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Martyred for the Gospel

Martyred for the Gospel
The burning of Tharchbishop of Cant. D. Tho. Cranmer in the town dich at Oxford, with his hand first thrust into the fyre, wherwith he subscribed before. [Click on the picture to see Cranmer's last words.]

Daily Bible Verse

Showing posts with label The Demise of the Reformed Episcopal Church. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Demise of the Reformed Episcopal Church. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Do You Have a Dog in the Fight? The PCA, the REC and the Federal Vision

"I can take two substances that struggle in the crucible, and, by the mystic processes of the art I have learned, can make them combine in perfect peace. But here there is no possible accord. If the doctrine of justification by faith in the blood of Jesus, is the truth of God, then justification by sacraments is a lie, whose author is the Father of lies. There is no possible ground on which to stand between the two. If the one is true, the other is false."  -- Bishop Charles Cheney, Reformed Episcopal Church


Beloved, while I was very diligent to write to you concerning our common salvation, I found it necessary to write to you exhorting you to contend earnestly for the faith which was once for all delivered to the saints. (Jude 1:3 NKJ)


I do not read everything that comes to me by way of headlines from the Aquila Report.  However, every now and then something catches my attention.  Today I saw an article from a minister who spent 40 years in the Presbyterian Church in America and then transferred his credentials to the Reformed Episcopal Church.  His name is William H. Smith.  He says of his decision:

Some may think that I jumped from one frying pan, if not into the fire, at least into another frying pan. I would not disagree. But I am used to being in the minority. I remain content with my decision. Moreover, thanks to the graciousness of the interim rector and a small REC congregation I am getting opportunities for ministry on Sundays, assisting in the liturgy and sometimes preaching.  William H. Smith, "I Don’t Have a Dog in the PCA Fight: But That Doesn’t Keep Me from Having an Opinion,"  The Aquila Report.

I would have to agree, except Smith jumped into the fire.  While it is true that the Presbyterian Church in America is supposed to be a distinctly Reformed denomination with the Westminster Confession of Faith and the Larger and Shorter Catechisms as its doctrinal standards, the sad truth is that the PCA has officially opted to allow open and self-avowed Federal Visionists like Peter Leithart, Jeffrey Myers, and others to continue as teaching elders.  (See:  Green Baggins:  The Leithart Verdict).  This is nothing new.  Around 2007 Sean Gerety wrote a booklet entitled, Can the Presbyterian Church in America be Saved?  Although Leithart was exonerated by the Northwest Presbytery, the hope was that the exoneration would be examined by the Standing Judicial Committee and overturned.  At the last General Assembly, the SJC voted not to overrule the Northwest Presbytery's decision.   Thus, the GA and SJC ruled to allow full blown Federal Vision heresy to be taught openly and without discipline in the PCA.  The PCA is no longer a Reformed denomination since the Reformed tradition says that the mark of a true congregation and denomination is church discipline.  When a so-called "Reformed" denomination no longer exercises that discipline, then it is no longer Reformed.  It is an Arminian, broad church, or Federal Vision denomination.  Lane Keister pretty much summed it up with this assessment:
To say that I am disappointed in the decision would be a gross understatement. Aghast is more appropriate here. We are not talking about narrow Reformed versus broad Reformed. We are talking about evangelicalism versus what amounts to Roman Catholic teaching. At this point, it will not matter if the SJC decides to try to distance itself from Leithart’s theology. They will have allowed his theology to exist. This decision is completely and utterly wrong. The record of the case should have been enough all by itself to convince anyone truly confessional that Leithart’s theology does not fall within its boundaries. It does not fall within evangelicalism, let alone Reformed theology.  Lane Keister:  The Leithart Verdict.

