The Anglican Communion

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The Anglican Communion The Anglican Communion Africa ● The Anglican Church of Burundi Europe ● The Church of the Province of Central Africa Americas ● The Church of England (Includes the Diocese in Europe) ● Province de L'Eglise Anglicane Du Congo ● Igreja Episcopal Anglicana do Brasil ● The Church of Ireland ● The Church of Nigeria (Anglican Communion) Asia and Oceania ● The Anglican Church of Canada ● The Scottish Episcopal Church ● The Anglican Church of Southern Africa ● Hong Kong Sheng Kung Hui ● Iglesia Anglicana de la Region Central de America ● The Church in Wales ● Province of the Episcopal Church of South Sudan ● The Nippon Sei Ko Kai ● The Church of the Province of Myanmar (Burma) ● La Iglesia Anglicana de Mexico ● The Lusitanian Church (E-P to the Archbishop of Canterbury) ● Province of the Episcopal Church of Sudan (The Anglican Communion in Japan) ● The Church of North India (United) ● The Episcopal Church ● The Reformed Episcopal Church of Spain ● The Anglican Church of Tanzania ● The Anglican Church of Korea ● The Church of Pakistan (United) ● Falkland Islands (Extra-Provincial to Canterbury) (E-P to the Archbishop of Canterbury) ● The Church of the Province of Uganda ● The Anglican Church of Melanesia ● The Anglican Church of Papua New Guinea ● Iglesia Anglicana de Chile ● The Convocation of Episcopal Churches in Europe ● The Church of the Province of West Africa ● The Anglican Church in Aotearoa, ● The Episcopal Church in the Philippines ● The Church in the Province of the West Indies ● The Anglican Church of Kenya New Zealand and Polynesia ● Church of the Province of South East Asia ● Bermuda (Extra-Provincial to Canterbury) Middle East ● Province de L'Eglise Anglicane au Rwanda ● The Anglican Church of Australia ● The Church of South India (United) ● The Anglican Church of South America ● The Episcopal Church in Jerusalem & The Middle East ● The Church of the Province of the Indian Ocean ● The Church of Bangladesh ● The Church of Ceylon (E-P to the Archbishop of Canterbury).
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  • A Short History of the Western Rite Vicariate
    A Short History of the Western Rite Vicariate Benjamin Joseph Andersen, B.Phil, M.Div. HE Western Rite Vicariate of the Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese of North America was founded in 1958 by Metropolitan Antony Bashir (1896–1966) with the Right Reverend Alex- T ander Turner (1906–1971), and the Very Reverend Paul W. S. Schneirla. The Western Rite Vicariate (WRV) oversees parishes and missions within the Archdiocese that worship according to traditional West- ern Christian liturgical forms, derived either from the Latin-speaking Churches of the first millenium, or from certain later (post-schismatic) usages which are not contrary to the Orthodox Faith. The purpose of the WRV, as originally conceived in 1958, is threefold. First, the WRV serves an ecumeni- cal purpose. The ideal of true ecumenism, according to an Orthodox understanding, promotes “all efforts for the reunion of Christendom, without departing from the ancient foundation of our One Orthodox Church.”1 Second, the WRV serves a missionary and evangelistic purpose. There are a great many non-Orthodox Christians who are “attracted by our Orthodox Faith, but could not find a congenial home in the spiritual world of Eastern Christendom.”2 Third, the WRV exists to be witness to Orthodox Christians themselves to the universality of the Or- thodox Catholic Faith – a Faith which is not narrowly Byzantine, Hellenistic, or Slavic (as is sometimes assumed by non-Orthodox and Orthodox alike) but is the fulness of the Gospel of Jesus Christ for all men, in all places, at all times. In the words of Father Paul Schneirla, “the Western Rite restores the nor- mal cultural balance in the Church.
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  • Worldwide Communion: Episcopal and Anglican Lesson # 23 of 27
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  • 1 CHAPTER ONE GENERAL INTRODUCTION 1.0 Background To
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  • Evensong 9 August 2018 5:15 P.M
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  • Inculturating Liturgy in Sri Lanka: Contextualization in the Church Of
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