This is yet another term I've come across as I try learning from past threads. Would someone please explain what High Chhurch and Low Church means?
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All Anglicans are both Catholic and Reformed. All use essentially the same liturgical forms. But the "look and feel" of the liturgy can range from indistinguishable-from-Roman-Catholic to indistinguishable-from-Evangelical, according to the customs of the parish. Both of these extremes are later developments (nineteenth and twentieth century). But even within the very traditional Anglican practices of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries there was a range between styles of worship that emphasized formal division of roles between clergy and laity with formal and precisely-defined vestments and accessories, to styles that emphasized lay participation, equality within the church, and integration of worship life with daily life. People can get very attached to particular forms, such that they can't abide having, or not having, some particular practice -- I know a man who left the Church rather than face the introduction of <gasp>candles! into the sanctuary. Some churches adopt a variety of different practices, and eschew others, to keep the peace and allow as broad a range of people as possible to feel at home in the parish.ChessCastle said:This is yet another term I've come across as I try learning from past threads. Would someone please explain what High Chhurch and Low Church means?
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High Church = dwindling congregations
Low Church = bursting at the seams
High Church = dwindling congregations
Low Church = bursting at the seams
holyshe said:i go to a high church bursting at its seems !!!!
PaladinValer said:High, Broad, and Low are various forms of "churchship." It is basically a preference to how a church service should be like.
High Churchers prefer a traditional Mass/Divine Liturgy, with smells and bells, Eucharistic adoration, etc.
Low Churchers prefer a more contemporary service, often utilizing just the bare minimums.
Broad Churchers prefer a balance of the two.
Low Church=Bursting at it seems
would it be concievable that someone should be a low church anglo-catholic... or a high church protestant?... *better question could be does anyone fit those groupings here... I can imagine that a person could easily be a low church anglo-catholic (a person with catholic beliefs at a church which maintains the bare minimums)... but I've yet to come across a high church protestant (in terms of theological positioning)...
ChessCastle said:What is Eucharistic adoration? I understand the Eucharist is communion is that just another term?
ChessCastle said:What is Eucharistic adoration? I understand the Eucharist is communion is that just another term?
Dogsbody said:An alternative view:
High Church = dwindling congregations
Low Church = bursting at the seams
I am simply pointing out that growth does not not equal truth.Dogsbody said:OK, so cliques of men in nighties are a good thing...but unfortunately against what Christ commanded us to do. Go..................