Sentences with phrase «faithful anglican»

She is a faithful Anglican pursuing a degree in medieval Spanish poetry.
In a letter to the Bishops of the Anglican Church of Australia, he wrote that he felt the need to» stand in solidarity with faithful Anglicans across the globe» especially «for those who are marginalised because of the doctrinal unfaithfulness of their bishops».
Lee McMunn, AMiE's Mission Director, said: «We know that many faithful Anglicans remain within the structures of the Church of England.
GAFCON hopes Canon Lines will «plant dynamic churches all over Scotland» and recognise «the pastoral need» for «faithful Anglicans».

Not exact matches

Word of Benedict's resignation — the first for a sitting pope in nearly 600 years — reportedly stunned the world's Catholic faithful, many of whom believed the German - born pontiff still had years of stymieing female advancement in Church roles, opposing stem cell research, and inflaming tensions with Jews, Muslims, and Anglicans left in him.
One could believe that Lewis was a theologically idiotic, reactionary old misogynist who couldn't write his way out of a wet paper bag, whose Narnia tales are a disgraceful blight on the landscape of children's literature, whose Aslan is a blasphemous parody of Our Lord, and — believing all that — one could still be a faithful Christian, even a devoted Anglican.
Jesus here is a «faithful minister of God's word and sacraments,» in the words of an Anglican prayer for ordained ministers.
[13] This is his commentary on «they went out from us, but they were not of us» (I John 2:19) It is a point which Newman makes in Difficulties of Anglicans and returns to in On Consulting the Faithful in Matters of Doctrine,
New City Press New York 2008 [14] Difficulties of Anglicans I pp 52 - 3; On Consulting the Faithful in Matters of Doctrine.Geoffrey Chapman 1961 p. 74.
In response, many faithful Episcopalians have jumped ship to become Catholics, Eastern Orthodox, or Evangelicals, or formed breakaway churches within the Anglican communion, sometimes under the authority of bishops in Africa and other places where traditional Christian moral beliefs remain intact.
Divided as it is, the Church has spoken with one voice upon certain ultimate principles, whether the voice was that of an Orthodox metropolitan of Athens, a cardinal archbishop of Munich, or a Lutheran primate of Norway; an Anglican archbishop or a Roman Pope — or of many less conspicuous but not less faithful witnesses, some of whom paid dearly for their witness.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z