Amusingly, William H. Smith argues that the PCA at its formation was never a confessional church; it was merely a broad church that functioned in real life that way and strict subscription was never part of the official doctrine.  He admits, however, that the Address at the founding of the denomination says otherwise:

Here is the reality. The Address cannot be read literally as descriptive of the PCA at its founding. The more recent letter reflects the PCA as it was and is. If one goes only by the words of the Address, then the PCA intended to be a thoroughly Reformed denomination holding strictly to the Westminster Standards. But the words of the Address and the reality of the views and practices of both the majority of the founders and the majority of the original ministers are two different things.  William H. Smith, "I Don't Have a Dog in the Fight."

Smith then points out that:

But the address did not reflect the real operating (as distinct from formal) theology of the majority of the founders of the PCA. Your operating theology is what you believe that makes a difference in what you preach and how you go about your ministry. The PCA was formed by conservative men most of whom were educated at Columbia Theological Seminary and who were part of the broadly evangelical coalition on the right of the PCUS. That broadly evangelical group had a “mix” of theological views that included such theological influences as dispensationalism, Finneyism, higher life pietism, and Westminster Calvinism. The majority of those who were Reformed and who were part of that coalition were not the fire-eating TR types. Nor were they the Puritan applicatory preaching sort. Rather they were Southern Presbyterian teaching ministers.

The main things that these men with diverse views and practices agreed on were that the PCUS had gone too far in the direction of theological liberalism, that the Bible is inerrant and infallible, and that people are lost and need a Savior (hence the commitment to evangelism and missions). From the beginning the PCA was mission not theologically driven. It was never a strict subscription denomination. Those who formed the minority on the hard right of the PCA were almost entirely young men who had been educated at Reformed Theological Seminary (those who sat together in one of the wings at old Briarwood and voted together at the first General Assembly). They held to Westminster Calvinism, Southern Presbyterian polity, Puritan experiential piety, and Kuyperian cultural engagement.  Smith, Ibid.

With this sort of logic almost anyone can equivocate (lie) and remain in good standing in any denomination.  One has to ask why the PCA voted for full subscription (with few exceptions) to the Westminster Standards if in fact it never enforced Reformed confessionalism and Reformed discipline of those doctrinal standards at its founding? If in fact the PCA only required the adherence to a broad consensus to an opposition to theological liberalism, the upholding of Biblical inspiration and inerrancy, and the evangelization of the lost why bother with requiring ministers to uphold the system of doctrine summarized from the Scriptures in the Westminster Confession?  According to Smith, the PCA was never Reformed but was always a broad Evangelical denomination with few doctrinal standards.  It seems to me that William H. Smith has a dog in the fight and his dog is in sympathy with the Federal Vision error.  That's because the church to which William H. Smith transferred his credentials caved in to the Federal Vision error long before the PCA was exposed as having caved to that view.


It can be easily demonstrated as far back as the 1980s that the Reformed Episcopal Church had rejected its own Declaration of Principles and its reason for being.  A book detailing some of the departures of the REC toward high church Anglo-Catholicism is called: For the Union of Evangelical Christendom: The Irony of the Reformed Episcopalians, by Allen C. Guelzo, (University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1994), 391 pp.  I was for a brief time ordained as a deacon with the REC around 2002-2003.  I resigned my credentials after it became apparent that the REC was planning a concordat with a high church continuing Anglican denomination (read Anglo-Catholic) called the Anglican Province in America.  (See:  The Departure of the Reformed Episcopal Church from Evangelical and Protestant Reformed Theology).  There were plans for the REC to join in full communion with the APA until the opportunity arose for the REC to join up with the newly founded Anglican Church in North America, another high church Anglo-Catholic denomination formed after the consecration of Gene Robinson, an open and practicing homosexual, as bishop of New Hampshire in The Episcopal Church in 2003.  The APA declined to join up with the ACNA due to the issue of women's ordination.  Thus the REC is in concordat with the APA but in full communion with the ACNA since the ACNA was founded in 2009


As a side note, Dr. James I. Packer and his church left the Canadian Anglican Church and joined up with the ACNA as well.  Of course, Dr. Packer endorses Evangelicals and Catholics Together and the Gift of Salvation, as well as the Manhattan Declaration.  Sadly, even Ligon Duncan and Albert Mohler compromised and signed the Manhattan Declaration, a clear violation of the Reformed doctrinal standards.

