Two churches examine shared ministries: dialogue with United church began in 2003.Nearly 30 years after the Anglican and United churches broke off merger talks, the two denominations are again discussing closer ties--but a merger is not on the table. "It's still in an exploratory phase, a problem-solving phase," said Canon Alyson Barnett-Cowan, director of faith, worship and ministry with the Anglican Church of Canada. "It's aimed at getting to understand each other better and to co-operate better in shared ministry," said Rev. Robert Mills, a retired United Church of Canada United Church of Canada, Protestant denomination formed in 1925 by the union of the Methodist, Congregational, and Presbyterian churches in Canada. A large number of Presbyterian congregations, however, remain outside the union. minister and co-chair of the dialogue group. This spring, the group's next meeting will coincide with a national conference on shared ministry to be held April 18 to 21 in Saskatoon Saskatoon (săskət n`), city (1991 pop. 186,058), S central Sask., Canada, on the South Saskatchewan River. , sponsored by the Prairie Centre for Ecumenism ecumenismMovement toward unity or cooperation among the Christian churches. The first major step in the direction of ecumenism was the International Missionary Conference of 1910, a gathering of Protestants. . Nationally, some 50 parishes (many of them in small communities in the West) operate under shared ministry, where a clergyperson of one denomination Denomination The stated value found on financial instruments. Notes: This term applies to most financial instruments with monetary values. The denomination for bonds and securities would be face value or par value. oversees congregations of both. "We have no common national policy on shared ministry, no national rules. For instance, do you use grape juice or wine (at the eucharist)? Do you participate in synod SYNOD. An ecclesiastical assembly. ?" said Ms. Barnett-Cowan. "One of the things we are looking at is seeing if a shared ministry is fully shared. There is still a problem with a United church minister appointed to a shared ministry if the Anglican bishop An Anglican Bishop is a bishop in the Anglican church, either in the British Isles or beyond. Anglican Bishops
"We are also trying to understand each other's theology. We're discussing sacramental sacramental, in the Roman Catholic Church, aid to devotion that is not a sacrament. Sacramentals are commonly divided into six classes: prayer, anointing, eating, confession, giving, and blessings. theology--why we do the things we do sacramentally--and see if we could come up with some kind of agreement similar to what the Anglican and Lutheran churches came up with," he said. The committee is also discussing ecumenical theological education, meeting with faculty members and examining how students come to understand the other's tradition. In 2001, the Anglican church and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada The Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada (ELCIC) (French: Eglise Evangelique Lutherienne au Canada) is Canada's largest Lutheran denomination, with 182,077 baptized members in 624 congregations. agreed to enter a closer relationship called Full Communion Full communion is a term used in Christian ecclesiology to describe relations between two distinct Christian communities or Churches that, while maintaining some separateness of identity, recognise each other as sharing the same communion and the same essential doctrines. , recognizing each other's clergy and sacraments and increasing communication and involvement. The discussions leading up to that agreement influenced the Anglican-United relationship, said Ms. Barnett-Cowan. "Around 1998 or '99, Peter Wyatt, the ecumenical officer for the United Church said he felt as if his nose was pressed against the glass (watching the Anglican-Lutheran talks)." Some exploratory talks took place between Anglicans and United church leaders in shared ministry around the country and they recommended a continuing process, which was approved by both national churches. The current dialogue, which began in February 2003, is the first formal set of conversations between the two since the Plan of Union (which would have seen a new church emerge with a new name such as the Church of Christ in Canada) collapsed in 1975 due to opposition from Anglican bishops. That process had still left some scars, as three people on the eight-person discussion group were involved with their churches in 1975. One of them was Mr. Mills. "The Anglican bishops had difficulties with the thought of ordination by anyone other than a bishop," he recalled. "In the United church, the conference ordains. It is a conciliar con·cil·i·ar adj. Of, relating to, or generated by a council: a conciliar appointment made by the governor; conciliar edicts. system versus an episcopal system. It was difficult for those two systems to come together." When the current talks started, Ms. Barnett-Cowan said, "we heard that they felt betrayed when the Anglican bishops pulled the plug. People said they were sad that we (the two churches) hadn't had much of a relationship. The United church had felt isolated when they went through their wrangling over homosexuality." However, larger issues came to the fore. "There was a feeling that we share in the Canadian reality: a lot of people don't go to church, it's a multi-faith reality--maybe we could help each other," she said. |
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