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CEEC Identity Statement

The CEEC defines the Anglican faith as English Orthodoxy, developing from the very beginning of the Christian faith in the British Isles enduring to the present age. Therefore, in our usage, Anglicanism is inclusive of it Celtic origins, Patristic roots, the Medieval Church, the Protestant Reformation, the Wesleyan Evangelical Revival, the Oxford Movement, and the modern Charismatic movement.

We measure Anglican history not only from Thomas Cranmer forward, but from the Reformation backward. Anglicanism in the CEEC is not shaped by its connection to the See of Canterbury but by its relationship to history.

The elements of Anglicanism are:

  • The proirity and authority of Holy Scripture as the source of our knowledge of God.
  • The doctrinal guidance of the Catholic Creeds; Apostle's, Nicene, and Athanasian.
  • The truth that salvation is, in the final analysis, the gift of God by grace alone.
  • The use of the liturgy which is faithful to Scripture and imbodies the experience of the church in worship over the centuries.
  • The historic episcopate, or order of bishops, as a sign of the unity of the one Church of God. The English (Anglican) reformers insisted on the retention of the historic order of Bishops.
  • The threefold ministry of bishop, presbyter (priest), and deacon as that ministry which has lead the Church to adopt since primitive times.
  • The two Gospel sacraments of the Holy Baptism and Holy Communion ordained by Christ for regular use in the Church.
  • The unity of the ministry of the Word and Sacrament in the service of Holy Communion.
  • The need for regular teaching and preaching from the Holy Scriptures.
  • The recognition that the visible unity of the Church on Earth is God's will.
  • The need for regularly reviewed Canon Law, to respond to the unfolding needs of the people and the Church.
  • The priesthood of the whole Church as a worshipping and praying society.
  • The recognition of the continuing ministry of the Holy Spirit and the impartation of gifts and ministries in our time.
  • A commitment to fulfill the Great Commission to winning the world to Jesus Christ into the Third Millenium.

The Communion's approach to liturgy is not to be based on legislative but normative practice as defined by the Scripture, the Book of Common Prayer, and the historic practice of the Church.

We anticipate liturgical practice to be expressed in three broad categories; low or Evangelical Church, broad Church, and high or Anglo-Catholic Church. The practice of a local congregation is recognized and determined by its relationship to its bishops.

Paradigm of Ministry

Liturgical/Sacramental

Evangelical

Charismatic

Theology

Biblical Foundation

Five-fold Ministry
and Government

Orthodoxy

Personal Conversion

Power of the Spirit

Universality

Evangelism & Mission

Spiritual Gifts

Liturgical Worship

Pulpit-Centered Worship

Charismatic Worship

Social Action

Personal Holiness

Kingdom

Incarnational understanding of the Church (based on theology, history, and sacramental elements of thought)

Biblical and Reformational understanding of the Church (pragmatic and rational)

Spiritual, Organic, and functional understanding of the Church (dynamic and informal)

 

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