Living Church Essays on South Carolina (I): Jesse Zink–Why Provinces Matter

As in Scripture, so also in ecclesiology: the pernicious hermeneutic of self-justification remains a constant temptation. This is regrettable. Ecclesiology is not a minor administrative matter that can be casually tossed aside. It is part of the core good news Christians have to proclaim. In a globalizing world that is dominated by discord and fracture, the Church makes the counter-cultural claim that in baptism we come to belong to the body of Christ. No other entity is shaped by a common willingness to die daily with Christ and be raised with him who is the author of true and abundant life. We believe we belong, and that this is good news. Anglicans work out the implications of this radical claim in the constellation of parishes, dioceses, provinces, networks, and institutions that comprise our global Communion.

The dispute in South Carolina could provide an opportunity ”” yet unrealized ”” to think seriously about the ecclesiological and theological convictions underlying Anglican churches. On that note, we might welcome the recent call in these pages for a retreat on the topic, organized by seminary deans. Prayerfully and reverently, one hopes, Anglicans may yet learn together to honor our theological convictions in our ecclesiological structures.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * South Carolina, - Anglican: Analysis, Ecclesiology, Episcopal Church (TEC), TEC Conflicts, TEC Conflicts: South Carolina, Theology

3 comments on “Living Church Essays on South Carolina (I): Jesse Zink–Why Provinces Matter

  1. MichaelA says:

    What a bizarre article – the author acknowledges that Dio South Carolina has stated that it is likely in time to affiliate with other Anglicans, yet then proceeds to make a number of adverse comments based on the assumption that it is never going to affiliate with anyone else!

    “It takes three bishops to ordain a new bishop.”

    There is no absolute rule to that effect. In any case, I suspect Dio South Carolina could call on dozens of Anglican bishops not only willing but very eager to assist.

  2. Cennydd13 says:

    Obviously, they’re in no hurry, and they’ll do what they think is best for them.

  3. CSeitz-ACI says:

    This essayist misses the point that “extra-provincial” in the present period does not refer to the cases he lists, but emerges in the context of our conflicts and was proposed as a way forward by the Windsor Continuation Group. It is a category overseen by a primatial committee. We have information on this at ACI. Incidentally, even the PB of TEC supported it.