Sunday, June 26, 2011

Readers Engage: Other Calvinistic Anglicans

aaytch said...
Yes. Our community (estranged from ACNA) is growing, albeit slowly. The blogging community is especially active. A few additional blogs that nearly always express an Anglo-Reformed perspective:







June 26, 2011 1:27 PM

BloggerReformation said...

Hudson:

Making sure this is on my blog. Also, earnestly wish there was more active updates. We have no other leading voices. We are like the early church facing the Graeco-Roman world of old.

This too is good when there are active posts.

http://reasonablechristian.blogspot.com/  Charlie is very active and always followed here--not followed in every single particular, but in many.  Charlie renders an able service for which this scribe gives thanks.

Thanks, this one is new, but it is not very active.

I've seen Jack around the net, but didn't know he had a blog.  

This is a daily read. Will post all this for visibility.  Although, there are very grave reservations about a writer on Anglicanism--and he is good--but who frequents Anabaptist houses of worship as well as places with CCM-fellows. 

June 26, 2011 2:02 PM

3 comments:

  1. Further comments:

    Anglo-reformed and anglicansinthewilderness, which are my blogs are not as active as I wish them to be, but they are as active as I have the time and skills to provide. If there's anybody out there who would like to become a contributing editor, let me know .

    Yes, anglicansablaze is a mixed bag. I have no doubt that he (Robin) is one of us, but the problem is that he believes we should wait patiently for ACNA to turn itself around, and that when it does there will be a place for us, Reformed Anglicans, in its midst. I just don't think that's rational. My preference is to seek the support of Presbyterians for planting churches with an Anglican ethos, yet under their discipline. That may be equally far-fetched, but I think it's Biblically principled, and rational from the point of view of history. The fallout of the 1662 settlements was tragic and unnecessary. We in North America have an opportunity to set things right, if God be willing.

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  2. I'm a Calvinist Anglican and I blog here:

    http://livingtext.wordpress.com/

    FYI.

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  3. Joel:

    Will begin reading your blog. I did not know it existed.

    Phil

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