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The Declaration of Principles
and Their Historic Context
In the 19th Century, major changes occurred
in the Anglican Communion, especially in the Protestant Episcopal Church
in America. As a result of a liberal movement in the previous century (18th),
some began to argue that the English Reformation was wrong and that Anglicanism
should return to a more Medieval Church. To do so, however, meant a significant
departure from historic Episcopalianism. As a result, there was a concern
on the part of others to protect what can be called the Anglicanism of the
English Reformation.
Their view was that liberalism was to
be combated by clearly proclaiming the Good News of salvation through faith
in Christ, by protecting the integrity of the Holy Scriptures, and by preserving
the Prayer Book of Thomas Cranmer, the Archbishop who was martyred for denouncing
certain innovative Roman Catholic doctrines of the Middles Ages.
One evangelical priest in the Protestant
Episcopal Church, the Rev. William Augustus Muhlenberg, attempted to summarize
the core issues for evangelicals in the 19th Century by formulating in essence
what became known to the Reformed Episcopal Church as the Declaration of
Principles.
The Rev. Mr. Muhlenberg was himself
an evangelical who worked in close ecumenical association with the Old Catholic
Church. As such, he was a high church "Gospel Man," which explains why some
evangelicals of his day had a range of liturgical practice, while uniting
around the ancient Reformed Catholic truths. Although he never became a Reformed
Episcopalian, the newly established Reformed Episcopal Church made good use
of his statements.
Some in the latter quarter of the 19th
Century concluded that their beloved Protestant Episcopal Church had so dramatically
changed that they had no alternative but to preserve the old Church by forming
another denomination (though not another church).
In 1873, the Rt. Rev. George David Cummins,
the Assistant Bishop of the Diocese of Kentucky in the Protestant Episcopal
Church, believed he must continue the old Church by becoming the founding
Bishop of the Reformed Episcopal Church, thereby maintaining historic succession
of orders to this very day in the REC.
It was Bishop Cummins who utilized the
Rev. Mr. Muhlenberg's seminal statement that became the Declaration of Principles.
Cummins even wanted him to become a bishop in the REC. Thus, the Declaration
of Principles are the heart of the essential convictions of the Reformed
Episcopal Church.
However, given who the Rev. Mr. Muhlenberg
was, his churchmanship, and what Bishop Cummins said he wanted the Reformed
Episcopal Church to be, the following clarifications should be kept in mind
as the reader attempts to interpret the Declaration of Principles.
First, the opening principle clearly
recognizes Scripture as a primary authoritative document, but not exclusively
so. Holy Scripture was not given in a vacuum apart from the Church, and thus,
the ancient creeds as interpreted by their English commentary, the Thirty-Nine
Articles of Religion, are also authoritative.
Second, the statement on the episcopacy
is straight out of Richard Hooker, the late 16th Century Anglican theologian,
who wrote the classical defense of Anglicanism, The Laws of Ecclesiastical
Polity. Hooker endorsed episcopal polity as rooted in Scripture and
as historically verified by its universal, uncontested acceptance for the
first 1500 years of church history.
Nevertheless, this classical Anglican
resisted being so exclusive as to unchurch those who did not have bishops
(his European Reformed brethren) by denying the validity of their Baptism
or Communion. Those who came later in the 19th Century decided to depart
from the English Reformation of Hooker and reject the Holy Communion of nonepiscopal
protestant denominations. As such the second principle embraces the episcopacy
for the well-being but not the being of the church.
Third, the Prayer Book of the REC is
the 1785 American version of the 1662 BCP. Due to the allowance for revision,
the 1928 and the Australian BCP are permitted for use as long as the Declaration
of Principles are placed in the Prayer Book.
Lastly, the denials of the 4th Principle
clearly oppose any language defined to imply that the sacraments in and of
themselves convey salvation apart from faith. However, a negative does not
establish a positive. Particular terms such as priest, altar, and real presence
are not actually forbidden, only their incorrect use.
Specifically, these denials should in
no way be understood as rejecting the clear language of documents subscribed
to in the Declaration of Principles (The Scriptures, Book of Common Prayer,
Thirty-Nine Articles, etc.)
(1) The Articles allow the use of the
word priest as the anglicized version of the word presbyter by their consistent
use of it to describe a minister of the Word and Sacrament (XXXII, XXXVI),
and not as someone who can uniquely provide atonement (XXXI) is clear.
(2) Table and altar are used interchangeably
in Holy Scripture (Malachai 1:10, 12), suggesting the table of Holy Communion
is an altar of praise and thanksgiving.