But I digress.  The truth is the Reformed Episcopal Church is much worse off than the Presbyterian Church in America, as bad as the PCA has become.  There are still very conservative presbyteries in the PCA.  That cannot be said for the REC, which for all practical purposes is a full blown Anglo-Catholic denomination with no connection to its historical roots.  The Declaration of Principles was formulated with the stipulation that it could never be amended, edited, or rescinded.  However, the REC bishops got around that minor detail by utilizing a Tractarian tactic employed originally by John Henry Newman.  Basically, the REC presiding bishops have written commentary on the DoP to reinterpret the document in such a way that it is explained away as if it were in full agreement with the Romish tendencies of the Anglo-Papists and high church Laudians.  You can easily see that by reading the DoP on the REC website.  Reading the historical context of the DoP leads one to believe that the REC has not gone high church.  But this is all explained away in other documents posted there.  For example, during the time when the REC and APA were planning to unite in full communion the Anglican Statement of Belief and Practice was formulated.  That statement rejects the Declaration of Principles and the Protestant understanding of the Thirty-nine Articles of Religion in toto:

. . . Scripture given by God is, therefore, supreme in its authority to declare God’s will.  Similarly, the Church may not teach anything as necessary for salvation that cannot be proven out of Scripture; nor has the Church any authority to reject or alter any of Scripture’s teaching on faith or morality. Likewise, no revelation in Scripture concerning God the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost or his plan for human redemption is susceptible to change by any human agency. There are, however, rites and ceremonies that are in themselves indifferent, which need not require biblical sanction but which should not contradict the clear meaning of Scripture.

Tradition: Just as Scripture contains all things necessary for salvation and the promise that the Holy Spirit will lead the Church into all truth, it is axiomatic that the faith once delivered to the saints has been believed and practiced at all times, in all places and by all in the Church.[10] It does not follow from these principles that the Church on earth may never err, as if it were infallible, but rather, that it is indefectible, and that in it is found a universal consensus in faith and practice through time and across the earth.

This consensus constitutes what St. Paul calls tradition.[11] In substance, the tradition of the Church is none other than the rule of faith as discerned in Scripture. In practice, tradition also refers to the teaching of the faith through time. In neither sense of the word does tradition indicate a source of authority separate from or parallel to Holy Scripture. Nor does it indicate a source of authority equal to that of Scripture. Rather, Scripture provides the standard for tradition.

Tradition thus has a derivative authority for Christians, and only then when tradition is understood aright. What Jesus calls the "traditions" of men are practices of human devising, which cannot bind Christian conscience and can often separate man from grace.[12] What St. Paul calls tradition, the apostolic teaching and the process of preaching and receiving it, constitutes tradition as a source of authority. Understood in this way, tradition is not mere human custom.  Taken materially, it is the presence of the Holy Ghost in the Church over time. Taken formally, it is the evidence of this presence as found, for example, in the three historic Creeds,[13] the first four undisputed Ecumenical Councils, the Fathers of the early Church, the range of Anglican divines, the historic Books of Common Prayer and the Thirty-nine Articles of Religion. The process of discerning tradition in this latter sense involves bringing this evidence before the bar of Scripture, where it is cleared and kept, convicted and discarded or corrected. Those traditions that reach back to Christ himself or to his Apostles brook no change. Because tradition has corporate and historical dimensions to it, it is of higher authority than reason (which may be regarded as a faculty of the individual Christian). Similarly, tradition is a faculty of the whole Church, as beliefs, practices, modes of spirituality, and theological in sights are given special honor and reverence by the wider Church or particular churches.   REC:  Anglican Belief and Practice

It is clear from reading this contradictory document that on the one hand the REC upholds the "supreme" authority of Scripture.  But one cannot avoid noticing that Scripture is not the "only" infallible rule for faith and practice.  The REC gets around this commitment to Scripture by appealing to the fallibility of the church.  Of course, even if the church is fallible, it is "indefectible."  One has to see that the loose way of defining infallibility and indefectibility enables the equivocation of terms that are essentially synonyms.  In fact, the doctrine of the indefectibility of the church is a papist doctrine!

