🛡️ Why I'm Fond of the Episcopal Church

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  • Опубліковано 29 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 232

  • @52churchesin52weeks
    @52churchesin52weeks  2 роки тому +11

    Thanks for watching and hope you enjoyed this exploration of an Episcopal church.
    LIKE and SUBSCRIBE to stay tuned for future visits. You can also check-out the first "52 Churches in 52 Weeks" on Amazon at 📚 amzn.to/3DKry4q

  • @k3grappler
    @k3grappler Рік тому +92

    I have been an Episcopalian for 30 years. The first time I visited an Episcopal Church, similar to the one you visited, I didn't 'understand' anything that was going on with the liturgy. But, somehow, on a non-rational level, that liturgy 'spoke' to me. Today I am an altar server and chalice bearer totally involved with that same liturgy. My advice to first time visitors is don't try to understand everything. Just let the spirit of the service move you because it will. Thanks be to God.

    • @fordmercuryman
      @fordmercuryman Рік тому +5

      I recently started at an Episcopal church, I've always been in a Southern Baptist or non-denominational. It was a lot to take in at first, but I had some amazing people in the church who helped me and explained things to me. She was from a Lutheran church and she had been going for about 8 months. She told me the same thing, just be there and experience it. I have to say this has been the most amazing experience I've had in church, I love it.

    • @las-beat7637
      @las-beat7637 9 місяців тому +1

      Please can anyone help me with prayer books and bible please am a new convert who really wants to know more about God please help

    • @joecitizen8988
      @joecitizen8988 7 місяців тому

      ​@@las-beat7637
      Are you asking Episcopalian books of prayer and meditation etc or are you trying to be more specific biblical etc I'm more than happy to help as a cradle Episcopalian but I need more detail as to what you're actually asking for and probably one item at a time. Clarification are you a new Christian in general or are you a new Episcopalian and lost they're not necessarily exclusionary but they can be very different!

    • @las-beat7637
      @las-beat7637 7 місяців тому +1

      ​@joecitizen8988 yes sir I need a Bible, also a prayer & meditation book 📖 that I can be reading 📚 to draw me closer to God. Please help me

    • @las-beat7637
      @las-beat7637 7 місяців тому

      @joecitizen8988 Yes, am asking for Episcopalian books of prayer & meditation
      Am a new convert who wants to know more about God

  • @ReMEMchannel
    @ReMEMchannel 2 роки тому +1

    This is a new lesson for me: Episcopal Church, thanks for sharing this wonderful piece.

  • @ramlin35
    @ramlin35 Рік тому +2

    The “service being 35 minutes and the sermon being only 5 minutes…” there might lie the problem

    • @pc-w8844
      @pc-w8844 10 місяців тому +1

      My guess is that he didn't attend the main service on Sunday but may have attended a BCP (book of common prayer) serivice which cuts out the singing and focuses on the bible readings and Eucharist. In the Church of England these are about 35-40 minutes or so in length.

  • @annief.9256
    @annief.9256 Рік тому +4

    Very nice presentation. Your description sounnds appealing "merging of Evangelical and Catholic." Thinking about leaving the Catholic church because of the hierachy and next to no encouragement to read the Bible on one's own. Not sure I will be able to do it though because during my formative years, I lived with my Irish Catholic grandmother.

    • @annb9029
      @annb9029 Рік тому +4

      I recommend watching Trent Horn on UA-cam and Michael Lofton as well on Catholic info and for a good Catholic Bible study Jeff Cavins the great adventure and Fr. Mike Schmitz the Bible in a year

    • @annief.9256
      @annief.9256 Рік тому +3

      @@annb9029 Thank you :)

  • @paulconnors2078
    @paulconnors2078 Місяць тому

    Episcopal liturgy, not Episcopalian liturgy.

  • @laurieloudamy1846
    @laurieloudamy1846 Рік тому +46

    My parents were Baptist, but I never felt comfortable there. I found the Episcopal faith just a few years ago and I am so happy and content with being an Episcopalian. They realize that we are caretakers of this planet and animals and I love that. I actually discovered the church through a Saint Francis Blessing of the Pets function in October of one year.

    • @savannahsmiles1797
      @savannahsmiles1797 10 місяців тому +2

      I remember LONG ago the blessing of the pets services...

    • @laurieloudamy1846
      @laurieloudamy1846 10 місяців тому +2

      @@savannahsmiles1797 Yes, that one of the things that led me to my church. I took my dogs to the St Francis blessing and I loved the church!! They don’t do it anymore and I miss it terribly.

    • @joecitizen8988
      @joecitizen8988 7 місяців тому +1

      ​@@laurieloudamy1846
      Just suggestion from a cradle Episcopalian they're 7,000 plus Episcopalian parishes anyone particular Parish doesn't do something please feel free to look around cuz for instance the blessing of animals I'm almost absolutely certain that the national cathedral will do that until the end of time now whether or not they will do it online or not I have no idea but if you need something like blessing your four-legged children I have two four-legged children so I'm a little bias but my suggestion would be if your individual parish does not have enough bodies etc to do blessings of the animals I would almost be certain that your cathedral that you belong to Will have that service that there is a blessing is of the animals once or twice a year at all cathedrals throughout the country so I mean I know there's at least once for St Francis every year and I have no reason to think that you could not have your four-legged children come with you on All saints Day whenever your parish celebrates all saint these just thoughts of cradle Episcopalian.

  • @BlondieBisquit93
    @BlondieBisquit93 Місяць тому +5

    Thank you for posting!
    I went to an Episcopal church for the first time ever in my hometown. Having been raised Baptist, needless to say, it was quite the culture shock.
    But I greatly admired the reverence they maintain throughout the service. It was a beautiful style of worshiping our Lord

  • @bradleymitchell287
    @bradleymitchell287 Рік тому +23

    One of the things that I really love about an Epicopal Church service is how it engages all 5 senses - the visual spectacle of the clerical vestments, the singing, the incense, the taste of the communion bread, and yes the touch of the sometimes less than comfortable kneeler. I find that all these things turn my mind to God.