(3) The Articles affirm belief in the
real presence of Christ when they say, The Body of Christ is given, taken,
and eaten, in the Supper, only after an heavenly and spiritual manner (XXVIII).
(4) The Holy Scriptures (Titus 3:5)
and the Catechism of the BCP speak of baptism as an outward sign of an inward
grace such that regeneration should be understood as normally occurring at
Holy Baptism, but not inseparable with Baptism.
Thus, the Declaration of Principles
are not an attempt to depart from historic Anglican beliefs. Rather, they
are an expression of a return to the old paths of the Protestant Episcopal
Church and our English Reformers, in the words of Bishop Cummins. Moreover,
their rejection of peculiar Medieval errors that have sometimes reappeared
in the history of Anglicanism has held Reformed Episcopalians to orthodoxy
for 123 years without a single occurrence of schism or doctrinal deviation.
The Declaration of Principles
Of the Reformed Episcopal Church
Adopted, December 2, 1873
I.
The Reformed Episcopal Church, holding
"the faith once delivered unto the saints," declares its belief in the Holy
Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments as the Word of God, as the sole
rule of Faith and Practice; in the Creed "commonly called the Apostles' Creed;"
in the Divine institution of the Sacraments of baptism and the Lord's Supper;
and in the doctrines of grace substantially as they are set forth in the
Thirty-Nine Articles of Religion.
II.
This Church recognizes and adheres to
Episcopacy, not as of Divine right, but as a very ancient and desirable form
of Church polity.
III.
This Church, retaining a liturgy which
shall not be imperative or repressive of freedom in prayer, accepts The Book
of Common Prayer, as it was revised, proposed, and recommended for use by
the General Convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church, A.D. 1785, reserving
full liberty to alter, abridge, enlarge, and amend the same, as may seem
most conducive to the edification of the people, "provided that the substance
of the faith be kept entire."
IV.
This Church condemns and rejects the
following erroneous and strange doctrines as contrary to God's Word:
First, that the Church of Christ exists
only in one order or form of ecclesiastical polity:
Second, that Christian Ministers are
"priests" in another sense than that in which all believers are a "royal
priesthood:"
Third, that the Lord's Table is an altar
on which the oblation of the Body and Blood of Christ is offered anew to
the Father:
Fourth, that the Presence of Christ
in the Lord's Supper is a presence in the elements of Bread and Wine:
Fifth, that regeneration is inseparably
connected with Baptism.
© 1995, The Reformed Episcopal Church.
The Mission Statement of the
Reformed Episcopal Church
Built upon the foundation of the authoritative
Word of God, the Holy Scriptures, the Reformed Episcopal Church declares
her first priority to be that of evangelism, the bold and
unadulterated proclamation of salvation by grace through faith in the Lord
Jesus Christ (Acts 8:4).
In keeping the faith once delivered
to the saints, the Reformed Episcopal Church, however, does not believe evangelism
to be the end, but rather the beginning of her divinely given vocation.
Thus, she is deeply committed to discipleship,
the work of training evangelized men and women in Christian living (St. Matthew
28:20). This inescapably means that the Reformed Episcopal Church sets a
high priority on biblical worship. When the Gospel is truly proclaimed and
the mercies of God are made known, redeemed men and women must be led to
offer their bodies as a living sacrifice, which is their spiritual service
of worship (Romans 12:1).
Thus, the Reformed Episcopal Church
understands the Christian life to be necessarily corporate.
The Gospel call of salvation is not only to a Saviour, but also to a community
of those who have been saved (I Cor. 12:27), which community, being indwelt
by Christ's Spirit, transcends both temporal and geographic bounds.
Therefore, the Reformed Episcopal Church
is creedal, following the historic Christian faith as it
was affirmed by the early undivided Church in the Apostles' (A.D. 150) and
Nicene Creeds (A.D. 325), sacramental, practicing the divinely
ordained sacraments of Baptism and the Lord's Supper as outward and visible
signs of His inward and spiritual grace, confessional, accepting
the doctrines and practices of the English Reformation as found in the Thirty-nine
Articles of Religion, and episcopal, finding unity with
the Church of the earliest Christian eras through submission to the government
of godly bishops.
In this fashion, by embracing the broad
base of doctrine and practice inherent in the historic Church of the Reformation,
the Reformed Episcopal Church has a foundation for effective ministry in
the name of Christ to a world which is lost and dying without Him.
Unanimously received from the Bishops
at the 47th General Council of the Reformed Episcopal Church, May, 1993.
© 1995, The Reformed Episcopal Church
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