THE INDEFECTIBILITY OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH

Compiled by Pauly Fongemie

The Catholic Encyclopedia of 1917 gives the following definition of the Church's indefectibility:


"By this term is signified, not merely that the Church will persist to the end of time, but further, that it will be preserved unimpaired in its essential characteristics. The Church can never undergo any constitutional change, which will make it, as a social organism, something different from what it was originally. It can never become corrupt in faith or in morals; nor can it ever lose the Apostolic hierarchy, or the Sacraments through which Christ communicates grace to men." 

<>"Simon, Simon, behold Satan has desired to have you, that he may sift you as wheat. But I have prayed for thee that thy faith may not fail; and when once thou hast turned again, strengthen thy brethren." (Lk. 22:31-33)  

Jesus chose Peter to be the first Pope: he was impetuous, vacillating, courageous and cowardly all at the same time.  He was probably the strongest and, paradoxically, the weakest of all the Apostles, yet even though he denied our Lord three times he ended by being crucified upside down in contrition. Peter in the end proved that he truly was "the Rock". Peter is the perfect example to demonstrate that Christ meant what He said, His Church is indefectible.

The Daily Catholic, October 2, 1999  [The Indefectibility of the Church].
The REC statement on Anglican Belief and Practice is a case study in Federal Vision and Anglo-Catholic theology.  While the Federal Visionist still operates surreptitiously and keeps up the front of being a Reformed Presbyterian, the Anglo-Papists are more straightforward with their equivocations.  The REC pretends to uphold the doctrine of sola Scriptura and the Declaration of Principles.  But their own words convict them of rejecting those self same doctrines. 

How strange that the original REC rejected the 1662 Book of Common Prayer and rewrote the 39 Articles of Religion because they saw in these documents "Romanizing tendencies."  I don't think so but I do believe the Tractarians revised the interpretation of the plain teaching of the Articles and the 1662 BCP in order to move the Anglican Communion back toward Rome.  Charles Cheney, one of the founding bishops of the REC, however, said that just as oil and water do not mix, neither does Tractarianism and Evangelical/Reformed Protestant theology mix:



I stand here to-night, and I make the assertion without the fear of contradiction, that the gospel that my dear brother (who has said some hard things about me) preaches in Trinity Church, is as utterly irreconcilable with that which is preached in the cathedral on West Washington street, as these two systems of astronomy. They are utterly and wholly and radically different from each other. Now I can make discordant elements in chemistry blend together.

Like the Arve and the Rhone, like the Ottawa and the St. Lawrence, the same external boundaries may indeed contain them, but their waters refuse to mingle.  Sermon:  The Reformed Episcopal Church, by Bishop Charles Cheney, founding bishop of the Reformed Episcopal Church.  [See also:  Project Canterbury:  The Reformed Episcopal Church.]

It is clear from the statements of Bishop Cheney that he fully understands the law of contradiction.  Anglo-Catholicism and Reformation Anglicanism are diametrically contradictory of each other and there is no excluded middle or middle ground between the two systems of theology.  William H. Smith is correct.  He has jumped from the frying pan into the fire.  While there is still a remote hope that God will discipline the Presbyterian Church in America and cause its leadership to repent, that seems even more remote in the case of the REC.  The REC has gone completely apostate.  I seriously doubt there are remnant congregations in the REC that still adhere to Calvinist and Reformed theology, though I concede that I could be wrong.