  • @judebampoe2045
    @judebampoe2045 2 роки тому +25

    I really enjoy seeing how others worship. I remember taking comparative religions in college. But, this is alive! 🕊

  • @DannyEastVillage
    @DannyEastVillage Рік тому +8

    sounds like you were at what's sometimes called a "Deacon's Mass," i.e., with no priest. So he administered communion from the sacrament that had already been consecrated by a priest at a different service, and which was probably "reserved" in the tabernacle in the altar. That would explain why no wine was administered, i.e., wine will often not be reserved while the wafers would be for services like this. The Episcopal church has definitely fallen on hard times in many--perhaps most--places, so many churches can't pay a priest. I totally agree with you about this wonderful building: it's tragic that it has been prepared and preserved with such loving care, and yet has so few takers.

  • @m.v.5425
    @m.v.5425 2 роки тому +13

    Corrections: members are Episcopalian. The church is Episcopal. I attend an Episcopal church, I am Episcopalian.

    • @52churchesin52weeks
      @52churchesin52weeks  2 роки тому +4

      That makes sense. Thanks for the clarification.

    • @m.v.5425
      @m.v.5425 2 роки тому +2

      @@52churchesin52weeks Ah all the secret languages of all the religions LOL. FYI: because clergy and bishops had to swear allegiance to the crown of England, the Scottish Episcopal Church consecrated the first bishops for the church here in the USA. We use the Apostolic Succession and Scotland does not require swearing allegiance to the crown but IS part of the Anglican Communion, that is, a daughter church of the Church of England. In gratitude, the church in the USA named themselves Episcopal after the Scottish Episcopal Church and used their version of liturgy (Book of Common Prayer).

    • @TP-om8of
      @TP-om8of 2 роки тому

      Spoken like a true Episcopal.

    • @joecitizen8988
      @joecitizen8988 7 місяців тому

      Well except for leaving out the fact that you could be an Episcopalian and an Anglican at the same time for better or worse.

    • @joecitizen8988
      @joecitizen8988 7 місяців тому

      Oh robin Williams statement number one reason to Episcopalian what ever you believe there bound at least one other Episcopalian who believes the same thing.

  • @draconious4005
    @draconious4005 7 місяців тому +7

    This is one of the first videos I watched that ended up bringing me to the Episcopal Church. It’s a lovely tradition, and I’m excited for it to be my formal entrance into the church with my baptism at this years Great Easter Vigil

  • @TheFitnessMission
    @TheFitnessMission 2 роки тому +18

    It's beautiful when all different denominations come together in unity with the mission of bringing people to Christ.

  • @TarotLadyLissa
    @TarotLadyLissa Рік тому +24

    I grew up Episcopalian and my grandma used to joke “we’re just Catholics that failed Latin!” lol

    • @bombofbombe
      @bombofbombe Рік тому +1

      I like to call it divorced catholic

    • @Dantastic
      @Dantastic Рік тому +2

      The sad thing is that most of us Catholics don't even know much Latin these days. Haha

    • @highup7
      @highup7 10 місяців тому +4

      I'm an Episcopalian and my neighbor always tells me that I belong to the Catholic Lite Church.

    • @highup7
      @highup7 10 місяців тому +1

      Since the last Vatican Council the Latin Mass was no longer in effect for countries that did not speak Latin. They were allowed to speak the language of their country. In the days of the Latin Mass only the priest spoke Latin and the altar boys responded to the priest in Latin. The sermon was always in English. I was an altar boy during the Latin days and if you wanted to be an altar boy, you were given cards that were in English and Latin. We had to learn all of the Latin that was on those cards. During my third year of being a server, the Church changed. English was used and the priest and servers faced the people. Latin was no longer used. During the Latin days the restrictions for communion were harsh. You had to fast three hours before you could receive the sacrament. I only attended Catholic schools for my education. I left the Church a couple of years ago. They did away with Limbo and I really believe that when the money stops for paying for a soul to get redeemed from purgatory, purgatory will be done away like Limbo was. None of the places like purgatory or Limbo are mentioned in the bible. I doubt that anybody is burning in hell for knowingly eating meat on a Friday. I can't believe that I believed this stuff as a child.@@Dantastic

  • @coachjon03
    @coachjon03 2 роки тому +18

    I grew up in the Episcopalian church. We had a lovely congregation and I have very wonderful memories. sadly my childhood church had its last service a few weeks ago. the numbers declined and there was not enough money to keep it going. many are leaving the episcopal church because of the church's hard left political turn over the last several decades.

    • @52churchesin52weeks
      @52churchesin52weeks  2 роки тому +1

      That's unfortunate to hear. It seems like several traditional churches have been forced with a decision of rebranding or remain. For those who stick with remaining, it's making it harder to stick around.

    • @stevenking6129
      @stevenking6129 Рік тому +11

      Its left turn attracts me.

    • @coachjon03
      @coachjon03 Рік тому +5

      @@stevenking6129 for some it works. I just took my mom to Maundy Thursday service at an Episcopal church. lovely service as always ❤️

    • @sgg17003
      @sgg17003 Рік тому

      ​@@stevenking6129 Oh, then when they openly have drag shows for children and support manipulating your children into "gender confirming" surgeries without your knowledge, you'll fit right in.

    • @elicrowleyycontreras1135
      @elicrowleyycontreras1135 Рік тому +3

      Anglicanism has always been a broad-church, it isn’t the same without Conservative people and many remain. 😊

  • @bombofbombe
    @bombofbombe Рік тому +10

    After learning about the denomination I felt a weird sense of relief, like I had been lost and found. Ive been going for a few weeks and I love it.

    • @joecitizen8988
      @joecitizen8988 7 місяців тому

      Well I'm reminded of a statement said in my church on occasion I think it's from right one but there's a statement of to whom only the Almighty knows thou's face basically it's a little more technical than that but as a cradle Episcopalian thing I have learned about being an Episcopalian is there lots and lots of flavors of Episcopalian if you have any doubt whether you belong I looked I tell you to look to two things One are you welcomed under the US Constitution The other thing is does Robin Williams number one reason to be in Episcopalian is because regardless of whatever crazy idea you have you're bound to find another Episcopalian who believes the very same thing you do and accepts you as that person.

