More so than some more Protestant church bodies, Anglicanism understands the divine-human drama to be centered not on the individual but on the community of the Church. While not strictly a matter of either/or, it does matter where we put the emphasis. By the Holy Spirit, God calls us into community where we learn to love one another as God loves us and empowers us to bear that love in the world. In, with and under that community, the Holy Spirit moves like an electric current empowering the Church to make our “life together a sign of Christ’s love to this sinful and broken world, that unity may overcome estrangement, forgiveness heal guilt, and joy conquer despair” (Book of Common Prayer).
The Holy Spirit not limited tot he Church, of course. It blows where it will. But, wherever else it blows, we can count on it blowing through the baptized community that is the Church.
As the body of Christ the Church is, in a mystical sense, an extension of the Incarnation.
“The Spirit of Christ will be wanting in the heart that is shut up in selfishness”
– Henry Martyn (1781-1812), Journal and Letters of the Rev. Henry Martyn
“‘Individualism’
has no place in Christianity, and Christianity verily means its extinction.”
–
Michael Ramsey (1904-1988), The Gospel and the Catholic Faith
“Of course
every person is an individual; but his individuality is what marks him off from
others; it is a principle of division; whereas personality is social, and only
in his social relationship can a man be a person. Indeed, for the completeness
of personality, there is needed the relationship to both God and neighbours. The
richer his personal relationships, the more fully personal he will be.”
– William Temple
(1881-1944), Christianity and Social Order
“We realize the fullness of our own being only when we are conjoined in love to other beings, and gain our best hints of unity and completeness of life in sacred flashes when hearts and minds, retaining their separateness, through their very separation realize the mystery and miracle of fusion. Such flashes are rare and fugitive; it is possible that many people are never visited by them. But they are real, they do happen; and a suggestion is in them of the Divine interweavings wherein the full richness of Infinitude must abide.”
– Vida Dutton Scudder (1861-1954), Social Teachings of the Christian Year
“The Holy Catholic Church is both logically and chronologically prior to its individual members with their individual experience. Christian doctrine knows nothing of an atomistic individualism. Though an intensely personal matter, faith is never a purely private matter.”
– J. S. Whale (1896-1997), Christian Doctrine
“Thus it must ever be with the working of the separatist principle in the Church. That principle tends inevitably to disintegration. One sect begets another, until gradually the original idea of a company of believers knit together in one organic body dies away, and nothing is left but the barren individualism, whose motto is ‘Every man for himself’.”
– William Reed Huntington (1838-1909), The Church-idea
“Men speak as
if Christians came first and the Church after: as if the origin of the Church
was in the wills of the individuals who composed it. But, on the contrary,
throughout the teaching of the Apostles, we see it is the Church that comes
first and the members of it afterwards ... In the New Testament ... the Kingdom
of Heaven is already in existence, and men are invited into it. The Church
takes its origin, not in the will of man, but in the will of the Lord Jesus
Christ ... Everywhere men are called in: they do not come in and make the
Church by coming. They are called into that which already exists: they are
recognised as members when they are within; but their membership depends on
their admission, and not upon their constituting themselves into a body in the
sight of the Lord.”
– Frederick
Temple (1821-1902), Catholicity and Individualism, quoted in Catholicity, A
Study in the Conflict of Christian Traditions in the West Being a Report
presented to His Grace the Archbishop of Canterbury by a group of scholars
including Dom Gregory Dix, T. S. Eliot, Austin Farrer, and Michael Ramsey
“Christ did
not order or provide for any book to be circulated. He forbade our following
any one person. ‘Call no man master.’ He endowed His Church with the Holy
Spirit, making the Church thereby a living organism, through which He acts,
gathering souls into His saving light and life. In the Church are to be found
the Holy Scriptures and the sacraments. By the Church the Scriptures are
preserved and interpreted to our enlightenment, and the sacraments are
administered for our reception of life. We hear the voice of Christ speaking to
us through the Church as guided by the Holy Spirit, it interprets the written
word, and makes the truth known within us by our union with it.”
– Charles
Grafton (1830-1912), Christian and Catholic
“For this
primarily the Church exists: to be the Spirit-bearing body, and that is to be
the bearer of Christ, the great ‘Christopher,’ perpetuating, in a new, but not
less real way, the presence of the Son of man in the world.”
– Charles Gore
(1853-1932), The Incarnation of the Son of God
“Christianity
has always maintained that God incarnate, Jesus the Christ, inaugurated
Christian community. Some maintain that he established it directly. Others
hold, more plausibly, that he founded it indirectly. For them, church is the
continuation of the mission that Jesus preached and enacted. This corporate
activity, empowered by the Holy Spirit, makes Christ present in and as that
community.”