It seems obvious to me that Smith's "dog in the fight" is a relativizing one.  The agenda of the Federal Visionists and the Anglo-Catholics is to lead Evangelicals back to Rome.  This is an unavoidable conclusion in my opinion.  Smith wants to know where the traditional Reformed folks will go?  Well, God tells us in the Scriptures that God always reserves to Himself a remnant who remain faithful to the promises of the Gospel and the authority of Holy Scripture:

Because you have plundered many nations, All the remnant of the people shall plunder you, Because of men's blood And the violence of the land and the city, And of all who dwell in it. (Habakkuk 2:8 NKJ)

Isaiah also cries out concerning Israel: "Though the number of the children of Israel be as the sand of the sea, The remnant will be saved. (Romans 9:27 NKJ)

Even so then, at this present time there is a remnant according to the election of grace. (Romans 11:5 NKJ)

Jesus himself, the shepherd, shall pull the remnant from the lion's mouth:

Thus says the LORD: "As a shepherd takes from the mouth of a lion Two legs or a piece of an ear, So shall the children of Israel be taken out Who dwell in Samaria-- In the corner of a bed and on the edge of a couch! (Amos 3:12 NKJ)

See also:  The Auburn Affirmation Heresy


Wednesday, April 25, 2007

The Departure of the Reformed Episcopal Church from Evangelical and Protestant Reformed Theology

Front row: Jim Reber, Charlie Ray, Willie Hill, Canon Mocke.  Back row:  ? Kevin Burke, Bishop James West

The photo is from my ordination as a deacon by Bishop James West, of the Reformed Episcopal Church around 2002. On the left is Jim Reber, presbyter. I am standing to right of Jim Reber.  Holding the shepherd's staff is Kevin Burke, deacon. Center, James West, bishop of the Southeast Diocese of the REC. On the right, Willie Hill, presbyter and pastor of New Israel REC in Charleston, SC. Photo was taken at the historic chapel of Good Shepherd TEC in Maitland, Florida, where Trinity REC was meeting at the time. I am kneeling in the middle.

[Editor's note:  I am no longer a Reformed Episcopalian.  I align completely with the Westminster Confession of Faith and the Larger and Shorter Catechisms.  February 12, 2025.]






















At the risk of repeating myself, I want to re-emphasize the situation with the Reformed Episcopal Church, which is essentially committing apostasy by merging with an Anglo-Catholic and Romish continuing Anglican denomination called the Anglican Province of America, the presiding bishop of which is Walter Grundorf. I have recently been in contact by e-mail with the presiding bishop of the Anglican Orthodox Church, the Most Reverend Jerry L. Ogles. The Anglican Orthodox Church is very Evangelical and low church according to Bishop Ogles and furthermore, the AOC separated from the Episcopal Church USA in 1963 over doctrinal issues and moral issues that have only gotten worse. To my surprise, Bishop Ogles informed me that "Wally" Grundorf was once ordained as a deacon with the Anglican Orthodox Church but was defrocked by Bishop James Parker Dees when it became obvious that Deacon Grundorf was intending to take one of the AOC parishes into Romish doctrines. (Grundorf is now the presiding bishop over the Anglican Province of America).

These developments between the Reformed Episcopal Church and the Anglican Province of America are alarming to me, and I feel that I was terribly misled by the Rev. James Reber of the REC, who was at that time the pastor of a missionary parish of the REC in Maitland, Florida. Reverend Reber presented himself to me as a "Reformed" person, i.e. a Calvinist. I was later to learn that such was far from the truth. Rev. Reber told me up front that he was a "theonomist," which I totally disagree with. I let him know in no uncertain terms that I didn't agree with that schismatic Reformed teaching, but I could tolerate it provided his views were not extremist. We agreed to disagree and Rev. Reber helped me to obtain orders as a deacon with the Reformed Episcopal Church so that I could serve with him and Kevin Burke, the other deacon at Trinity Reformed Episcopal Church, which had an active membership of maybe 15 or 20 people.

Initially, Rev. Reber had told me that the REC was thoroughly Reformed and that he himself had been ordained with the Orthodox Presbyterian Church prior to returning to the REC, after having earned his master of divinity through the Reformed Episcopal Seminary in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. I read the Reformed Episcopal Church's Declaration of Principles statement, which is supposed to be unchangeable according to their original canons in the formation of the denomination in 1873 under Bishop David Cummins, and I read For the Union of Evangelical Christendom: The Irony of the Reformed Episcopalians, by Allen C. Guelzo, (University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1994), 391 pp. I was convinced from the historical background information that the Reformed Episcopal Church was essentially Protestant, Reformed (i.e. moderately Calvinistic), and Evangelical. However, as time went on, my alarm bells kept going off, especially after attending the Southeast Diocese synod around 2003 where I learned that Bishop Royal Grote was hosting a representative of the Anglican Province of America who would speak briefly from the platform in one of the evening prayer services.

