ACNA: Ordinal Approved for Use by the College of Bishops
ACNA: Ordinal Approved for Use by the College of Bishops
August 3, 2011
Text Describes the Form and Manner of Ordaining Bishops, Priests and Deacons. View here:http://www.anglicanchurch.net/media/ORDINAL_2_0.pdf
The Anglican Church in North America is pleased to announce the Ordinal has been approved for use by the College of Bishops. The Ordinal text was approved on June 24, 2011. To view the PDF document, please click here.
"One of the major things that we sought to do was to craft an Ordinal that was written in contemporary English, but also was clearly in the Prayer Book tradition. Of particular focus was the strengthening of the vows that those who are ordained ascribe to," said Bishop Bill Thompson, Chair of Prayer Book and Common Liturgy task force.
"We were very deliberate about the tone and content of the Ordinal and the fact that it is clearly connected to our Anglican roots. Our intention is for the other liturgies that we put forth to have that same quality," Bishop Thompson said.
The language and doctrine of the new Ordinal is descended from the historic Anglican Ordinals of 1549, 1662, and the American 1928 and Canadian 1962. The primary source was the American book of 1928 because it has removed references to the English Monarch and Government, which makes more sense in our North American context. The other editions are used in places where there has been a variance between the various editions.
Read the full story at www.VirtueOnline.org
August 3, 2011
Text Describes the Form and Manner of Ordaining Bishops, Priests and Deacons. View here:http://www.anglicanchurch.net/media/ORDINAL_2_0.pdf
The Anglican Church in North America is pleased to announce the Ordinal has been approved for use by the College of Bishops. The Ordinal text was approved on June 24, 2011. To view the PDF document, please click here."One of the major things that we sought to do was to craft an Ordinal that was written in contemporary English, but also was clearly in the Prayer Book tradition. Of particular focus was the strengthening of the vows that those who are ordained ascribe to," said Bishop Bill Thompson, Chair of Prayer Book and Common Liturgy task force.
"We were very deliberate about the tone and content of the Ordinal and the fact that it is clearly connected to our Anglican roots. Our intention is for the other liturgies that we put forth to have that same quality," Bishop Thompson said.
The language and doctrine of the new Ordinal is descended from the historic Anglican Ordinals of 1549, 1662, and the American 1928 and Canadian 1962. The primary source was the American book of 1928 because it has removed references to the English Monarch and Government, which makes more sense in our North American context. The other editions are used in places where there has been a variance between the various editions.
Read the full story at www.VirtueOnline.org
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