– Scott
MacDougall, Who Needs Church?, The Other Journal, Issue 37: Church ,
Spring 2024
“The
commission given to the Church is that it carry out the purpose of God. That is
what is meant by the description of it as ‘the Body of Christ’. It is to be the
instrument or organ of His will, as His fleshly Body was in the days of His earthly
ministry. That Body has many functions to fulfil, and one of them is suffering.
The members of the Church do not, or should not, belong to it for what they can
get in this world or in any other world; they – we – should belong to it in
order to take our share in the great work, the fulfilment of God’s purpose in
the world and beyond it.”
– William
Temple (1881-1944), Christianity and Social Order
“The Church is the only institution that exists primarily for the benefit of those who are not its members.”
– William Temple (1881-1944), Attributed
“While the New
Testament emphasises the Catholic truth that the church is the extension of the
Incarnation, it stresses also the vital importance of that Faith which is
associated with the word Evangelical; for the Indwelling of Christ, which makes
possible the Church, is linked to Faith in Him ‘Who loved me and gave Himself
for me.’”
– Michael
Ramsey (1904-1988), The Body of Christ - An Appeal to Anglo-Catholics in The
English Catholic: the Quarterly Gazette of the Anglican Society (Summer 1928)
“The meaning
of the Christian Church becomes most clear when it is studied in terms of the
Death and Resurrection of Jesus Christ.”
– Michael
Ramsey (1904-1988), The Gospel and the Catholic Church
“The Christian
community (the church militant) has been put here on earth not for self-nurture
or nourishment but to exercise the painful, glorious work of reconciliation
across the terrifying barriers erected all across our communal existences in
this world.”
– Hans Frei
(1922-1988), On the Thirty-Nine Articles in Unpublished Pieces: Transcripts
from the Yale Divinity School archive edited by Mike Higton
“The Church is itself the primary sacrament of Christ in human history. It is the sign of the union of all believers with God the Father, and at the same time it is the sign of the promise of the ultimate unity of the whole of humanity.”
– Louis Weil (1935-2022), Sacraments & Liturgy, the Outward Signs
“The church is
the community of those who have been immersed in Jesus’ life, overwhelmed by
it.”
– Rowan
Williams (1950 - ), Tokens of Trust
“The Church is
saying to the world, ‘he form of human community that's ultimately in accord
with God’s purpose and God’s nature is one in which these principles apply: the
principle of mutual enrichment when we receive the gifts of others, and see and
meet the one another's needs, and the converse, the mutual impoverishment that
happens when we forget or ignore the gift or the suffering of others.’ The
Church says to the world, ‘this is the kind of community that makes God known;
one that shows God's own nature and purpose. God’s nature as one who is beyond
all partisanship, all self-interest, whose whole being is selflessness: that
mystery which the doctrine of the Holy Trinity supremely reveals for us.
What that
leads to is that every action in which that becomes real is, to use the
language of a later generation, a kind of sacrament: an effective supernatural
realization of God's nature and purpose within history. While we speak of the
sacramental acts of the Church gathered for worship, I think that the Bible
encourages us to believe that every action in which God's justice becomes
manifest is also sacramental in the sense that it shows God's future. For us to
be aware of that, to work and pray with it, is where the sacraments in the
narrower sense become important. The community gathered around the Lord's Table
is a sign of God's future.”
– Rowan
Williams (1950 - ), No One Can Be Forgotten in God's Kingdom, a speech at the
TEAM Conference in South Africa Friday 9th March 2007
“The Christian
community, desiring to share ever more fully in Christ’s dying and rising
again, develops a new understanding of humanity’s contemplative calling―so that
a continual conversion of contemplative consciousness collaborates in Christ’s
re-harmonizing of creation with God’s knowing and loving of each creature.”
– Mark
McIntosh (1960-2021), The Divine Ideas Tradition
“In the
Church, the mystical body of Christ, we have a yet further extension of the
idea for which the lover of humanity cries. For the Church, both normally and
ideally, includes the entire human race; even now, in a world invaded by sin
and failure, it is the representative of all, the earnest of the society to be.
It not only claims our service, but commands our reverence; for, made up as it
is of faulty and distorted people, it yet reaches up into a higher region, and
witnesses to perfection, through its organic and sacramental union with a Head
in whom are centered holiness, wisdom, authority.”
– Vida Dutton
Scudder (1861-1954), The Witness of Denial
The Church
is essential, But Anglicans have no illusions of it being anything other than a treasure-bearing clay jar (2 Corinthians 4:7).
