“We declare aloud that we are Catholic, but not Roman, the last of which words destroys the meaning of the first. We will never confine words of so wide an import within the narrow limits of one city or one man’s breast. The more that a man refuses to do that, the more Catholic is he.”
– Lancelot Andrewes (1555-1626), Response to Cardinal Bellarmine
After writing appreciatively of both Luther and Calvin, John Cosin goes on to write, “We are no more followers of Luther or Calvin than of the Pope, where either they or he fall away from Holy Scripture, or cease to walk in the footsteps of the old Fathers who consent in the Catholic Faith. It is clear from all this that we have introduced no new religion into the world or into the Church. On our principles none such could be introduced, but the faith must remain in its completeness and unaltered. It is also clear that we retain in all essentials the Christian and Catholic Faith, which existed formerly, by which we, as well as our ancestors, were brought into the bosom of the Church, and which alone could save us.”
“I die in the Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Faith, professed by the whole Church, before the disunion of East and West: more particularly I die in the communion of the Church of England, as it stands distinguished from all Papal and Puritan Innovations.”
– Thomas Ken (1627-1711), an epitaph provided in his will
Reflecting on the 39 Articles of Religion, F. D. Maurice wrote, “The principles of the Reformation are asserted in the one division, not as necessary qualifications, but as indispensable conditions of the great Catholic truths which had been asserted in the other. And so to whatever cause we owe it, this has been the result of these articles; they have been thorns in the side of those who have wished to establish an English theological system, either fashioned out of the materials which Romanism or Calvinism supplies; they have encouraged persons of all sects and schools to hope that their principles, in some sense or other, might be contained in them, or by some process or other extracted out of them . . .”
“In 1868 Bishop [Jackson] Kemper referred to the plans for organizing the Diocese of Fond du Lac in the following words: ‘The example of zeal and true Christian faith would be so beneficial, and so
encouraging to the whole of the Reformed Catholic Church, throughout the world, that I hereby pledge my cordial support’.”
– ‘Bishop Grafton,’ a Commemorative Volume by Reginald H. Weller, James O. S. Huntington OHC, William Walter Webb, William Harman van Allen, George McClellan Fiske, Erving Winslow (1913)
“Our special character and, as we believe, our peculiar contribution to the Universal Church, arises from the fact that owing to historic circumstances, we have been enabled to combine in our one fellowship the traditional Faith and Order of the Catholic Church with that immediacy of approach to God through Christ to which the Evangelical Churches especially bear witness, and freedom of intellectual inquiry, whereby the correlation of the Christian revelation and advancing knowledge is constantly effected.”
– Bishops’ Encyclical, 1930 Lambeth Conference
“The Anglican churches have received and hold the faith of Catholic Christendom, but they have exhibited a rich variety of methods both of approach and of interpretation. They are heirs of the Reformation as well as the Catholic tradition; and they hold together in a single fellowship of worship and witness those whose chief attachment is to each of these, and also those whose attitude to the distinctively Christian tradition of a free and liberal culture which is historically the bequest of the Greek spirit and which was recovered for Western Europe at the Renaissance.”
– William Temple (1881-1944), Introduction to Doctrine in the Church of England, The Report of the Commission on Christian Doctrine, 1938
“First, there are two very definite schools of thought in the Church of England, one of which tends to emphasise that she is a branch of the Catholic Church and the other, that she is a Protestant Church; and secondly, that in spite of acute differences both in ceremonial and in actual doctrine, there are certain points on which all Anglicans would agree together, as against Rome on the one hand and Geneva on the other. She would, for example, agree with Geneva against Rome in repudiating certain Papal claims and certain pronouncements about doctrine which she does not hold to be oecumenical; she would agree with Rome against Geneva in upholding the Apostolic Succession and the formal theology of the Creeds.”
– Dorothy L. Sayers (1893-1957), Worship in the Anglican Church
“The Anglican Tradition . . . has its strong Catholic element – which emphasizes the historic continuity and organized life of the Church as the appointed channel of the Divine grace through creed, ministry, and sacraments. It has its strong Evangelical element, which emphasizes Gospel before Church, personal conversion before corporate expression of it, spiritual immediacy, the direct response to the Holy Spirit wherever He may breathe. It has its third strong element, not easy to give a name to, which acts as a watchdog of both the other elements, and brings into our tradition a special element of intellectual integrity, of sobriety and moderation of judgment, of moral earnestness – an element which is as aware of what we do not know as of what we do, which does not wish to go beyond the evidence but to judge all things with a large and reasonable charity.
No Anglican should be without something of these elements.”
– Geoffrey Fisher (1887-1972), Archbishop of Canterbury, Address Delivered to the Joint Session of the General Convention of the Protestant Episcopal in the United States of America, Sept. 12, 1946