  • @SpeakingGraceTV
    @SpeakingGraceTV 2 роки тому +14

    Thank you so much for this video. It is so informative. It really bothers me too that 100 years later attendance has declined! Churches like this in England are the same, for a 35 minutes church service! We need revival!

    • @Every26Seconds
      @Every26Seconds 10 місяців тому +1

      I’ve been drawn to this church so just know there will be 4 more parishioners soon 🙏🏻

    • @ZeroGravityFuneral
      @ZeroGravityFuneral 7 місяців тому

      So I was just talking about this with someone. It’s declining because socially it’s more acceptable to not go so the people leaving aren’t really feeling the Christian way anyway.

    • @joecitizen8988
      @joecitizen8988 7 місяців тому +1

      I would as a cradle Episcopalian disagree about the quote unquote death of the parish I'm sure there are parishes that are in real trouble but I always look to 9/11 etc when there's a real crisis we don't seem to have a lack of takers if anything we seem to have a lack of enough space with enough time but that's only when there's a real crisis of whether or not the almighty exist or not. I'm also reminded of that old saying of soldiers in foxholes they're no atheist in foxholes there may be agnostics but there ain't no atheist in a foxhole why because every time every day every moment you're in a foxhole you're taking a chance that you might meet your maker so even the most devout atheist is willing to go you know I might be wrong it can't hurt to balance my odds. Just for a point of clarity as a cradle episcopalian Even atheist and agnostics are very welcome

  • @BramptonAnglican
    @BramptonAnglican 3 місяці тому +3

    Absolutely love the Anglican Church here in Canada. I’m a very devoted member.

  • @FrankUnknown
    @FrankUnknown 3 місяці тому +2

    The Episcopal Church is the American branch of the Church of England. We had to make some changes (like not recognizing the King as head of our branch of the Church) for political reasons, but we're still in full communion with Canterbury and our bishops all trace their line of succession to Anglican bishops (and from there to Catholic bishops, and ultimately to the Apostles themselves). Our hierarchy is a continuation of the C of E, not a copy-and-paste.

  • @shella775
    @shella775 Рік тому +8

    Your thoughts resonated with me regarding beautiful churches with aging populations. I attended a Methodist church recently whose architecture was so beautiful. I'm nearly 60 years old and I was probably one of the younger people in attendance. The children that were there seemed to be mostly attending with their grandparents. You could tell that the people who attended had deep connections with the community and there was a beautiful spirit there but I can't see how it will stay open for another generation.

  • @AmericanAngel333
    @AmericanAngel333 2 роки тому +9

    I always admire beauty art in these church ⛪️ buildings. Love red door, So beautiful thank you for sharing.
    Christianity have so many denominations. May God continue to lead us on right Direction.

  • @MinistryMediaSolutionz
    @MinistryMediaSolutionz 2 роки тому +8

    What a beautiful sanctuary! I learned a lot about the episcopal church from watching this video. Thanks so much for sharing your experience!

  • @deborahbloomer4567
    @deborahbloomer4567 Рік тому +4

    I was raised Lutheran (ELCA) and confirmed in the Episcopal church approximately. 5 years ago. I have never regretted the change. Please feel free to visit St. Paul's Episcopal church in Marfa, TX. I was told the red doors are to represent the blood of Christ.

  • @april0647
    @april0647 Рік тому +24

    The Episcopal Church has congregations alive and well, and growing. My congregation, and those in several other states in which I lived, have services about an hour and fifteen minutes. The sermon, called a homily, is about 15 minutes, addressing how the Bible lesson is made whole in our current lives. The service has the Word - Biblical readings, homily, prayers for ourselves and others; and the Eucharist (Thanksgiving) - communion service. God calls and we do not differentiate. All are welcome, without exclusion. All races, genders, sexualities, mental and physical abilities. All are made in God’s image. God is Mother and Father and loves each of us whom God has created. To me being Episcopalian brings out the best in the qualities of Catholic - which I am, and Protestant - which I am.

    • @user-JenF
      @user-JenF Рік тому +3

      I was raised a Catholic and derived an education from being one, but I am too much a liberal and needed a church that is all inclusive of every person no matter their race, sex, sexual orientation, age, skin color, ethnicity or anything else that makes each person unique. I don’t live close enough to go to church, and I have a great personal relationship with God, but, if I were to pick a church that fits my views on social justice, it would be the Episcopal Church. Being open-minded and all-inclusive of all of humanity is my idea of true Christianity.

    • @marilynblake2188
      @marilynblake2188 8 місяців тому +1

      I love that the answer to the question, "Is the Episcopal church Catholic or Protestant?" is "YES!" (or both)

  • @fianna88
    @fianna88 Рік тому +3

    It is so sad to see a dying church. My home episcopal church is lively and vibrant, but when i went to visit family in another city and found a local church to attend service, i found the exact opposite. The church itself was old and beautiful, but my family and i were the youngest out of 20 total congregants. It was so disheartening because i feel the episcopal church had so much to offer.

  • @marvinp01
    @marvinp01 5 місяців тому +1

    Why be an Episcopal when you can be Catholic?? Might as well be in communion with the one true Apostolic church and not some watered down knock off with invalid women priests/bishops

  • @gotchavlogph
    @gotchavlogph 2 роки тому +6

    The church is big. It is also beautiful

  • @pennyjaggars9835
    @pennyjaggars9835 5 місяців тому +3

    I am currently in an Episcopal church,playing the piano for worship .I appreciate how God's word is in every service,the group of people there are very loving,as I serve His body ,I love the beauty of the Lord in all of this,we serve a wonderful Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.Please continue your journey,He will reveal Himself if you seek Him May God bless you ❤️

  • @brettduffy1992
    @brettduffy1992 Рік тому +4

    They are too liberal

  • @margochanning11
    @margochanning11 Рік тому +11

    As a cradle Episcopalian, I am grateful for our tradition.

  • @oldskola3634
    @oldskola3634 Рік тому +4

    Even though I’m LDS, I’ve always appreciated churches like this. I love the beauty within these everyday chapels. LDS chapels typically are boring but useful, welcoming, but boring. LDS temples are beautiful, but not usually in a gothic fashion like this. I hope these buildings stand the test of time, it would be terrible if declining membership left them in ruins.

