Source: (consider it)
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Thread: churchpersonship
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Roselyn
Shipmate
# 17859
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Posted
Are there any CofE/Anglican parishes around that offer a wide range of churchmanship?
Posts: 98 | From: gold coast gld australia | Registered: Oct 2013
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Liturgylover
Shipmate
# 15711
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Posted
I know a few parishes in London which emabrace different churchmanship traditions:
In Holland Park a united benefice - St John the Baptist is strongly Anglo-Catholic, whilst St Gerorge's church is more moderate.
The same is true Clerkenwell between Most Holy Redeemer and St Mark's.
There is also a growing trend of cross-tradition churches:
Some - eg St Peter's Bow, St John Hackney - offer a traditional Sung Eucharist at 9.30 or 10 followed by a later less formal worship band type service.
Others - eg St Alban's Golders Green - offer a morning Sung Eucharist with bells and smells, and evening praise and worship style service.
There is also a growing number of churches in the Anglo-catholic tradition offering earlier informal Eucharists eg St Mary Primrose Hill and more recently Emmanuel, West Hampstead to accomodate growing congregations. The latter had 600 at its Mothering Sunday masses last weekend, with 120 plus coming to the 9.15 service.
Posts: 452 | From: North London | Registered: Jun 2010
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dj_ordinaire
Host
# 4643
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Posted
Is this question a general one or related to Australia, as per the OP'ers location?
-------------------- Flinging wide the gates...
Posts: 10335 | From: Hanging in the balance of the reality of man | Registered: Jun 2003
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Roselyn
Shipmate
# 17859
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Posted
General or I would not have referred to CofE which no longer exists in this fair country. I suppose even other denominations might be of interest but not sure if there are "high church" equivalents therein.
Posts: 98 | From: gold coast gld australia | Registered: Oct 2013
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Episcoterian
Shipmate
# 13185
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Posted
How's Lutheranism like in the Antipodes?
-------------------- "We cannot let individualism make corporate worship impossible!" (iMonk)
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Posts: 286 | From: Franca, SP, Brazil | Registered: Nov 2007
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Gee D
Shipmate
# 13815
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Posted
In parts of Queensland and South Australia, but not elsewhere. Perhaps because Lutherans are such a small grouping that they maintain a closed table and a very closed community. Their participation in the Council of Churches is minimal, as it is also in such local ecumenical activities as combined carol services. With all that, it's impossible for an outsider to know of any variations in churchmanship.
-------------------- Not every Anglican in Sydney is Sydney Anglican
Posts: 7028 | From: Warrawee NSW Australia | Registered: Jun 2008
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Knopwood
Shipmate
# 11596
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Posted
I'm given to understand the Lutheran Church in Australia maintains a somewhat equivocal stance with respect to Missouri vs the LWF. It wouldn't surprise me if their practices with respect to various Dead Horse issues (as I seem to recall closed communion is) hewed more closely to the former, since being a "conservative" member (even "associate") of the LWF is an easier position to maintain than being a "liberal" member (ditto) of the ILC. Many of the LCA's founders were fleeing the same forced Prussian Union which propelled the Fathers of the Missouri Synod from their homeland.
Posts: 6806 | From: Tio'tia:ke | Registered: Jun 2006
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venbede
Shipmate
# 16669
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Posted
I honestly don't understand the last post. What is Missouri? Who were they fleeing?
-------------------- Man was made for joy and woe; And when this we rightly know, Thro' the world we safely go.
Posts: 3201 | From: An historic market town nestling in the folds of Surrey's rolling North Downs, | Registered: Sep 2011
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Gee D
Shipmate
# 13815
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Posted
Knopwood, I assume that by Missouri, you mean the Missouri Synod, but I have no idea what the acronyms mean - perhaps you could use the titles. And also unpack quite a bit of what you say, as it's rather dense.
-------------------- Not every Anglican in Sydney is Sydney Anglican
Posts: 7028 | From: Warrawee NSW Australia | Registered: Jun 2008
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Knopwood
Shipmate
# 11596
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Posted
There are two main international alignments of Lutherans, the Lutheran World Federation and International Lutheran Council. The LWF represents the "mainline" tradition of the old state churches of Europe. The ILC includes the Missouri Synod and its missions, and other communities formed by refugees from Bismark's Prussia.
The Lutheran Church in Australia, as I understand it, has not cast their lot fully with either of these camps, but are an "associate" member of each. Like the Missouri Synod, they originate in the exodus from the imperially imposed Prussian Union with the Reformed, which created today's united Protestant Church of Germany. I am not sure how much of the history of the union I can appropriately "unpack" within the parameters of this thread, but for our purposes it's fair to say that the legacy (or baggage) of the union has left these refugee communities with a certain sense of vigilance against doctrinal compromise.
Posts: 6806 | From: Tio'tia:ke | Registered: Jun 2006
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Roselyn
Shipmate
# 17859
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Posted
Are people saying that Lutheran parishes have a wide range of churchmanship, I am a little confused.
Posts: 98 | From: gold coast gld australia | Registered: Oct 2013
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Kayarecee
Apprentice
# 17289
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Posted
People are saying that "Lutheran" covers a huge range of theological and liturgical positions, from Catholic-but-not-in-communion-with-Rome all the way down to allegedly-nonliturgical hyper-congregationalist, and everything in between. Ditto politics, and with every possible permutation of high and low theology, left and right polity.
But the Lutherans in any particular nation or region in a nation* tend to be a lot more coherent in thought and practice, within and among ourselves. It sounds like the Lutherans in Australia are among the more closed-off and politically and theologically conservative flavors of Lutheran.
Edited to add: in the largest Lutheran denomination in the US, there are a fair number of parishes that try to accommodate both "traditional" and "contemporary" worship, usually with two different worship services on a Sunday morning. Generally speaking though, within a congregation, even if the worship format varies, the theological and political position of the people attending worship will be pretty much the same no matter which format of worship they prefer, and theology and polity are just as much a part of churchpersonship as liturgy. --- *Regional variation in a nation the size of the United States can be pretty extreme. I grew up among the descendents of German Lutherans on the eastern seaboard of the US, where the prevailing form is something along the lines of high-church CofE, roughly speaking. There's some variation, but broadly speaking, a Lutheran from the state of New York and the state of Pennsylvania are going to have more in common with each other than they are with another Lutheran from the more pietistic, congregational (Low Church, verging on conevo in some cases) Midwest. [ 25. March 2015, 13:51: Message edited by: Kayarecee ]
Posts: 25 | From: The Cornfields | Registered: Aug 2012
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DangerousDeacon
Shipmate
# 10582
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Posted
quote: Originally posted by Gee D: In parts of Queensland and South Australia, but not elsewhere. Perhaps because Lutherans are such a small grouping that they maintain a closed table and a very closed community. Their participation in the Council of Churches is minimal, as it is also in such local ecumenical activities as combined carol services. With all that, it's impossible for an outsider to know of any variations in churchmanship.
Lutherans up here as well - they had control of the missions in Central Australia, and have a college up here in Darwin.
-------------------- 'All the same, it may be that I am wrong; what I take for gold and diamonds may be only a little copper and glass.'
Posts: 506 | From: Top End | Registered: Oct 2005
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