10 Reasons Why You Should be an Episcopalian

Now we know there are many other wonderful traditions within Christianity... and we are well aware of the many imperfections which exist within our own brand of the Christian Church.

We also know that not everyone reading this may be a Confirmed member of The Episcopal Church... but a lot has been said and written in recent years about our denomination and we thought it would be good if we tried to set the record straight.

Holy Trinity, fresco in the church of St. Agatha in Schmerlenbach, Germany

1. Drawn to the Complexity of God as Revealed in the Holy Trinity

You should be an Episcopalian if you are drawn to the complexity of God as revealed in the doctrine of the Holy Trinity... as opposed to simplistic expressions of God which cannot help but distort God's true multidimensional nature.

2. If you believe men and women are equal in the sight of God.

You should be an Episcopalian if you believe men and women are fundamentally equal in the sight of God, and women, as well as men, should be able to serve in every office in the Church.

In the Episcopal Church, women serve as acolytes, vestry members, senior and junior wardens, deacons, priests, bishops, and even as Presiding Bishop!

Believe it? Heck, we've seen it.

We believe this is a genuine glimpse into the very Kingdom of God where men and women have equal access to the glory and the love of God.

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Gay couple walking on beach with child on shoulders

3. If you believe age, race, disability or orientation shouldn't keep anyone from the House of God

You should be an Episcopalian if you believe age, race, disability, or orientation shouldn't keep anyone from having an equal place in the House of God.

Now, this is a position that created significant tensions in our fellowship over the years and those tensions still exist in some places... but we believe the positions we have taken in these matters will, with the benefit of history, make us look as though we have been guided by the Triune God in our deliberations. And, in true Anglican form, we remind every unity is not uniform.

You don't have to agree with us to worship with us, to receive the Sacrament with us, to join us in bearing the cross of Christ.

4. If you believe in the power of the Word of God preached and in the Presence of God revealed through sacrament

You should be an Episcopalian if you believe in the power of both the Word of God preached and in the Presence of God as revealed through the Sacraments.

If you find Solace and strength through hearing God's word preached with power and in receiving the Body and Blood of Christ on a regular basis, you have come to the right place.

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PARIS, FRANCE - JANUARY 08: Stained glass window in Saint Eustache church in Paris, France on January 08, 2018.

5. If you believe the Glory of God can be revealed through artistic beauty

You should be an Episcopalian if you believe the Glory of God can be revealed through beautiful architecture, beautiful music, beautiful liturgy, beautiful art, and beautiful literature.

Episcopalians believe God is fully revealed in the midst of such artistic beauty and we seek to value the aesthetic in all life.

6. If you're serious about hearing and learning the Word of God

You should be an Episcopalian if you’re serious about hearing and learning about the Word of God.

If you attend Episcopal worship regularly, you’ll hear the largest part of the Bible read over a three-year cycle. Episcopalians hear lessons from the Old Testament, the Psalms, the Epistles, as well as from the Gospels, while many so-called “Bible churches” hear comparatively little of the Bible read in worship.

Episcopalians bring a scholarly mind to the study of the Bible and most Episcopalians take the Bible far too seriously to take it literally.

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Group Of People Sitting Together Praying With Holy Bible

7. If you belieive church's should be built around the worship and not the charisma of one clergy person

You should be an Episcopalian if you think churches should be built around the worship of God and not around the charisma of any one clergyperson. Robert Schuller was an incredibly gifted orator, and my mom loved that guy… but his great Crystal Cathedral is now home to a Roman Catholic diocese that found a bargain basement deal on real estate in southern California!

Our ecclesiology makes it difficult; though as we know all too well, not impossible, for charismatic clergy to lead parishes and dioceses into unhealthy relationships with them. But in The Episcopal Church, it will always be God, and not the clergy, who remains the center of our focus.

8. If you belieive frightening imperfect Christians with the fiery flames of hell or with crushing, unrelenting guilt is un-biblical

You should be an Episcopalian if you believe frightening imperfect Christians with the fiery flames of hell or with crushing, unrelenting guilt is not only unbiblical, but it is foundationally un-Christian.

It is nothing less than theological malpractice.