To my chagrin I was to discover that the REC and the APA were in process of a merger, which Reverend Reber downplayed to me as much as possible in the beginning, knowing that I was an avowed Calvinist and thoroughly Protestant. I think Rev. Reber mistakenly thought he could persuade me to accept the merger and maybe even persuade me in the Anglo-Catholic direction. It was only after I was ordained that I became aware of this mass apostasy on the part of the Reformed Episcopal Church, which was in direct opposition to their reason of being in the first place. According to all accounts, the Reformed Episcopal Church was formed after Evangelicals in the Protestant Episcopal Church were openly persecuted and forced out by Anglo-Catholic bishops in the PEC in the late 19th century. One need only read the Declaration of Principles of the REC to become aware of this.

I should have paid more attention to Allen C. Guelzo's comments in For the Union of Evangelical Christendom:

  • What is interesting in this regard is to note how some Reformed Episcopalians, without any apparent prompting, have undergone some of the same changes, and followed virtually the same arc of reconciliation with their Anglican identity, as their Evangelical counterparts in the Church of England and the Episcopal Church. For just as the 1970s saw the pendulum of enthusiasm swing in Evangelical favor in England and the Episcopal Church, so in the 1980s something of the same resurgence of Anglican interest and life occurred in the Reformed Episcopal Church. Reformed Episcopalians began showing up at meetings of Anglican traditionalists in Fairfield, Connecticut, in 1985 and 1986; in 1988, the General Convention of the Episcopal Church sanctioned the opening of discussions; and in 1989, the Episcopal Synod of America (a joint venture of Episcopalian Evangelicals and traditionalist Anglo-Catholics) welcomed a Reformed Episcopalian onto their platform. Even the rochet and chimere for Reformed Episcopal bishops, and the surplice and scarf for the other clergy, have surfaced within the New York and Philadelphia Synod. (Page 334).
And on the previous page, Guelzo points out that despite the Reformed Episcopal denials of apostolic succession, for all practical purposes the REC bishops have continued to follow the ordinal of 1662 for consecrating bishops and have kept thorough records to make sure that succession lines could be traced (page 333). Guelzo is almost prophetic when he makes the statement that the Reformed Episcopalians return to Anglicanism might be too late since they might have nothing to return home to:

  • The Reformed Episcopalians may well have come back to Anglicanism only to discover that no one is quite sure what Anglicanism is. That could possibly mean that there is no longer any viable reason for Episcopalians to see the Reformed Episcopalians as being outside of official Anglicanism, but it could just as well mean that the Reformed Episcopalians have lost so much of their original raison d'etre that they no longer see any reason to remain outside official Anglicanism, or it could mean that there really is no Anglicanism left to come back to. (Page 335).
The Reformed Episcopal Church had been slowly losing membership since the 1930s and by some estimates had less than 6,000 total communicant members in the mid 1990s. According to Guelzo, the REC had flirted with fundamentalism and its inherent anti-intellectualism, dispensationalism, Calvinism, theonomy and reconstructionism (page 336). But the most recent "-ism," says Guelzo, is "Anglicanism." I think what he really means is Anglo-Catholicism since this is the direction that the REC is headed with the coming merger with the Anglican Province of America. Already the REC and APA have a concordat with full communion between its ministers whereby any REC or APA minister can pastor a parish within the other's denomination. In fact, after I was forced to leave the ministry at Trinity Reformed Episcopal Church the parish collapsed and Reber was forced to leave because virtually all of the members of Trinity Reformed Episcopal Church had left, apparently because they too were uncomfortable with the Anglo-Catholic leanings of the REC. To confirm my suspicions, I later learned that Rev. Reber was appointed as rector at an Anglican Province of America parish in Kissimmee, Florida.