  • @cinnamondan4984
    @cinnamondan4984 2 місяці тому +1

    I practised Anglicanism in Shanghai for a year and then my family joined the LDS Church. Love the smells and bells of traditional Christianity, but really feel at home in the LDS faith.

  • @jonziegler6538
    @jonziegler6538 Місяць тому +1

    My daughter began attending an Episcopalian parish in Utah. I attended for the first time two plus years ago when she was baptized as an Episcopalian. I find that I experience a level of comfort, when attending the Episcopal Church, that I do not feel in the church I have been associated with for the past 50+ years. Although I have not become an Episcopalian, I do attend fairly regularly.

  • @Pablo--fb3lk
    @Pablo--fb3lk 2 роки тому +5

    In God there are no coincidences but purposes.

  • @Geoplanetjane
    @Geoplanetjane 4 місяці тому +1

    The Episcopal Church is not a lost art. It is very much alive. The megachurches with their rock bands are for religious entertainment. Not for worship or the Eucarist

  • @Geoplanetjane
    @Geoplanetjane 4 місяці тому +1

    The service you attended was not presided over by an ordained Episcopal priest. For whatever reason, none may have been available for that occasion.

  • @thedirtlifesupreame
    @thedirtlifesupreame Рік тому +3

    The Episcopal church is just the American Version of the Church of England. I lived in the UK for a few years. It was interesting g to go as a former Lutheran/ Catholic converted to a Member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.

  • @bouffant-girl
    @bouffant-girl Рік тому +3

    Reverend Stuart Phillips is an Ordained Episcopalian Minister for over 30 years. Reverend Phillips is 90 years Young! Incidentally, Reverend Phillips is also a Living Legend of the Grand Ole Opry cast 👏 🙌 👌 And Of Canadian and American Country Music 🎶 🎵 I personally Nominate Reverend Phillips for induction into The Country Music 🎶 Association's Hall Of Fame, In Nashville, Tennessee!

  • @FrJWF
    @FrJWF Рік тому +3

    You might want to know that 56% of the signers of the Declaration of Independence were Anglican/Episcopalian. 51% of the Constitutional Convention were Episcopalians. So was George Washington. The story of the Episcopal Church's origin is much longer, more interesting, and involves the non-juring bishops of the Scottish Episcopal Church who consecrated our first American bishop, requiring that we use the more Catholic Church of Scotland's liturgies, rather than the English liturgies. The form of government adopted by the nascent Episcopal Church more closely resembled the American congressional system than it did the Church of England's system (which is not surprising since many of the same people were involved in establishing the American government and the new Protestant Episcopal Church). The format of our worship follows very ancient Church practices, some dating back to the earliest centuries of the Church.
    I really enjoyed your presentation and will look forward to your experience in other denominations.

    • @52churchesin52weeks
      @52churchesin52weeks  Рік тому +2

      Thank you, appreciate that and learning about that is FASCINATING. Guess that doesn't surprise me after thinking about it. One of the most stunning churches I ever worshipped at was the Washington National Cathedral in DC (which is Episcopal). In the back of my head, I always wondered why all the American history and focus on past presidents in there - including George Washington. Your comment sheds new light on why. Interesting.

  • @FindingTheTruthMinistry
    @FindingTheTruthMinistry 2 роки тому +3

    It's good to have a broader understanding of the different denominations. However, differences in the Way older churches handle proceedings vs these modern age churches do things has left such a void. You know there is only one way to worship God, the scripture puts it this way in spirit and in truth. I find it extremely hard to digress from what God says! The lord requires us to be holy...which a lot of us as Christians fail to do. I find your video very refreshed!

  • @henryfraipont9343
    @henryfraipont9343 Рік тому +3

    It’s nice to see a more positive video in the genre of Christian denomination videos here on UA-cam. Up until now it’s so divisive I feel like I’m covering politics

  • @marcmeinzer8859
    @marcmeinzer8859 Рік тому +3

    Prior to the revolution the Episcopal church, then known as the Church of England, was the largest denomination in the thirteen colonies. But then as the westward migration evolved, the majority of Episcopalians got poached by the Methodist church, which is why the United Methodist Church is currently the largest mainline protestant denomination. Methodism was founded by an Anglican priest, Wesley, whose followers split from the Episcopal church since Episcopalians found them too evangelical for their taste. The Episcopal church is a dying religion in the developed world where in most countries it is called the Anglican Church, except in Scotland. The American Episcopalians got their first bishop from the Scottish Episcopal church, an American Tory called Samuel Seabury who George Washington detested for obvious reasons. In my opinion, having been raised Episcopalian, most Protestants instinctively recoil from the Episcopal church owing to [1] it’s incredibly snobbish and effete Anglophile clergy [2] the stuffiness of it’s presentation in which classical music is fetishized and [3] the fact that morning prayer was discontinued in the 1970s in favor of weekly communion and most of their sung communion services take well over an hour. Their faster communion services are the unsung or low mass version typically offered at the 8:00 service, or the early service. And finally, their clergy are unthinkingly and reflexively ultra liberal having a strong Ivy League bias, which most middle class whites find annoying. The entire atmosphere is repellent to most people who are not old money or at least upper middle class. Other peculiarities of this church is that they are the only protestant church which is so ambivalent about the reformation that they actually have both nuns and monks, albeit in modest numbers, or perhaps 2,500 world wide concentrated mostly in the Pacific island countries of Papua New Guinea and Fiji.

    • @k3grappler
      @k3grappler 9 місяців тому

      Actually I think you would be surprised as the racial, financial, and cultural diversity of today's Episcopal Church. Cradle Episcopalians are now a distinct minority in today's church. People come to us from many former religious traditions (or even no religious tradition). Some have even called us 'the church of the religious refugees'.