“Before
Christians can say things about what the church ought to be, their first need
is to say what the Church is, here and now amid its own failures and the
questionings of the bewildered. Looking at it now, with its inconsistencies and
perversions and its want of perfection, we must ask what is the real meaning of
it just as it is. As the eye gazes upon it, it sees the Passion of Jesus
Christ; but the eye of faith sees further: it sees the power of Almighty God.”
– Michael
Ramsey (1904-1988), Glory Descending: Michael Ramsey and His Writings, ed.
Douglas Dales
“Living in the
Christian institution isn’t particularly easy. It is, generally, today, an
anxious inefficient, pompous, evasive body. If you hold office on it, you
become more and more conscious of what it’s doing to your soul. Think of what
Coca-Cola does to your teeth. Why bother?
Well, because
of the unwelcome conviction that it somehow tells the welcome truth about God,
above all in its worship and sacraments. I don’t think I could put up with it
for five minutes if I didn’t believe this.”
– Rowan
Williams (1950 - ), No life, here – no joy, terror or tears, Church Times 17
July 1998
“We would like
to imagine the Church striding through history like a hero or a saint. But, if
we are honest, we must admit that the Church has ever staggered through history
like the Whiskey Priest – all too often drunk on (worldly) power and sin,
cowardly, less than faithful, self-interested, etc. But, while it has never
been more than a Whiskey Priest, it has, by the grace of God, never been less.
In spite of all its shortcomings, it has borne Word and Sacrament to the world.
And it has also raised up exemplary saints – known and unknown. As with Graham
Greene’s priest [in The Power and the Glory], we know that in spite of
its shortcomings, the Spirit does not abandon the Church and God’s power and
glory are present in and through it. But only and always by God’s grace, not
its own heroic or saintly purity.
And there’s
the rub. The compulsion and presumption to create a pure Church, whether that
be pure in holiness or pure in teaching or pure in justice – however and by
whomever any of those is defined – is rooted in either pride or impatience (or
both). If we continually expect and demand that the Church stride through
history like a hero-saint we will continually be frustrated by its actual
plodding through history like a Whiskey Priest. But we will also miss the
opportunity to learn what it means to live by God’s power and glory rather than
our own. We will miss the fact of God’s sheer grace. I wonder if the refusal to
accept and love the Church as a ‘corpus permixtum’ – a mixed body of sinners
and saints – is not rooted in our own unwillingness to see ourselves as ‘simul
justus et peccator – simultaneously righteous and sinful. We only ever live
under the Mercy.”
– Matthew
Gunter (1957 - ), Whiskey Priest Church, An Odd Work of Grace blog, July 4,
2015
“It is almost
too obvious that the church reflects both the very best and the very worst of
us, for, – whatever else it is – it is composed of human beings. And human
beings are sometimes hopeful, sometimes seek after petty forms of power, and
sometimes are mobilized into the most remarkable sacrificial acts. . . as
furious as I get, the church – in all its hypocrisy, human cravenous, and
prejudice – remains a place of grace. And remains a place of grace because God
is bizarrely and wonderfully passionate about the freaks, the half-mad, the
second-rate, and yet glorious bunch that we – the church – are. And if God can
still value the loons within it (including me), then so can I.”
– Rachel Mann
(1970 - ), Dazzling Darkness
“In spite of
the various faults which at any time disfigure the Church, we also see from
time to time what might be called ‘gleams of glory,’ moments when the ideal
nature of the Church, its true nature, shines out.”
– John
Macquarrie (1919-2007), Starting from Scratch
Anglicanism is international
Anglicans belong to the Anglican Communion, comprised of 42 autonomous provincial churches and over 80 million members across 160+ countries. It is united by shared historic Anglican tradition and worship, mutual recognition and fellowship rather than a central authority. The Archbishop of Canterbury serves as spiritual leader and focus of communion. The Anglican Communion is a reminder that to be a Christian is not an individual affair. It is to be a member of the body of Christ, the Church. It is to be bound to allegiances that transcend national boundaries as well as other loyalties. Members of the Anglican Communion are fundamentally united to other members of the Communion around the globe by a common heritage of faith, by bonds of affection, and by the water of baptism which is thicker than blood. We belong to one another.
“The Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America, otherwise known as The Episcopal Church (which name is hereby recognized as also designating the Church), is a constituent member of the Anglican Communion, a Fellowship within the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church, of those duly constituted Dioceses, Provinces, and regional Churches in communion with the See of Canterbury, upholding and propagating the historic Faith and Order as set forth in the Book of Common Prayer.”
– Preamble of the Constitution of the The Episcopal Church
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