Moreover, the straw that broke the camel's back between Rev. Reber and me was the issue of apostolic succession and my vows to "obey" my bishop. I told "Jim" my views on apostolic succession were those of the Evangelical, low church side of things whereby apostolic succession is only valid as apostolic doctrine as recorded in Holy Scripture is upheld and taught by the bishops who are consecrated. The Reformed and Protestant doctrine is that where the Gospel is rightly preached and the sacraments are rightly administered, there you will find the true local church. This is even mentioned in the Thirty-nine Articles of Religion:

XIX. Of the Church. 

THE visible Church of Christ is a congregation of faithful men, in the which the pure Word of God is preached, and the Sacraments be duly ministered according to Christ's ordinance in all those things that of necessity are requisite to the same.

As the Church of Jerusalem, Alexandria, and Antioch, have erred: so also the Church of Rome hath erred, not only in their living and manner of Ceremonies, but also in matters of Faith. 

Rev. Reber and I had strongly disagreed several times over the issue of theonomy, as it seemed to me that he was trying force me into accepting his views since he several times characterized those who disagreed with him as "antinomians." Thus, to him my views represented a challenge to his newfound conversion to Anglo-Catholic views and to his theonomy. I was surprised therefore when he approached me and told me that I needed to contact Bishop James West immediately to "explain" myself because in his view I had broken my vows given at ordination to "obey the priests and the bishops appointed over me." I quickly pointed out to him that I had done nothing wrong since I had clearly promised to obey the Gospel and those over me so long as they too were in obedience to the one Gospel of Jesus Christ. I made it clear that he was more than welcome to bring formal charges of heresy against me if he thought I was doctrinally wrong on any point. He refused to do so and said that if I didn't contact the bishop, he would take action. At that point I saw that he was determined that I should either agree with his views on theonomy, reconstruction and Anglo-Catholicism, or I should voluntarily leave or be forced to leave based on his false charges. It was then that I realized I would never fit with the Reformed Episcopal Church and offered my resignation.


I for one will never compromise the Gospel of Jesus Christ, the same Gospel for which our English Reformers were burned at the stake, including Cranmer, Ridley, Latimer and a host of others. I gladly bear the reproach of apostates and heretics who have forsaken the gospel for the sake of man's traditions and man's approval. It has become increasingly obvious that the Reformed Episcopal Church is in agreement with the Anglo-Catholic denial of justification by faith alone as it is laid out so clearly in Article XI. Of the Justification of Man.


While I greatly appreciate the 1662 Book of Common Prayer and the sacraments of the Anglican Reformed faith, I am not opposed to Protestant churches which adhere strictly to their traditional roots and their confession of faith while preaching the true Gospel of Jesus Christ and administering the sacraments in a proper manner. My true leanings are Calvinistic and I do believe in the complete sovereignty of God who has a purpose for everything that happens to us in this life. Therefore, I have a general commitment to most of the Reformed Confessions of Faith with The Thirty-Nine Articles of Religion being the primary and foremost of them. I greatly admire the Westminster Standards and the Heidelberg Catechism.


Where God will take me from this point I do not know. But the one thing I do know is that God cannot fail to keep His visible church intact until the return of Christ. The gates of hell shall not prevail against His church, no matter how many former believers depart the faith for something less than apostolic doctrine as it is recorded once for all in Holy Scripture.

May the peace of God be with you all,

Charlie

(P.S. Sadly, Bishop James West has since passed away. I truly hope that his heart was right with God. I believe it was since he told me himself that he was not comfortable with the Anglo-Catholic side of things. However, I could be wrong since it seems the denomination is determined to part from the Gospel and join with Romish Anglo-Catholics who deny all 5 of the solas of the English and Continental Reformation).

Addendum:  The Reformed Episcopal Church no longer adheres to the plain teaching of the Declaration of Principles but has given them an Anglo-Catholic  revisionist spin.



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