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Anglican Church of Chile

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Christian denomination in Chile

Anglican Church of Chile
Iglesia Anglicana de Chile
ClassificationProtestant
OrientationAnglican
ScriptureHoly Bible
TheologyAnglican doctrine
PolityEpiscopal
PrimateEnrique Lago
AssociationsAnglican Communion,GAFCON,Global South
LanguageSpanish,Mapudungun,English
HeadquartersSantiago, Chile
Territory Chile
Membersc. 20,000[1]
Official websiteiach.cl

TheAnglican Church of Chile (Spanish:Iglesia Anglicana de Chile) is theecclesiastical province of theAnglican Communion that covers four dioceses inChile. Formed in 2018, the province is the 40th in the Anglican Communion. The province consists of four dioceses. Itsprimate andmetropolitan is the Archbishop of Chile,Enrique Lago.

History

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Diocese of the Falkland Islands

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During the 19th century, British immigrants toSouth America broughtAnglicanism with them (Milmine 1993, p. 8). The Patagonian Missionary Society, renamedSouth American Mission Society (SAMS) in 1868, was initially active inTierra del Fuego and later extended its activities to theAraucanian region. It was responsible for the formation of all the early Anglican churches and missions in Chile.

Waite Stirling, a missionary from the South American Missionary Society, was consecrated atWestminster Abbey on 21 December 1869 as the firstBishop of the Falkland Islands. The see of the bishop was in Buenos Aires (Milmine 1993, p. 11). This was due to legal requirements at the time which did not allow the Church of England to consecrate or appoint bishops outside those territories under the jurisdiction of the Crown, but the jurisdiction of the bishop was stated to be all of South America apart from British Guiana.

Diocese of Chile

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Cholchol Anglican Church (1915),Cautín Province.

The Diocese of Chile, Bolivia and Peru was formed in 1963,[2] as part of a general process of forming national dioceses out of the enormous diocese of the Falkland Islands. Following expansion it became the Diocese of Chile and Bolivia in 1971 when Peru became a separate diocese. It was again renamed the Diocese of Chile in 1981, following separation from Bolivia.

Until 1974, the various dioceses of the southern cone were under themetropolitical oversight of theArchbishop of Canterbury. In that year a process began to inaugurate a new Anglican province. The Diocese of Chile was a constituent and founding diocese of the new Province of the Southern Cone of America in 1981, and remained part of that province until 2018, although the province was renamed in September 2014 as the Anglican Church of South America.[3]

Proposed autonomy

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Following the change of provincial name, two constituent dioceses, Chile and Peru, both began expansion towards forming autonomous provinces. In 2017 the Diocese of Peru voted at its diocesan synod to abandon its plans to form an autonomous province, but the diocese of Chile continued its expansion towards that goal. As part of these preparations, auxiliary bishops were consecrated. Three auxiliary bishops, together with the diocesan bishopTito Zavala, took responsibility for four geographical regions, and in 2018 these were formed into four new dioceses.

Province of Chile

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Following approval from theAnglican Consultative Council the four Chilean dioceses were nominated to form an autonomous province, to be established in 2018, and named Iglesia Anglicana de Chile (Anglican Church of Chile).

The inauguration was carried out in a special service on 4 November 2018 inSantiago.[4] The Presiding Bishop of South America,Gregory Venables, presided at the service, and theArchbishop of Canterbury,Justin Welby, presided over the inauguration and preached the sermon in the presence of bishops and archbishops from across South America and other parts of the Anglican Communion. Archbishop Welby handed primatial authority (represented by the symbolic handing over of a primatial cross) to Archbishop Tito Zavala,[4] theBishop of Santiago, and previously Bishop of Chile. Archbishop Zavala had previously served as Primate of South America from 2010 to 2016.

St. Paul's Anglican Cathedral in Valparaíso, completed in 1858.

The new province gives the statistics of 95 parishes and approximately 20,000 members for their membership.[1]

The House of Bishops at the formation of the province in 2018 consisted of:[5]

Archbishops

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ThePrimate andMetropolitan of the province is the Archbishop of Chile.

Dioceses

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The province consists of four dioceses.[6]

DioceseYear foundedTerritoryNumber of congregations(2024)CathedralSee cityBishop(s)
Araucanía2018Araucanía40NoneTemucoJoel Millanguir
Santiago1981Santiago Metropolitan,O'Higgins20NoneSantiagoJuan Esteban Saravia (diocesan);Alfred Cooper andNelson Ojeda (auxiliary)
South of Chile2018Maule,Ñuble,Biobío,Los Ríos,Los Lagos,Aysén,Magallanes9NoneConcepciónEnrique Lago
Valparaíso2018Arica and Parinacota,Tarapacá,Antofagasta,Atacama,Coquimbo,Valparaíso14St. Paul's CathedralValparaísoVacant

Previous bishops

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As a constituent diocese of the South American province, the Anglican Church in Chile was previously led by BishopDavid Pytches (1972–1976) and BishopColin Bazley (1977–2000).Tito Zavala became the first Chilean native bishop in 2000;Abelino Manuel Apeleo became an assistant bishop in 2016.

Anglican realignment

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TheAnglican Church of South America, formerly known asAnglican Church of the Southern Cone of America, from which the Province of Chile was formed, has been involved in theAnglican realignment. Likewise the Anglican Church of Chile is also a member of theGlobal South and theGlobal Anglican Future Conference (GAFCON), and is in full communion with theAnglican Church in North America (ACNA), formed in 2009 by former members of theEpiscopal Church in theUnited States and theAnglican Church of Canada, wishing to maintain a more conservative approach to biblical interpretation and authority. Representatives of the Anglican Church in North America were present at the inauguration of the new province, including former archbishopRobert Duncan and currentFoley Beach.[4]

The future Anglican Church of Chile was represented atGAFCON III, inJerusalem, on 17–22 June 2018, by a 15 members delegation.[7]

References

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  1. ^ab"Iglesia Anglicana de Chile se convierte en la provincia 40º del mundo, Anglican Church of Chile Official Website (Spanish)". Archived fromthe original on 7 November 2018. Retrieved7 November 2018.
  2. ^Millam, Rev. Peter J. (August 1997)."The Falklands - The World's Largest Diocese". Archived fromthe original on 12 January 2008. Retrieved2008-02-17.
  3. ^Change recorded atAnglican Communion website.
  4. ^abc"Birth of a new mission as "shining light" Chile becomes Anglican Communion's 40th province". Anglican Communion News Service. Retrieved6 November 2018.
  5. ^"NUESTROS OBISPOS". Iglesia Anglicana de Chile. Archived fromthe original on 25 December 2018. Retrieved7 November 2018.
  6. ^"Provincia Anglicana de Chile". Iglesia Anglicana de Chile. Archived fromthe original on 8 August 2020. Retrieved30 March 2023.
  7. ^GAFCON III largest pan-Anglican gathering since Toronto Congress of 1963, Anglican Ink, 20 June 2018

Bibliography

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Milmine, Obispo Douglas (1993),La Comunion Anglicana en América Latina

External links

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