Originally posted by Rhetorician:
Brother Matt Black,
I believe if you explain the principle of "Via Media" the Worldwide Anglican Communion has always used as their guiding principle it may help unknowing Baptists to understand a bit better!?
Cheers!
sdg!
rd
Ah, would that be Richard Hooker's idea, perchance?
The Church of England, which is kind of the 'Mother Church' of the Anglican Communion, has always seen itself as a 'middle way' between the City on the Hill (Rome) and the City in the Valley (Geneva), and is therefore properly described as Catholic
and Reformed (see the text of the Book of Common Prayer as a classic example of this). At times it has been more one than the other and right from the start had both of those 'wings' in it, eg: the Laudians of the 17th century and Oxford Movement Tractarians of the 19th representing the Anglo-Catholic end of the spectrum and, through the 'Branch Theory' of Apostolic Succession, seeing themselves as spiritual descendants of the ECFs and as valid Reformed successors to the medieval Catholic Church, on the one hand, and the Puritans of the 16th and 17th centuries, Wesley and Co in the 18th, and the Tory evangelicals of the 19th representing the evo-Reformed wing on the other hand. The liberals are very much the new kids on the block as far as the 'wings' are concerned and have only really risen to prominence in the last 40 years or so (anyone here old enough, apart from Jim

to remember +John Robinson's
Honest to God ?)
[ETA - ironically, it tends to be the CofE churches over here which use the traditional liturgy ie: the Book of Common Prayer, which are more liberal/ nominal. The Anglo-Catholic liturgy tends to be smells'n'bells and virtually indistinguishable from the Roman Catholic Mass (but the communicants tend to be very devout), whereas the average evangelical congregation is happy-clappy and indistinguishable from the average evo Baptist service (albeit they wheel out a member of the clergy to 'do' communion); neither can be considered 'traditional' CofE...