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Anglican and Church
There was so much interest shown in this present-day venture that it was continued on B.B.C., where comments were equally made by an Anglican parson, a Free Church minister and a Catholic priest.
The Anglican Communion is an international association of national and regional Anglican churches ( and a few other episcopal churches ) in full communion with the Church of England ( which is regarded as the mother church of the worldwide communion ) and specifically with its principal primate, the Archbishop of Canterbury.
There is no single " Anglican Church " with universal juridical authority as each national or regional church has full autonomy.
With a membership currently estimated at over 85 million members worldwide, the Anglican Communion is the third largest Christian communion in the world, after the Roman Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Churches.
Some of these churches are known as Anglican, such as the Anglican Church of Canada, due to their historical link to England ( Ecclesia Anglicana means " English Church ").
The Anglican Communion considers itself to be part of the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church and to be both Catholic and Reformed.
In response, the American Episcopal Church and the Anglican Church of Canada answered that the actions had been undertaken after lengthy scriptural and theological reflection, legally in accordance with their own canons and constitutions and after extensive consultation with the provinces of the Communion.
* The Anglican Church in Aotearoa, New Zealand and Polynesia
* The Anglican Church of Australia
* The Igreja Episcopal Anglicana do Brasil ( Anglican Episcopal Church of Brazil )
* The Anglican Church of Burundi
* The Anglican Church of Canada
* The Iglesia Anglicana de la Region Central America ( Anglican Church in the Central Region of America )
* The Province de L ' Eglise Anglicane Du Congo ( Province of the Anglican Church of Congo )
* Hong Kong Sheng Kung Hui ( Hong Kong Anglican Church ( Episcopal ))
* The Anglican Church of Kenya
* The Anglican Church of Korea
* The Anglican Church of Mexico
* The Anglican Church of Papua New Guinea
* The Anglican Church of Southern Africa

Anglican and Canada
** Marie Guyart ( Anglican Church of Canada )
In Canada, where the Act of Settlement is now a part of Canadian constitutional law, Tony O ' Donohue, a Canadian civic politician, took issue with the provisions that exclude Roman Catholics from the throne, and which make the monarch of Canada the Supreme Governor of the Church of England, requiring him or her to be an Anglican.
Some provinces of the Anglican Communion have begun ordaining women as bishops in recent decades for example, the United States, New Zealand, Canada and Cuba.
Since the implementation of concordats between the ELCA and the Episcopal Church of the United States and the ELCIC and the Anglican Church of Canada, all bishops, including the Presiding Bishop ( ELCA ) or the National Bishop ( ELCIC ), have been consecrated using the historic succession, with at least one Anglican bishop serving as co-consecrator.
* Anglican Church of Canada
For the most part, religious traditions in the world reserve marriage to heterosexual unions, but there are exceptions including certain Buddhist and Hindu traditions, Unitarian Universalist, Metropolitan Community Church and some Anglican dioceses and some Quaker, United Church of Canada and Reform Jewish congregations .< ref >" World Religions and Same Sex Marriage ", Marriage Law Project, Columbus School of Law at The Catholic University of America, Washington, DC, July 2002 revision
Most of the Anglican priests were Loyalists who fled to England, New York or Canada during the war.
Denominations that practise infant baptism include the Roman Catholic Church, the Eastern Orthodox Church, Oriental Orthodoxy, Armenian Apostolic Church, Assyrian Church of the East, the Anglican churches, Lutherans, Presbyterians, Methodists, some Church of the Nazarene, the Reformed Church in America, the United Church of Canada, the United Church of Christ ( UCC ), and the Continental Reformed.
** Robert Wolfall, Presbyter ( commemoration, Anglican Church of Canada )
* List of Anglican Church of Canada dioceses
** Anglican Catholic Church of Canada, a member of the Traditional Anglican Communion
* John Anderson ( archbishop of Moosonee ) ( 1866 – 1943 ), Anglican Church of Canada metropolitan bishop
* John Anderson ( bishop of British Columbia ) ( 1912 – 1969 ), Anglican Church of Canada bishop
File: Anglican Cathedral St. John's newfoundland. jpg | Cathedral of St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada ( 1847-1905 )
# The Anglican Church of Canada and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada
* Chris Williams ( bishop ) ( John Christopher Richard Williams, born 1936 ), Anglican bishop in Canada

Anglican and developed
They developed in the socio-economic and political cleavages that existed during the first three decades of the 19th century, and had the support of the business, professional and established Church ( Anglican ) elites in Ontario and to a lesser extent in Quebec.
A small dame school and prayer house run by Anglican deaconesses existed in the 1890s and 1900s, and developed to become St. Barnabas ( 1915 ).
In 1865 the scheme was taken up by George Truefitt who developed most of the local villas and St. George's Church ( 1865 ), built for Anglican secessionists.
Historically, it had little of the difference in organisation between parishes characteristic of other Anglican provinces, although a number of markedly liberal, High Church or Evangelical parishes have developed in recent decades.
In 1847 cottages had begun to appear, and by 1851 a fairly sizeable community had developed, and an Anglican church, St Andrew's, was built.
Which of these views is considered to represent " authentic " Anglican eucharistic theology depends on wider theological and ecclesiological understandings of Anglicanism, in particular the role of pre-English Reformation doctrine and practices, versus a more Magisterial Reformation theology, in interpreting the Book of Common Prayer ( which has its origins in the works of Thomas Cranmer ) and the Thirty-Nine Articles ( an Anglican formulary developed in the sixteenth century ).
Synan further traces the influence of Catholic and Anglican mystical traditions on John Wesley's doctrine of Christian perfection or entire sanctification, from which Pentecostal beliefs on Spirit baptism developed.
Glebe's name derives from the fact that the land on which it was developed was a glebe, originally owned by the Anglican Church.
Anglican Chant was developed in England at the time of the English Reformation and appears to be an adaptation of the plainchant method that was in common use at the time for singing the same texts but in Latin.
* Henry Venn ( Anglican, Church Missionary Society ) ( 1796-1873 ) and Rufus Anderson ( Congregationalist, American Board ) ( 1796-1880 ) simultaneously developed a strategy of Indigenisation in response to the extreme paternalism exercised by western missionaries of the early 19th century, particularly in Asia.
Inspired by an unused design for Liverpool's Anglican Cathedral, which had been developed several years earlier, the architects added the dome to the design in order to give the building a more imposing look.
Industrialised communities have long appeared to weaken the pre-eminence of the Church of England, and as the Cornish people were readily involved in mining, a rift developed between the Cornish people and their Anglican clergy in the early 18th-century.
Bartica developed from an Anglican missionary settlement, established in 1842.
He was raised in the Anglican Church but developed an interest in Spiritualism and the occult at about age 12, after encountering it from a Spiritualist uncle.
A small dame school and prayer house run by Anglican Deaconesses existed in the 1890s and 1900s, which developed to become St Barnabas ( 1915 ).
By 1840, the Anglican clergyman developed a sense of separation between himself and the secular world.
One theory is that it was developed to fly atop Anglican churches in Wales, in the same way that the St George's Cross was flown outside churches in England, though since 1954 churches are more likely to fly a flag bearing the armorial bearings of the Church in Wales, granted that year.
In the mid-1980s an Anglican Rosary or " Christian prayer beads " was developed in the Episcopal Church ( United States ) by Rev.

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