Episcopal Missionary Church

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Episcopal Missionary Church

The EMC Seal.
Classification Continuing Anglican
Orientation Anglo-Catholic
Polity Episcopal
Founder A. Donald Davies
Origin 1992
Separated from Episcopal Church in the United States of America
Separations Christian Episcopal Church
Associations Federation of Anglican Churches in the Americas
Geographical Area United States
Statistics
Congregations approximately 30
Part of a series on the
Continuing
Anglican
Movement


Background

Christianity · Western Christianity
English Reformation · Anglicanism
· Book of Common Prayer
Ordination of women
Homosexuality and Anglicanism
Bartonville Agreement

People

James Parker Dees · Charles D. D. Doren
William Millsaps · Robert S. Morse
Council Nedd II . Stephen C. Reber

Churches

Anglican Catholic Church
Anglican Church in America
Anglican Episcopal Church
Anglican Orthodox Church
Anglican Province of America
Anglican Province of Christ the King
Christian Episcopal Church
Church of England (Continuing)
Diocese of the Great Lakes
Diocese of the Holy Cross
Episcopal Missionary Church
Free Church of England
Orthodox Anglican Church
Orthodox Anglican Communion
Reformed Episcopal Church
Traditional Anglican Communion
Traditional Protestant Episcopal Church
United Episcopal Church of North America

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The Episcopal Missionary Church (EMC) is a Continuing Anglican church body in the United States and a member of the Federation of Anglican Churches in the Americas. Its founding in the early 1990s can be traced to the protests of members of The Episcopal Church in the United States of America (ECUSA) who were concerned that their church had become massively influenced by secular humanism (i.e., liberal theologies). At first, these clergy and laypersons sought to change the direction of their church by working from within it, to which end they formed a voluntary association, the "Episcopal Synod of America."

When they later concluded that this approach would not succeed, a new missionary diocese was formed by them, still attempting to remain within ECUSA. In 1992, however, the missionary diocese withdrew from ECUSA and formed a separate church, the Episcopal Missionary Church. The Rt. Rev. A. Donald Davies, retired ECUSA Bishop of Dallas and Fort Worth, was named the first Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Missionary Church.

The Episcopal Missionary Church affirms the Holy Scriptures as containing all things necessary to salvation and as the ultimate rule and standard of faith. The Church acknowledges the Nicene and Apostles' Creeds and the necessity of the Sacraments of Baptism and Holy Communion. It uses the 1928 American edition of the Book of Common Prayer or the Anglican Missal based upon it, and emphasizes the preservation of Apostolic Succession.

The name Episcopal "Missionary" Church was selected as part of the Church's desire to provide a home for all Episcopalians and other Christians who feel that they have been forced from their churches by the growth of liberalism within them. At present, the Episcopal Missionary Church has approximately thirty parishes throughout the U.S. The current presiding bishop is the Rt. Rev. William Millsaps, a former chaplain of the University of the South in Sewanee, Tennessee. The other bishops of the Episcopal Missionary Church are the Rt. Rev. G. Wayne Craig (Ret.), the Right Rev. Lucien Lindsey, the Right Rev. Edward P. Whately (Ret.) and the Right Rev. Council Nedd II.

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