[Magdalen] TEC talk
anthony clavier
anthonyfmclavier at gmail.com
Mon Oct 21 18:49:14 UTC 2019
It was proscribed as Jacobite, no more than four communicants could gather
for worship and the CofE established its own parishes in some cities. It
allied itself to the Non Juring bishops in England with whom it was in
communion. There's a wonderful painting in St Mary's Cathedral, Edinburgh
of imprisoned clergy pouring water through barred windows onto the heads of
babies held aloft by their mothers.
I think you will find the available histories of the SEC all agree on this,
a history of which they are very proud.
+Tony
On Mon, Oct 21, 2019, 12:25 PM Ferdinand von Prondzynski (Emeritus) <
f.von-prondzynski at rgu.ac.uk> wrote:
> Tony Clavier wrote:
>
> > When Samuel Seabury was consecrated the SEC was not in communion with the
> > See of Canterbury
>
> Is that really so? What is your source for that? It is certainly not my
> understanding. The Episcopal Church was not under Canterbury's authority,
> but was I believe in communion with it.
>
> Ferdinand
>
>
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