    • @marcmeinzer8859
      @marcmeinzer8859 9 місяців тому

      I know a great deal of Episcopalian trivia since I tried being an Episcopal monk briefly before moving on and spending a great deal more time living as a Catholic monk. I also tried being Greek Orthodox but turned down an invitation to become an Orthodox monk. But then I lost all belief in the gospels and became a Buddhist. In a way Anglicanism is my favorite Christian church, but that doesn’t really mean much since I have absolutely no belief anymore. Nevertheless, the Anglican clergy are the most urbane of any church today so for the most part they are also the least offensive in many respects. But the fact remains that the vast majority of clergy in all denominations are narcissistic douchebags. Occasionally I run into a cleric who I think is cool but they are few and far between.@@k3grappler

    • @marcmeinzer8859
      @marcmeinzer8859 9 місяців тому

      There’s always been a great deal of movement of membership amongst the various mainline protestant denominations. After all, some of them are very closely related such as Methodists and Episcopalians in particular.@@k3grappler

  • @ShannonCarpenterTHMCoach
    @ShannonCarpenterTHMCoach 2 роки тому +3

    In interesting peak into the Episcopal church. I’ve always wondered how they started etc…

  • @ashleynoelle7429
    @ashleynoelle7429 Рік тому +2

    Two people offer the sacrament. One offers the chalice of wine while the other offers the body of Christ as a wafer…and back in my day, they would simply wipe the rim before the next person took a sip from the one chalice. Maybe they have a different system post-Covid?

    • @k3grappler
      @k3grappler 9 місяців тому

      Most of our churches are back to the old system. For awhile, only the priest drank from the chalice. It was not offered to the congregation except symbolically. People could touch the base of the chalice, but not drink from it.

  • @debluce8607
    @debluce8607 Рік тому +3

    Thanks again, David for a great video. My paternal side goes back at least 4 generations in that faith.
    I was married in the local Episcopal church at my Dads request. It too was an ornate structure with magnificent woodwork.
    Keep up the great work of sharing.

  • @KimOmana
    @KimOmana 2 роки тому +3

    That red door connection that came to your mind makes sense, I am sure some of the meaning reasoning has been lost over time as people have come and gone so the original May not be known. The detailing is so majestic, agree can be unappreciated in todays world.

  • @deniskay7235
    @deniskay7235 Рік тому +1

    All bread, no wine. I bet you were kind of bummed out and thirsty too! The Episcopal Church believes that Christ is truly and fully present in both/either species of the bread and the wine of the Eucharist. So you did get full communion that day. It's ideal that both bread and wine are offered but there are a lot of reasons that this may not be possible. For example, in a church with limited staff, if the Eucharistic Minister could not come on short notice, and there was no one to take their place. Logistically, the priest alone cannot distribute bread AND wine to more than a handful of people. It takes two, at least. Another reason could be COVID rules. I don't know when or where you attended this church. Throughout the pandemic, each bishop had different rules for their diocese about public worship which changed often, depending on the local situation at the time. One of the first things to go, and the last to be restored was everyone drinking from a single chalice for obvious reasons.
    Funny COVID communion story for you: the time I fought for the chalice. Things were beginning to get much better in my area, and I went to Church after a few weeks absent because of work and didn't get the memo. I went up for communion and received the bread from the priest and ate it and said "Amen". Then I saw the Eucharistic Minister holding the chalice! I grabbed it and pulled it towards me. He pulled back. I pulled back. He pulled back and I realized after the brief struggle something is off. After the service we talked, and it turned out that the wine was offered at that time for tincturing only (this is when you dip the communion host in the wine then eat it). This made total sense as a stepping stone toward "normal times", but I never take communion this way. A bit embarrassing, but we all had a good laugh.

  • @ChristCenteredMentalHealth
    @ChristCenteredMentalHealth 2 роки тому +3

    That’s a gorgeous sanctuary! It reminds me of some of the Catholic Churches I have seen. The symbolism also reminds me of the Catholic Church too. Thanks for sharing and may God bless you!

  • @abbeysommer7990
    @abbeysommer7990 Рік тому +2

    So, just to elaborate a little bit more on the history of the Episcopal church, as you stated, the Episcopal church started after the revolution as essentially the Church of England (the Anglican Church) in America. It was basically the same thing with all the same beliefs, just the head of the church was not the monarch for obvious reasons.
    Starting in, I believe, the 90s/early 00s, the Episcopal church really started to shift their views. A lot of people will point to Gay Marriage as the point on contention, but it was only one of many, and it essentially came down to the authority of scripture. The leaders of the Episcopal church were basically interpreting scripture however they wanted to and doing whatever they wanted.
    Due to this, a lot of churches who did not agree with them and still believed in the authority of scripture, decided they needed to break away. My church specially broke away officially the weekend before Christmas 2008 (that sunday before christmas was our first service as an Anglican church and in our new building as they refused to sell our old building to us). This has been an ongoing thing and now you will find just as many Anglican churches as you will Episcopal. The irony is that the King of England is once again the head of our church, but in order to have a church that aligns with the bible that is worth it.
    The Episcopal diocese tried to keep an Episcopal church open in our old building, but they couldn't get any members and had to close.
    The few times I have been to an Episcopal church since, I have noticed the same thing as you. Not very many people, and all older. My church did go threw a rough patch with members, but since the pandemic we have actually grown a decent amount, and with mostly young families, so as one of the youth leaders that makes me very excited for our future. I reccomend you check out an Anglican church, literagy will be the same but if they are anything like my church (in Buffalo, NY) you will find the congregation looks more like what you are used to (we dont have many 20s aged people, but that is really our only gap right now).
    One fun fact of the Anglican church is that we consider ourselves both Catholic and Protestant, Liturgical and Evangelical. We take the best of each and meet them in the middle. Our services veer more Catholic, but our beliefs and how we act at youth events and other things like that we veer more protestant/evangelical.
    Also, the fact that the sermon was only 5 minutes is crazy, if my pastor goes less than 30 minutes it feels short. Also, you were correct about communion. The only requirement is that you are a baptized bible believing Christian. But if someone goes up to receive you will never be denied.
    If there are any other questions I am happy to answer to the best of my ability!

