History of the Episcopal Church

History of the Episcopal Church

Early Christianity of Britain and Ireland

700-450 BC Celtic speaking people migrated from central Europe to Britain
37 1st Christian Church built in Glastonbury Britain
43 – 410 Rome occupied Britain

  • The Apostles Simon Peter (died 64 AD)
  • Simon the Zealot (died 61 AD)
  • James son of Alphaeus (died 62 AD)

All three are reported to have been missionaries in the British Isles.

180 First evidence of Christianity in Roman Britain
313 Constantine declared religious tolerance across the Roman Empire
451 – 499 St. Patrick converts Celtic pagans in Ireland (Born 385 AD, Britannia)
563 St. Columba converts Celts in Scotland & establishes Iona Abbey in 563 (Born 521, Ireland)

  • With the arrival of Christianity the standing stones were adopted by the monks, who carved Christian images on them and used them to mark the boundaries of their monasteries. Many of the stones may have been sculpted directly from standing stones.
  • Columba studied under Ireland’s most prominent church figures.
  • The Celts inhabited Ireland & Britain into the Middle Ages when their culture and language diverged into the modern Welsh, Cornish, Bretons, & Irish (different dialects)
  • Augustine (Roman) was the first archbishop of Canterbury around 597 AD. However, the Celts never accepted him as their bishop.
664 Synod of Whitby

  • The majority of the debate centers around the issue of the calculation of the dates for celebrating Easter.
    • NOTE: The Celtic Church: Priests permitted to marry, used a different mode of baptism, kept the Jewish Sabbath, and observed Easter on the Hebrew Passover
    • King Oswiu (King of Northumbria) declared “it was fitting that those who served one God should observe one rule of life and not differ in the celebration of the heavenly sacraments”.
    • Bishop Colman, abbot of Lindisfarne, argued for the Celtic Church
      • According to Irish Christians their roots went back to the apostle John and his churches
    • Agilbert, bishop of the West Saxons, argued for the Roman Church
      • The Romans insisted that the apostles Peter and Paul and their churches practiced Easter in the pattern which the Roman church kept.
    • Though the Celtic Christians were defeated by King Oswiu’s vote, they continued to oppose Rome until the 11th century when they assimilated into the Roman religion
    • The early church of England was a distinctive fusion of British, Celtic, and Roman influences.

The Emergence of Countries

937 British kingdoms united under King AEthelstan

England was named after a Germanic tribe called the “Angles”, who settled in Central, Northern, and Eastern England in the 5th century. A related tribe called the “Saxons” settled in the south of England. That is why that period of English history is called “Anglo-Saxon”. Dates these countries were established

  • 843 France – 937 England – 962 German – 1937 Ireland
500 -1066 Formation of the English language

The earliest form of English is called Old English or Anglo-Saxon (c. 550– 1066 CE). Old English developed from a set of North Sea Germanic dialects originally spoken along the coasts of: Frisia (Netherland) – Lower Saxony (Germany) – Jutland (Denmark) – Southern Sweden By Germanic tribes known as the Angles, Saxons, and Jutes

The Anglican Reformation

1517 – 1564 Anglican Reformation
Martin Luther “95 Theses,”
1529 – 1536 English Reformation Parliament (Henrician Reformation) called by Henry VIII (governed by the Magna Carta 1215)

  • Anne Boleyn (Queen 1533-1536) Influential in Henry VIII break with Rome
  • Thomas Cromwell (Lawyer & statesman served as chief minister to King Henry 1532 to 1540) pushed for Henry to break with Rome
1534 Henry VIII – Act of Succession
1558 – 1603 Elizabeth 1st religious settlement

Elizabeth 1st religious settlement
Act of Supremacy of 1559
Abolished papal supremacy, but defined Elizabeth as Supreme Governor, rather than Supreme Head, of the church. This change of title placated those who did not feel that a woman could be the head of the church, and the act passed fairly easily.

Act of Uniformity of 1559
Restored the 1552 version of the English Prayer Book but kept many of the familiar old practices and allowed for two interpretations of communion, one Catholic and one Protestant. The bill was hotly debated but eventually passed by three votes.

The Church of England in America

1604 Church of England cannons require Anglican clergy affirm loyalty and obedience publicly to the King of England
1607 Church of England established in Jamestown, Virginia
1635 Vestries and clergy loosely under authority of the Bishop of London
1649 Parliament granted charter for missionary organization, “Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in New England”

American Revolution

1775-1783 American Revolution. During the war many Anglicans began using the terms “Episcopal” and “Episcopalian” to identify themselves.
1776 Starting July 4 Congress passed laws making prayers for the king and British Parliament acts of treason. Many clergy fled to Canada.
1784 Samuel Seabury of Connecticut is consecrated the first overseas Anglican Bishop by Scottish non-juring bishops

Samuel Seabury was a Loyalist before the end of the Revolutionary war and claimed them in England in 1783, when he was seeking Episcopal consecration.

Seabury was arrested November 1775 by local Patriots and kept in prison six weeks. He took refuge in New York City where he was appointed chaplain to the King’s American Regiment in 1778. At the end of the war, he stayed in the United States and was loyal to the new government.

March 25, 1783, a meeting of ten Episcopal clergy in Connecticut elected Seabury bishop. There were no Anglican bishops in America to consecrate him so he sailed to London on July 7. In England, his consecration was impossible because, as an American citizen, he could no longer take the oath of allegiance to the King. He turned to the Scottish Episcopal Church. At that time, the Episcopalians in Scotland were not the established church; they were a legally recognized but oppressed.

