The Anglican Mission in England (AMiE) will hold its first ordination service Thursday in London. Which begs the question: are these ordinations outside the
Church of England necessary?
Yes for a number of reasons, but one is enough –
orthodox traditionalists, either evangelical or Anglo-Catholic, are less and
less welcome among the clergy in the Church of England. Oh you mossback orthodox laity, of
which there are many, do keep sending in those offerings please. But if you are called to holy orders…
Is there a single robustly orthodox Church of
England diocesan bishop anymore?
I’m aware of none. And more
and more candidates for holy orders are having experiences like one told in the Times:
One was blocked from ordination because he expressed his conviction that
every church leader should believe and teach that Jesus is the only way to be
saved. He was told that he didn’t
have a broad enough understanding of the different traditions in the Church of
England.
Related is an excellent dissection of Libchurch
“dialogue” from once CofE Anglo-Papalist John Hunwicke:
Their idea of 'discussion' or 'dialogue' meant them shouting abuse until
their foes fell silent. They demanded that we 'hear their experience' purely as
a preliminary to getting out their cudgels. They would never engage in rational
argument because, happy pantomaths, they already knew every answer. They had
made bullying into a fine art. To disagree with them was but to manifest one's
own psychological problems - one's phobias and hang-ups and prejudices. What
defences had we, or the methods by which Divinity had hitherto been done on the
banks of the Isis or even of the Cam, against this ruthless and Stalinist
totalitarianism and its Dahlek-like readiness to ex-ter-min-ate?
Yes, “exterminate” is a strong word. But robustly orthodox Church of England
clergy are at the very least an endangered species in several dioceses thanks
to apostate bishops who will not have them. That’s what “inclusiveness” looks like.
So although I enthusiastically support orthodox
ministry in the Church of England, an outside strategy is necessary as well. In some areas of the U.K., there is
hardly much choice about it any more.
1 comment:
Thanks Mark, good points.
The repeated persecution of those in CofE who only wanted to follow the teachings of historic Christianity has led inevitably to this.
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