  • @summergreen2412
    @summergreen2412 8 місяців тому +3

    Hi! First time watching your videos. Love it! I'm an Episcopalian (Episcopal is our denomination, Episcopalian is the people.) I wanted to answer a few of your questions. The red doors and the baptismal font near the door have significant meaning. The red denotes the blood of Christ and you enter into this community through it. The doors help you remember this important truth as well as the baptismal font placement. It's the same. You continue to live into the community through baptism. Such an important part of recognizing your place in the community of believers. Isn't that cool! Our worship spaces are intentional as you mentioned and tell the story of Christ and our rich ancient history. Next you mentioned the liturgy being short and that the deacon preached. I believe you did Morning Prayer with a deacon which means that a priest was not present. If a priest is present you would do the full service including the Eucharist. (continued below)

    • @summergreen2412
      @summergreen2412 8 місяців тому +1

      You are totally right that our church population is ageing. Not all Episcopal churches are thriving with young families ect. BUT, I do believe that it's changing. My particular parish is made of half life long Episcopalians, 25% people leaving Evangelical churches and 25% new and younger converts. We are an interesting denomination who allows for questions, mystery, reason and tradition. In modern churches they have stripped the history and interconnected aspect of being a part of the global and universal body of Christ. This is really important for us. This is why we use the same lectionary (readings both on Sunday and daily) that Catholics, Presbyterians and Methodists do. That means that millions of people are reading and contemplating the same scriptures together.

    • @summergreen2412
      @summergreen2412 8 місяців тому +1

      During communion- It may have been that the first "tier" is for the host and the wine and the second if for people who do not want to receive the common cup. It may be a Covid thing, my church has our qwirk with it all too. But we do believe that if you have the host, you have had communion, both are not necessary. How did the Episcopal church come to be? The brief answer is that we are the North Americal branch of the Anglican church. Yes, that would have been a problem during the revolutionary war and after, but we are still apart of the Anglican Communion which is no worldwide. Thank you for your video!

    • @joecitizen8988
      @joecitizen8988 7 місяців тому +1

      ​@@summergreen2412
      Point of clarity one can be an Episcopalian and an Anglican at the same time.
      One can also be an Anglican and not an Episcopalian.
      And history as intense and crazy as American.

  • @RestfullyRenewed
    @RestfullyRenewed 2 роки тому +2

    Isn't God so gracious to gift people with skills in art, stained glass, sculpture.

  • @robbchristopher158
    @robbchristopher158 3 години тому

    I attend an Episcopal Church and it is amazing!!➕🍞🍷✨🕯️🕯️

  • @janesaltin443
    @janesaltin443 2 роки тому +4

    Amazing and beautiful church wow.

  • @corym8358
    @corym8358 Рік тому +2

    Beautiful church. I've been an Episcopalian for over 30 years and this is the first time I've seen an actual crucifix (cross and corpus) hanging in an Episcopal Church. That's interesting. Unfortunately the Episcopal Church has pretty much become all show and no substance - beautiful buildings and services but not standing for anything. Members can basically believe whatever they want. As a result, they've been hemorrhaging membership. They're down to around 1.7 million now. When I joined in the early 90's they were around 2.5 million and were already in decline.

    • @TheMahayanist
      @TheMahayanist Рік тому

      If it's about belief, it won't last.

    • @k3grappler
      @k3grappler 9 місяців тому

      I think you oversimplify. Episcopalians do not believe anything they want. There is core doctrine--belief in the divinity of Jesus, belief in the Creeds of the Church, belief in the holy and undivided Trinity. In other areas we have questions and do not claim to have all of the answers. We never want the law to kill the spirit. The truth be told, church attendance is down even in places like the Southern Baptist Convention and in the Roman Catholic Church. Our culture has changed, and we are becoming secular, but in my opinion the church is needed now more than ever.

  • @kinaeventsanddecor704
    @kinaeventsanddecor704 2 роки тому +4

    Thank you for sharing more about this church.

  • @johncrasto1195
    @johncrasto1195 2 роки тому +3

    I love n see more churches which gives us the Christianity origins which we all Christian are not aware we need to be united as Christians.

  • @sameash3153
    @sameash3153 Рік тому +1

    Regarding the crash course at the end: the Episcopal church is the American branch of the Church of England. The revolutionary war was obviously a source of division, though praying to the king is not necessarily the problem. To this day, the current king is still the head of the church as it exists worldwide, meaning he is still prayed for to this day, even in America.
    One source of problems is that the church of England becomes "the church of [country name]" wherever it goes. But America, once it became a country independent of England, and founded on religious liberty, cannot have a national church, so we could not have the Church of America. That is why the Episcopal church is one of the only anglican churches that does not have its country of origin in its denominational title.
    What is important to know is that we are in communion with the church of England, Canada, Australia, and all other Anglican churches. Unfortunately, even though Episcopalians strongly identify as catholic, Roman Catholics are not in communion with Anglicans, and we are not permitted to share the eucharist with them (though they are allowed, if their father doesn't find out, to share with us).
    As for the protestant thing, well, anglicans are basically the second schism of the eastern catholic church. That is, England was founded as a catholic country before Rome split from the east. Its catholic heritage goes back to the orthodox church. It remained with the western church after they broke off, but then, famously, England broke off from them, leaving it split from both churches. But they did not break off from each other for theological reasons, so they kept their catholic heritage. Over time, the church of England adapted more protestant elements, though it was not part of the reformation proper.
    Lastly, it is odd to hear of a 35 minute service. It also sounds like they may have had a vacant organist if the congregation was singing a capella. Service at my church is usually at least an hour. Sermons are not normally long though, that is true. At the episcopal church, most of our sermons are explanations of the scriptures. Some people say the church has gotten more "woke" over the years, though not in my experience. I have never heard any current event discussed at a congregation, with the exception of war or otherwise impossible to avoid situations like the pandemic.

  • @kitchentools6880
    @kitchentools6880 2 роки тому +3

    It is beautiful sanctuary, learned again about it.

  • @vox9841
    @vox9841 Рік тому +2

    Thanks for the video. My church was built in 1115AD. The baptismal font at the entrance is a reminder that entry into Christ’s church is through our baptism.