Seabury was consecrated in Aberdeen November 14, 1784 by 3 Bishops on the condition that he study the Scottish rite of Holy Communion and work for its adoption, rather than the English rite of 1662. To the present day, the American liturgy adheres to the main features of this rite in one of its Holy Eucharist Liturgies.

The anniversary of his consecration is now a lesser feast day on the calendars of the Episcopal Church (United States) and the Anglican Church of Canada and other churches of the Anglican Communion.

Seabury’s consecration by the non-juring Scots (refusal of allegiance to the monarchy) persuaded Parliament to make provision for the ordination of foreign bishops. Seabury’s tenacity in the matter had the effect of making possible a continued relationship between the American and English churches.

1785 The first General Convention of the Episcopal Church was held and names itself the Protestant Episcopal Church of the United States of America.
1821 The General Convention established the Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society of the Protestant Episcopal Church
1822 Henry Benjamin Whipple first Bishop of Minnesota

The Anglican Communion

1867 The Anglican Communion was founded at the Lambeth Conference.

The Lambeth conference is a decennial assembly of Bishops of the Anglican Communion convened by the Archbishop of Canterbury at Canterbury Cathedral. The second and subsequent councils meet at Lambeth Palace located outside London UK.

The Anglican Communion is 39 autonomous national and regional Churches plus six Extra Provincial Churches and dioceses; all of which are in Communion – in a reciprocal relationship – with the Archbishop of Canterbury, who is the Communion’s spiritual head.

There is no Anglican central authority such as a pope. Each Church makes its own decisions in its own ways, guided by recommendations from the Lambeth Conference, Anglican Consultative Council, the Primates’ Meeting and the Archbishop of Canterbury.

Anglicans and Episcopalians have always worked and worshipped together across national borders to support each other’s lives and ministry.

The insight, experience and wisdom contributed to joint endeavors by Anglican Communion members from all provinces means that the Communion can pack a real punch at national and international levels.

Examples of such collaboration can be found in the Communion’s Networks, in projects such as Anglican Witness, the Anglican Alliance, in its International Commission on Unity, Faith and Order and on the Anglican Communion News Service.

The Protestant Episcopal Church of the United States Flag

1940 The House of Bishops and the House of Deputies adopted an official flag for the Episcopal Church.

  • The shield was adopted by the General Convention of 1940 and is rich in symbolism.
  • The red cross on a white field is the St. George Cross, an indicator of our link to the Church of England, the mother church of the Anglican Communion.
  • The miniature crosses in the blue quadrant symbolize the nine original American Dioceses that met in Philadelphia in 1789 to adopt the constitution of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America. Connecticut (1783), Maryland (1783). Massachusetts (1784), Pennsylvania (1784), New Jersey (1785), New York (1785), South Carolina (1785), Virginia (1785), Delaware (1786).
  • The miniature crosses are in the form of St. Andrew’s cross in tribute to the Scottish church’s role in ordaining the first American Bishop, Samuel Seabury, in 1784.
  • The colors red, white and blue symbolize, respectively,
    • (Red) the sacrifice of Christ and Christian martyrs,
    • (White) the purity of the Christian faith, and
    • (Blue) the humanity of Christ received from the Virgin Mary.
  • In duplicating the colors of the American flag, they also represent the Episcopal Church’s standing as the U.S. branch of the Anglican Communion.
REALM OF HISTORY web site https://www.realmofhistory.com/ “The future lies in the past”

Definitions of Interest

Anglican
adjective
1. relating to or denoting the Church of England or any Church in communion with it.
noun
1. a member of any of the Anglican Churches.

Briton
noun
plural noun: Britons
1. a citizen or native of Great Britain.
2. one of the people of southern Britain before and during Roman times.

Catholic
a often capitalized : of, relating to, or forming the church universal
b often capitalized : of, relating to, or forming the ancient undivided Christian church or a church claiming historical continuity from it

Celtic
adjective
1. relating to the Celts or their languages, which constitute a branch of the Indo-European family and include Irish, Scottish Gaelic, Welsh, Breton, Manx, Cornish, and several extinct pre-Roman languages such as Gaulish.

Dialects
noun
plural noun: dialects
a : a regional variety of language distinguished by features of vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation from other regional varieties and constituting together with them a single language

Episcopal
Adjective
1.of a bishop or bishops.
“episcopal power” (of a church) governed by or having bishops.

Lindesfarne
Lindisfarne is intimately connected with the history of Christianity in Britain. In 635 the Northumbrian king, Osiu (reigned 634–42), summoned an Irish monk named Aidan from Iona – the island-monastery off the south-west coast of what is now Scotland – to be bishop of his kingdom. Oswiu granted Aidan and his companions the small tidal island of Lindisfarne on which to found a monastery.

Oswiu’s gift of Lindisfarne, 6 miles up the coast from Bamburgh, to the monks from Iona enabled them to establish a monastery and a bishopric in the political heart of the Northumbrian kingdom. The ultimate success of the monks’ mission, together with the long-term wealth of their monastery, was founded on their proximity to the royal dynasty of Bernicia.

Non-juring
not swearing allegiance —used especially of a member of a party in Great Britain that would not swear allegiance to William and Mary or to their successors