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The nature of episcopal authority in the Church of the Province of Southern Africa : (with special reference to the Constitution and Canons, recent Commissions on Episcopacy and the Metropolitan, and the Third Draft of the Plan of Union) : a contribution to the church union debate

The c.P.S.A. as a daughter of the Church of England is part of the Catholic .Church and has inherited the Historic Episcopate. In sorting cut its legal status, the C.P.S.A., unlike the Church of England came to be not an established Church, tut a voluntary religious association, free £ran state cont...

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Main Author: Lindhorst, Alan M
Other Authors: De Gruchy, John W
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Religious Studies 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Lindhorst, Alan M
author2 De Gruchy, John W
author_browse De Gruchy, John W
Lindhorst, Alan M
author_facet De Gruchy, John W
Lindhorst, Alan M
author_sort Lindhorst, Alan M
collection Thesis
description The c.P.S.A. as a daughter of the Church of England is part of the Catholic .Church and has inherited the Historic Episcopate. In sorting cut its legal status, the C.P.S.A., unlike the Church of England came to be not an established Church, tut a voluntary religious association, free £ran state control, with its and corpus of Cancns (adopted in 1870), by which its members agree to abide. This meant that the Bishops were no longer appointed by the but elected by the Church; and their authority was defined and limited by the Constitution and Canons. Episcopal authority is inherently spiritual, and is exercised in a number of episcopal functions, which are the special ministry of the bishop. A premium! of this thesis is that the 1:e.sic unit of church organisation is the territorial diocese under the jurisdiction of one bishop. He is its Father-in-God, teacher, leader in worship ordained; he exercises discipline and presides over Synod. He is linked collegially with his clergy in the diocese; and with his brother bishops in the province, of which the Archbishop/Metropolitan is the first anaig equals, and the focus of unity of the province as a whole. The heavy demands ai the Metropolitan in his dual role as Metropolitan and diocesan bishop lead us to that the C.P.S.A. be divided into three or four provinces, being held together under a Primate.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/38982
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:31:30.019Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
publisher Department of Religious Studies
publisherStr Department of Religious Studies
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/38982 The nature of episcopal authority in the Church of the Province of Southern Africa : (with special reference to the Constitution and Canons, recent Commissions on Episcopacy and the Metropolitan, and the Third Draft of the Plan of Union) : a contribution to the church union debate Lindhorst, Alan M De Gruchy, John W Episcopacy The c.P.S.A. as a daughter of the Church of England is part of the Catholic .Church and has inherited the Historic Episcopate. In sorting cut its legal status, the C.P.S.A., unlike the Church of England came to be not an established Church, tut a voluntary religious association, free £ran state control, with its and corpus of Cancns (adopted in 1870), by which its members agree to abide. This meant that the Bishops were no longer appointed by the but elected by the Church; and their authority was defined and limited by the Constitution and Canons. Episcopal authority is inherently spiritual, and is exercised in a number of episcopal functions, which are the special ministry of the bishop. A premium! of this thesis is that the 1:e.sic unit of church organisation is the territorial diocese under the jurisdiction of one bishop. He is its Father-in-God, teacher, leader in worship ordained; he exercises discipline and presides over Synod. He is linked collegially with his clergy in the diocese; and with his brother bishops in the province, of which the Archbishop/Metropolitan is the first anaig equals, and the focus of unity of the province as a whole. The heavy demands ai the Metropolitan in his dual role as Metropolitan and diocesan bishop lead us to that the C.P.S.A. be divided into three or four provinces, being held together under a Primate. 2023-09-29T13:31:19Z 2023-09-29T13:31:19Z 1988 2023-09-29T12:33:49Z Master Thesis Masters MA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38982 eng application/pdf Department of Religious Studies Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Episcopacy
Lindhorst, Alan M
The nature of episcopal authority in the Church of the Province of Southern Africa : (with special reference to the Constitution and Canons, recent Commissions on Episcopacy and the Metropolitan, and the Third Draft of the Plan of Union) : a contribution to the church union debate
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The nature of episcopal authority in the Church of the Province of Southern Africa : (with special reference to the Constitution and Canons, recent Commissions on Episcopacy and the Metropolitan, and the Third Draft of the Plan of Union) : a contribution to the church union debate
title_full The nature of episcopal authority in the Church of the Province of Southern Africa : (with special reference to the Constitution and Canons, recent Commissions on Episcopacy and the Metropolitan, and the Third Draft of the Plan of Union) : a contribution to the church union debate
title_fullStr The nature of episcopal authority in the Church of the Province of Southern Africa : (with special reference to the Constitution and Canons, recent Commissions on Episcopacy and the Metropolitan, and the Third Draft of the Plan of Union) : a contribution to the church union debate
title_full_unstemmed The nature of episcopal authority in the Church of the Province of Southern Africa : (with special reference to the Constitution and Canons, recent Commissions on Episcopacy and the Metropolitan, and the Third Draft of the Plan of Union) : a contribution to the church union debate
title_short The nature of episcopal authority in the Church of the Province of Southern Africa : (with special reference to the Constitution and Canons, recent Commissions on Episcopacy and the Metropolitan, and the Third Draft of the Plan of Union) : a contribution to the church union debate
title_sort nature of episcopal authority in the church of the province of southern africa with special reference to the constitution and canons recent commissions on episcopacy and the metropolitan and the third draft of the plan of union a contribution to the church union debate
topic Episcopacy
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38982
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AT lindhorstalanm natureofepiscopalauthorityinthechurchoftheprovinceofsouthernafricawithspecialreferencetotheconstitutionandcanonsrecentcommissionsonepiscopacyandthemetropolitanandthethirddraftoftheplanofunionacontributiontothechurchuniondebate