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Resolutions from 1878
Recommendation 12
Anglican Chaplains and Chaplaincies - Encyclical Letter 4.1-5
Your Committee have to report that they have agreed the following
recommendations:
- That it is highly desirable that Anglican congregations, on the
continent of Europe and elsewhere, should be distinctly urged not to admit
the stated ministrations of any clergyman without the written licence or
permission of the bishop of the Anglican Communion who is duly authorised
to grant it; and that the occasional assistance of strangers should not be
invited or permitted without some satisfactory evidence of their ordination
and character as clergymen.
- That it is desirable, as a general rule, that two chapels shall not be
established where one is sufficient for the members of both Churches,
American and English; also that where there is only one church or chapel
the members of both Churches should be represented on the committee, if
any.
- That it be suggested to the societies which partly support continental
chaplaincies that, in places where English and American churchmen reside or
visit, and especially where Americans out-number the English, it may be
desirable to appoint a properly accredited clergyman of the American
Church.
- That your Committee, having carefully considered a Memorial addressed
to the archbishops and bishops of the Church of England by four priests and
certain other members of "the Spanish and Portuguese Reformed Episcopal
Church," praying for the consecration of a bishop, cannot but express their
hearty sympathy with the memorialists in the difficulties of their
position; and, having heard a statement on the subject of the proposed
extension of the episcopate to Mexico by the American Church, they venture
to suggest that, when a bishop shall have been consecrated by the American
Church for Mexico, he might be induced to visit Spain and Portugal, and
render such assistance, at this stage of the movement, as may seem to him
practicable and advisable.
[NOTE: The Lambeth Conference of 1878 did not adopt any formal Resolutions
as such. The mind of the Conference was recorded by incorporating the
Reports of its five Committees, received by the plenary Conference with
almost complete unanimity, into an Encyclical Letter which was duly
published. Recommendations embodied in the Committee Reports were
evidently accorded equivalent status to formal Resolutions, and they are
reproduced here as they appeared in the course of the Encyclical Letter,
under appropriate reference.]
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