This is a church where the grace of God trumps the wrath of God and this is a church where God’s love has the power to redeem any and everyone.
A God who can forgive your deepest and most haunting sins may be a God who is loving and powerful enough to forgive mine.

This is a hospital for sinners, not a haven for saints!

  • If you’re divorced, this is the church for you.
  • If you’re a single mother or father, this is the church for you.
  • If you struggle with addiction issues, this is the church for you.
  • If you’re wondering how you will find the energy to take just one more step… this is the church for you.

We believe Christ died on a cross to save us, not to mock us or belittle us.

The Episcopal Church seeks to find a place mid-way between “an acrid orthodoxy and an arid liberalism” and we try, although we don’t always succeed), to maintain the “via media,” this “middle way.”

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Christians gather Sit and pray for blessings from God. With faith and faith

9. If you belieivein working closely in mission and ministry with other Christian denominations

You should be an Episcopalian if you believe in working closely in mission and ministry with other Christian denominations like the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, the Old Catholics, the Moravian Church, the United Methodist Church and a host of other denominations with whom we are pursuing deeper ecumenical relationships.

10. If you belieive Christians are fundamentally called to live out the Gospel imperative to feed the hungry, clothe the naked, and care for the least among us

You should be an Episcopalian if you believe Christians are fundamentally called to live out the Gospel imperative to feed the hungry, clothe the naked, and care for the least among us. These are imperatives for every Christian but they stand at the very core of who we are as Episcopalians.

Well, perhaps you didn’t need any encouragement from an old bishop on becoming or remaining an Episcopalian.
As an old sales manager of mine once told me,
“If they’ve decided to buy, you should stop selling.”

But we’re living in a turbulent and polarized time and assaults made upon our tradition from sources both foreign and domestic inspire me to remind us what being an Episcopalian truly means.
We must remember that even in the very presence of Christ, some doubted!

The cultural and political wars have not left our beloved tradition unscathed and where some see a liberal institution falling away from the faith once delivered, I see a holy institution discovering its deepest Christian moorings and coming most faithfully into its own.

Jesus said to them,
“All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Go, therefore, and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit and teaching them to obey everything that I have commanded you”

We are Episcopalians. We stand with the poor, the oppressed, and those who have no advocate... and this will always put us in harm’s way. We bring our heads and our hearts to every theological discussion…... and if you want to know what we truly believe?
Watch how we pray.

If we have little to say in the face of some of the most outrageous accusations made against us, it’s because we are exercising classic Anglican reserve rather than because we have nothing to offer in our own defense.

Jesus was angry when he cleared the money-changers out of the temple because he knew how they were desecrating the holy things of God for their own purposes.

As former Presiding Bishop John Hines once said,

“They did not crucify Jesus for saying,
“Behold the lilies of the field, how they grow.”

They crucified Jesus for saying,
“Behold the thieves in the temple, and how they steal.”
Picking up one’s cross requires strength and resilience.

We are Episcopalians… and we are unafraid to speak truth to power.
We are Episcopalians… and we are imperfect in so very many ways.
We are Episcopalians…and we live illumined by the light of the Trinity.

Remember in the Book of Acts where it says,
“When they had prayed, the place in which they were gathered together was SHAKEN; and they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and spoke the word of God with BOLDNESS.”

Is there a person in this sacred space who doubts the power of such prayer?
Is this not the power that changes the whole world?

As Christians, we pray, finally, to be raised up with Christ.
Raised up out of our anxieties.
Raised up out of our self-centeredness.
Raised up out of our darkness into the brilliant light.
Raised up out of our disillusionment into that sacred hope.
Raised up out of our despair into that unspeakable glory.
Raised up! Raised up!

Willa Cather, in her classic novel, Death Comes for the Archbishop wrote,

“The miracles of the Church seem to me to rest not so much upon faces or voices or healing power coming suddenly near us from afar off, but upon our perceptions being made finer, so that for a moment our eyes can see and our ears can hear what there is about us always.”

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Two parts. Kind-hearted businessman dividing his big meat burger in two parts while giving one of them to homeless man
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Today, this very day, may our perceptions be made finer.
May our eyes see and our ears hear, “what is there-about-us- always.”

Amen.

Originally written by Dean Wolfe, you can read the original article on www.ecfvp.org

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