
http://www.theologian.org.uk/church/WhyIamanEvangelical.mp3
Hope exists for a Protestant, Reformed, and Evangelical Anglican with men like this around.
Reformed Theology will not grant access to Pentecostalism and Charismaticism--and for good reasons. Of course, Anglo-Catholicism has been given place within Anglicanism in the late 19th-early 20th century due to the weakness of the episcopal bench. But historically, Anglo-Catholicism was not--and still is not--classical Anglicanism. I would invite--with all good cheer and integrity--Anglo-Catholics to join Rome or Orthodxy. Be what you are. With Dr. Peter Jensen, we get Protestant, Reformed, and Evangelical Anglicanism--consonant, coherent, and consistent with the 1662 Book of Common Prayer and the Thirty-nine Articles.
Hope exists for a Protestant, Reformed, and Evangelical Anglican with men like this around.
Reformed Theology will not grant access to Pentecostalism and Charismaticism--and for good reasons. Of course, Anglo-Catholicism has been given place within Anglicanism in the late 19th-early 20th century due to the weakness of the episcopal bench. But historically, Anglo-Catholicism was not--and still is not--classical Anglicanism. I would invite--with all good cheer and integrity--Anglo-Catholics to join Rome or Orthodxy. Be what you are. With Dr. Peter Jensen, we get Protestant, Reformed, and Evangelical Anglicanism--consonant, coherent, and consistent with the 1662 Book of Common Prayer and the Thirty-nine Articles.
A tad weak re: Arminians. On the other hand, good balance, to wit, for some Reformed who think TULIP is the centre of the Gospel. TULIP is quite biblical and we hold it here, but there are "some cagey Calvinists" who are imbalanced. A good Prayer Book restores and retains balance.
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