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  IN CASE YOU EVER WONDERED

A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE EPISCOPAL SHIELD

The red cross on a white field is the St. George Cross, an indicator of our link to the Church of England, the mother church of the Anglican Communion. The miniature crosses in the blue quadrant symbolize the nine original American dioceses that met in Philadelphia in 1789 to adopt the constitution of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America.

The outline of the miniature crosses is in the form of St. Andrew's Cross in tribute to the Scottish church's role in ordaining the first American bishop, Samuel Seabury, in 1784. The colors red, white and blue symbolize, respectfully, the sacrifice of Christ and Christian martyrs, the purity of the Christian faith, and the humanity of Christ received from the Virgin Mary. In duplicating the colors of the American flag, they also represent the Episcopal Church's standing as the U.S. branch of the Anglican Communion.

A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH

The Episcopal Church was formally organized in 1783 when representatives of the Church of England in the United States of America met in Connecticut and organized the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States. A year later Samuel Seabury traveled to Scotland be ordained the first Episcopal bishop by three Church of Scotland bishops. In 1785 the church's first General Convention, consisting of a House of Deputies, met in Philadelphia. The General Convention became a bicameral body in 1789 when the House of Bishops was formed. The first American Book of Common Prayer, modeled on the Church of England prayer book, was adopted by General Convention in 1790. The church's corporate organization, The Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society, was founded in 1820.

Bishop William White of Pennsylvania was the church's first presiding bishop. Until 1919 the presiding bishop's office was held by the church's most senior bishop. The first bishop to be elected presiding bishop was John Gardner Murray, bishop of Maryland, who served from 1926 to 1931. In 1946 the General Convention designated the presiding bishop as the chief pastor and primate of the church, and removed the requirement that the presiding bishop also function as a diocesan bishop. In 1994 the presiding bishop's term of office was reduced from twelve years to nine years.

EPISCOPAL FACTS

Founded: 1783, as the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States
Membership: 2.4 million baptized members
Organization: 100 domestic dioceses, 13 dioceses in Latin America, Caribbean islands, Europe
Clergy: bishops - 310, priests - 14,000, deacons - 1,700
Headquarters: Episcopal Church Center, 815 Second Ave., New York, NY 10017 (800) 334-7626

 

 

HUMOR FOR THE SOUL

 

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The Episcopal Church of the Resurrection
15319 E. 8th Avenue, PO Box 14771, Spokane Valley, WA 99214
Phone: (509) 926-6450

email us at:  ecorsite@aol.com

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