  • @901cleo
    @901cleo Рік тому +1

    I am Episcopalian. An Episcopalian is someone who attends The Episcopal Church. Noun/Adjective.

  • @BirdDogey1
    @BirdDogey1 3 місяці тому

    I'm LCMS so I appreciate the historic liturgy. Very comfortable in the ACNA. However, the Episcopal church has veered left theologically.

  • @bethelstairwaytoheaven333
    @bethelstairwaytoheaven333 2 роки тому +2

    Wow this video is very interesting. Such a beautiful building and history.

  • @deniskay7235
    @deniskay7235 Рік тому +1

    Red doors. Remembering the Passover, YES. A place of sanctuary and protection, YES. Blood of Christ, YES. One of the cool things about religious architecture, art, and symbolism I think is that people can take different meanings and understandings that speak to them.
    Another interpretation of the red doors: It represents the wounds of Jesus on the cross. Especially in a cruciform "cross-shaped" church or cathedral. When viewed from above, the church looks like a cross and the doors through which you enter represent the crown of thorns, and the wounds on his hands and his feet. We approach and enter in the presence of God as wounded ourselves. We can leave all our troubles and brokenness at the door. By His wounds we are healed.

  • @SingForMeEntertainment
    @SingForMeEntertainment Рік тому +1

    Wow. Only 35 minutes for the service. I would think more people would go for how short the service is.

  • @shabeemejaz7579
    @shabeemejaz7579 2 роки тому +2

    This is a beautiful video of a beautiful church building.
    There is one God, one church and one Christ.

  • @Ashs-mini-vlogs
    @Ashs-mini-vlogs 2 роки тому +2

    Does America have really old church's my church I go to was built in 1284

    • @52churchesin52weeks
      @52churchesin52weeks  2 роки тому +4

      Nothing compared to that! From what I read, oldest church in the U.S. is a Spanish colonial mission church in New Mexico from 1610.

    • @Ashs-mini-vlogs
      @Ashs-mini-vlogs 2 роки тому

      @@52churchesin52weeks I made a video about it il link my vid or its in my channel if interested ua-cam.com/video/KLz5S6_m9yU/v-deo.html

  • @shirleywhitt8740
    @shirleywhitt8740 Рік тому +1

    Church of the Good Shepherd in Allegan, Michigan has red doors. It symbolizes the Pascal blood.

  • @se1nodn1chtse1n
    @se1nodn1chtse1n 25 днів тому

    I am an organist for an Episcopal church. The reason they’re getting so small is that we Episcopalians are allergic to evangelism. I’m trying to grow our church in Philly… we started with 23 Easter 22, and 46 on Easter 23… they need to do the work to grow, but the old folks don’t want to change anything, and there is such a ‘we already tried that’ ‘we never did that.’
    If you ever want to pick my brain on the church and the mass, I’m open to it.

  • @MikeFisher-l3j
    @MikeFisher-l3j 27 днів тому

    I'm in canada,and I'm a new anglican. High anglican. I love my church and everyone there. The liturgy and music is absorbing

  • @aditshow2308
    @aditshow2308 2 роки тому +2

    Very interesting to watch your video,
    You gave me the information.

  • @blessingehiagwina4388
    @blessingehiagwina4388 2 роки тому +2

    This is my first time earing about episcopal church.

  • @dalemac614
    @dalemac614 16 днів тому

    That is shameful I've been a Episcopalian my whole life no sermon should have been 5 min. If it was only a deacon there should not have been communion

  • @paulblack1799
    @paulblack1799 Рік тому +2

    I'm fond of it because you can rearrange the letters in Episcopal to spell Pepsi Cola. JK. Lovely church and people.

    • @keithholgreen7294
      @keithholgreen7294 Рік тому +1

      The church is beautiful, and I prefer Diet Dr Pepper 😊

    • @edwardgabriel5281
      @edwardgabriel5281 Рік тому

      I really believe that a sense of humor is one of the Godly attributes mankind inherits from our Maker.

  • @Taco0718
    @Taco0718 Рік тому +9

    Born and raised Catholic but seriously considering converting to the Episcopalian Church.

    • @kaifreyleue5961
      @kaifreyleue5961 Рік тому +3

      If it speaks to you, go ahead and do it. I am Episcopalian, my friend is Catholic. She wanted to find a new church after moving to the town I grew up in. Since she's gay, she's felt kind of uncomfortable for a while in the Catholic church, so I brought her to the Episcopal church I grew up attending and she LOVED it. She goes back every Sunday now!

    • @Zenkai251
      @Zenkai251 Рік тому +3

      The Catholic Church is the Church founded by Jesus Himself. He doesn't want you to leave His Church. I would recommend studying the Church's history and teachings. God bless 🙏

    • @Taco0718
      @Taco0718 Рік тому +1

      @@Zenkai251 I don't think Jesus cares lol

    • @Zenkai251
      @Zenkai251 Рік тому +1

      @@Taco0718 then why did He bother starting a Church and giving the leader of the Church the keys to the Kingdom and the authority to bind and loose? Why did He bother having Church leaders that would spread the Gospel after His death and resurrection? Why would He change Simon's name to Cephas (Peter), which means 'rock', and then say the following?
      "And I tell you, you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church, and the powers of death shall not prevail against it. I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven.”"
      Matthew 16:18‭-‬19 RSV
      If you truly care about Jesus and love Him, you should want to know what the truth is. It would a good idea to research what His Church teaches and why it claims to be the True Church.
      If you don't believe in the Catholic Church and what it teaches, then you cannot receive Communion until you repent and submit to God's Church.
      God bless 🙏

    • @Taco0718
      @Taco0718 Рік тому +1

      @Classical Saxophonist alright Knights Templar calm yourself, we don't need another crusade and Inquisition lol.

  • @christopher3386
    @christopher3386 Рік тому +1

    You didn't receive the cup only by mistake. That's not normal. The chalice-bearer simply lost count of who had received. Also, a five-minute sermon isn't the norm, they are usually at least 15 to 20 minutes long.

  • @Guguchina
    @Guguchina 28 днів тому

    I enjoy anglican services because they are short - there is a routine and gives you the chance to praise God, hear the bible, say the creed and pray together. I appreciate a short sermon: it allows me to actually remember the message and it doesn't take over the other important aspects of going to a church service.

