A
ANGLICAN
The word "Anglican" just means "English" or
"of England." It is rarely used to describe anything besides
the Anglican Church, and there it just means that our branch of
the church began in England. In England, the Anglican Church is
referred to as the Church of England.
ANGLICAN COMMUNION
For full detail see the Anglican
Communion page devoted to an explanation of this term. It is
a concept by which Anglican churches are unified: a church either
is, or is not, a member of the Anglican Communion. Those that are
not are often called "continuing" churches, and sometimes
called "breakaway" churches.
APOSTOLIC SUCCESSION
The original bishops were by legend consecrated by one of the 12
apostles, to be their successors. These successor bishops later
consecrated more bishops, so that there would always be bishops.
This chain of consecration is called "apostolic succession."
There is documentation tracing the chain of consecration back to
the early 2nd century, to people who were no doubt the successors
of the Twelve, but no scholarly proof exists to document the chain
of succession during the very earliest days of the church.
See also "BISHOP."
ARCHBISHOP
An Archbishop is a Bishop who has additional
responsibilities. Some archbishops have "metropolitan authority"
over other bishops, while other archbishops are simply the chairman
of the House of Bishops, with no special powers. This term is becoming
less widely used, in favor of the term "Presiding Bishop."
ARCHDEACONRY
See "Deanery".
ARCHDIOCESE
The word "archdiocese" is not used in the Anglican church.
It is a Roman Catholic word. An Anglican Archbishop is in charge
of a diocese.
AUTONOMOUS CHURCH
An autonomous church is a church that governs itself. The Anglican
Communion consists of about 40 autonomous churches, most of
which are associated with specific countries and are therefore often
called "national churches."
B
BISHOP
A Bishop is a successor to one of the Twelve Apostles, who has
been consecrated by other Bishops. The unbroken chain of consecration
of Bishops reaching back to the Twelve is called Apostolic Succession.
The word "Episcopal" is derived from the Greek word for
"Bishop," which is "Episcopos." The phrase "epi
skopos" in Greek means "over sight." In Latin it
became "episcopus", in Old English it was "biscop,"
which came to be pronounced "bishop" and later spelled
that way too.
BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER
The Book of Common Prayer is the primary source of worship material
and liturgy in the Anglican church. The first Book of Common Prayer
was written in 1549 by Thomas Cranmer. See http://justus.anglican.org/resources/bcp/
for more information.
C
CANON
A Canon, in the singular, is either a law or rule (see below) or
a person. A person referred to as a Canon may be a member of a chapter
or college of priests, typically the chapter of a cathedral. It
is sometimes used as an honorary title bestowed on a person who
is not a priest but who does faithful work in support of the church.
CANONS
The canons of the church are its laws or rules. See the
section on church governance for more information.
CATHEDRAL
A Cathedral is a Church that is the home church, or "see,"
of the bishop of a diocese. Cathedrals are usually administered
by a priest who is referred to as the Dean of that Cathedral. In
some places the Dean of a Cathedral is known instead as its Provost.
A Cathedral is the church that contains the official stall or seat
of the diocesan bishop. This stall is called the throne or
cathedra, from which derives the adjective "cathedral"
as in "cathedral church," which later in common usage
became a noun.
COMMUNION
The word "Communion" has two different but related meanings
here. The most common meaning is as the name of the Christian sacramental
meal, equivalent to the Lord's Supper; often called eucharist.
The second meaning is as part of the phrase Anglican
Communion. The link between these two meanings of the word is
that in order to be "in communion with" someone you must
be willing to share communion with them.
D
DEACON
Being a deacon is the initial level of being ordained in the Anglican
Church. In some churches Deacon is a lay
order; in the Anglican Church, deacons are ordained. Deacons
often have special clerical duties; by tradition the Gospel is read
by the deacon if one is available.
DEANERY
A deanery is an organizational unit that is larger than a parish
and smaller than a diocese. Not every diocese is divided into deaneries,
but some are. If a diocese has more than one bishop,
sometimes each bishop is responsible for a separate deanery.
DIOCESE
The Diocese is the fundamental unit of structure of the Anglican
church. Every diocese is the seat of a Bishop.
In general a diocese contains many parishes
and churches, and normally dioceses are combined into larger administrative
units called Provinces
and National Churches.
E
EPISCOPAL
The Episcopal Church is the official U.S. name for the Anglican
church. It was certainly in use as an unofficial descriptor for
the kind of church that we had, long before there was a need to
have an official name for the church.
After the 1776 war of independence from England, and the subsequent
war in 1812, any word that reminded people of England was unpopular
in the U.S., so the church was called "Episcopal" rather
than "Church of England."
The U.S. is once again friendly with England and the UK, but the
name "Episcopal" has remained in preference to the more-recent
"Anglican." In Scotland the church is also called Episcopal;
this is probably based on times when the Scots noticed that they
were at war with the English, and wishing for similar reasons to
avoid a word that reminded people of England.
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