  • @paulconnors2078
    @paulconnors2078 Місяць тому

    You mean Episcopal Churches. Episcopalian is a noun that describes a member of the church. Episcopal is an adjective describing how the church is led - in this case by bishops. A common mistake, but one that annoys Episcopalians.

  • @brandonmayfield1537
    @brandonmayfield1537 2 місяці тому

    I’m 29 and trying to find a traditional church to join, what denomination, I considered Catholic, but felt the service is repetitive and not conducive to personal growth. Also the Catholic Churches history… I can’t do modern churches, they are way too wacky and to me little effort placed in the holy site and lack of idols and just overall seriousness in respect for Christ does not agree with me. I am much more conservative. This church is beautiful!

  • @blessingehiagwina4388
    @blessingehiagwina4388 2 роки тому +1

    All the churches you will go will all be different. Some may be similar.

  • @wmalden
    @wmalden 3 місяці тому

    Did you know that you can rearrange the letters in “Episcopal” to spell “Pepsi Cola”?

  • @heinmadsen-leipoldt2341
    @heinmadsen-leipoldt2341 3 місяці тому

    I have always wondered why there's churches with altars, those very same churches say they're new testamental churches, altars were used to burn offerings for forgiveness of sins, if Jesus died and rosed again and went to heaven and we can pray to God the father through he's name - Jesus name, being forgiven of our sins, why still have an altar in church?

  • @michaelkingsbury4305
    @michaelkingsbury4305 4 місяці тому

    The red doors are an ancient tradition, revived in the 70's during the sactuary movement. It dates from the early days of Christianity in England, when some pagan kings sought to kill the priests and converts. Churches became sanctuaries and the doors were painted red to declare ithat they were sacred spaces. The pagan warriors would not violate holy ground, even of their enemies.

  • @tcofbthecommunityoffirstbo6950
    @tcofbthecommunityoffirstbo6950 2 роки тому +2

    The view is so so beautiful ❤️❤️❤️
    Thanks for sharing.

  • @MattheMatthew
    @MattheMatthew 9 місяців тому

    Episcopalian here. We are a rich tradition, but have done a poor job evangelizing and growing our flock in the late 20th century.

  • @newbengraham4775
    @newbengraham4775 2 місяці тому

    i remember reading in catholic answers that every body has blood. therefore it is still valid to skip the chalice if you so wish.

  • @circuitsandparts
    @circuitsandparts 7 місяців тому

    The Red Doors are for the sacrifice. From Genesis to Christ. Imagery is part of the liturgical practice.

  • @BatchelderPatrick
    @BatchelderPatrick 9 місяців тому

    Red doors = "The Holy Spirit Dwells within" You need to read a Wiki' article on the denomination to be more specific in your description. 🕌

  • @amandanyc3420
    @amandanyc3420 9 місяців тому

    Some really strange assumptions here. Well-intentioned but not well-informed

  • @Modeltnick
    @Modeltnick 4 місяці тому

    You need to go to a “high mass” to get the whole experience. It is a Spirit filled denomination.

  • @tvtimewithtim
    @tvtimewithtim 2 роки тому +1

    My grandpa was Episcopalian so thanks for sharing that great info! I've watched all of your videos (except for the Pope Booty one, I've only seen about a third of that one...sorry). But I really like how you go into visiting these churches with such a kind and open-hearted attitude towards the people and the things you experience.
    I do also like the aspects of your own personal spiritual journey so I hope we can still see some of that. As a Latter-day Saint, I of course loved your experiences with that faith. I know the point of the channel is to visit different churches, but it would still be cool to hear more about your own personal discoveries. Like are you still meeting with the Sister missionaries and/or reading the Book of Mormon? Are you still seeing cardinals everywhere??
    Anyway, best of luck with your continued exploration of all these churches!

  • @NiquiCarltonMusic
    @NiquiCarltonMusic 2 роки тому +2

    I'm assuming you're part of a church community, but may appear to be a problem child who never attends 😄
    What home church are you part of? I'm interested to know.

    • @52churchesin52weeks
      @52churchesin52weeks  2 роки тому

      It's a long story haha. Pandemic and personal situations put a wrench in a "normal attendance," and the church body (interdenominational) I had been plugging into has been closed with Men's groups and Bible study groups for the summer. Doing this puts my faith on fire, but its NOT sustainable for the long-term.

    • @NiquiCarltonMusic
      @NiquiCarltonMusic 2 роки тому +1

      @@52churchesin52weeks Oh yes. Covid messed up a lot of the things!
      Well, it's a fun way of finding a new home church. But please pick a healthy one!! 😄

    • @edwardgabriel5281
      @edwardgabriel5281 Рік тому

      @@NiquiCarltonMusic We all march to the drumbeat we hear.

  • @lilsavvyfamily6641
    @lilsavvyfamily6641 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you for creating this review. The red door at every Episcopal church is very interesting. It's sad about attendance being down at the church. It kind of looked like a museum with all the art.

  • @brucealanwilson4121
    @brucealanwilson4121 4 місяці тому

    If you are just sitting in the church without a service going on, the church is preachingcto you.

  • @david.leikam
    @david.leikam 11 місяців тому

    Craftsmanship and Christ, both are unfortunately fading.

  • @AdoradoraAngelaLopez
    @AdoradoraAngelaLopez 2 роки тому +1

    The church is so beautiful. Thank you for this informative video that brings great insight. God bless:)

  • @Geoplanetjane
    @Geoplanetjane 4 місяці тому

    The Church is Episcopal. The members are Episcopalians

  • @tracygriffin4439
    @tracygriffin4439 6 місяців тому

    It is called the Episcopal Church. The people in it are Episcopalians.

  • @las-beat7637
    @las-beat7637 9 місяців тому

    Please can anyone help me with prayer books and bible please am a new convert who really wants to know more about God please help

  • @minmattmills
    @minmattmills 2 роки тому +1

    This is a cool way to give a first hand experience with these churches. I def agree with you in reference to the hidden treasures.