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The
Lusitanian Catholic Apostolic Evangelical Church
A Century of Portuguese Anglican Witness
The Lusitanian Catholic Apostolic Evangelical Church is a small
and minority Portuguese church, very keen on its Anglicanism,
with the liturgy said not in English but in Portuguese, living
in the midst of a mainly Roman Catholic ambience. Its character
is summarised in its seal: Apostolic Order, Evangelical Truth.
History
The reaction of some Roman Catholic priests and lay to a number
of dogmas from Vatican I (1869–70) and the witness of
two Anglican priests who passed through Lisbon in 1839 and 1868
were the main forces which led to the establishment of the Lusitanian
Church in 1880. This was at a Synod presided over by Bishop
Riley, consecrated in the American Episcopal Church to serve
in its new mission in Mexico. From the beginning we were assisted
by a Council of Bishops presided over by Lord Plunkett, at that
time Bishop of Meath, Church of Ireland, and years afterwards
there were some American Episcopal Bishops who provided Episcopal
ministrations and pastoral care, particularly Bishops in Charge
of the Convocation of American Churches in Europe, until the
consecration of the first Lusitanian Bishop in 1958.
Since 1980, it has been an extra-provincial Diocese under the
Metropolitan Authority of the Archbishop of Canterbury in his
capacity as the focal point of unity of the Anglican Communion
throughout the world, and as President of both the Lambeth Conference
and the Anglican Consultative Council.
From the very beginning of their religious movement the Lusitanian
fathers clearly decided to adopt the doctrinal and liturgical
standards of the Anglican Communion for the new-born Church,
stating at the same time: "We do not desire to found a
new religion, but simply to cleanse the Christian Religion from
the corruption of the ages, and to reconquer the ancient liberties
of the early Lusitanian Church – so long subjected to
the foreign yoke of Rome – and to spread through all this
country a doctrine, which shall be Catholic and Apostolic, in
a church that shall be Portuguese not Roman".
The Name
The Church was named Lusitanian, Catholic, Apostolic, Evangelical.
The word LUSITANIAN – referring to Lusitania, a Roman
Province situated in the territory which, in part, was to constitute
the Portuguese kingdom – was selected to signify that
the purpose of the new community was to restore the ancient
Christianity and maintain the faith of the Primitive Church;
the word CATHOLIC avoided the idea that the community might
belong to the specifically Protestant world; the word APOSTOLIC
was to emphasize her loyality to the apostolic succession; and
the word EVANGELICAL declared the aim to proclaim Jesus Christ
as a personal Saviour, in contrast with a supposedly dead ritualism
and the Marian devotion of the dominating religion.
The Mission
Diocesan Departments DJIL - Lusitanian Church Youth Department
It is a very alive and committed Department led by a young and
active couple. Besides seminars and retreats on pertinent issues,
it organizes annual summer camps for 100 children and young
people, where Bible studies and worship, side by side with moments
of leisure, have been blessed times of evangelization and fellowship
in Christ. A good number of participants in the camps are not
members of the Church.
DMIL - Lusitanian Church
Women's Department
Though very new in the life of the Church (four years old),
DMIL has been developing an important role in the Diocese, particularly
awakening women to their relevant action and presence both in
the individual parishes and in the Diocese as a whole. The life
of some parishes has changed as the women parishioners have
become involved in DMIL. At the same time, DMIL provides great
support for some poor families. This department also organizes
summer camps for older people and has nursing activities in
the Day Care Center for older people (AETP).
Social Responsibility
As a way of witnessing the love of Jesus within the community,
the Lusitanian Church has been promoting a true ministry of
service to the under-priviledged. At present there are three
institutions of the Lusitanian Church with social responsibility:
The Torne and Prado School Association, in Vila Nova de Gaia,
which provides social services for 150 children split into the
Day Nursery (25 children: 2 years old), the Kindergarten (75
children: 3-5 years old) and the Spare Time after-school schedule
(50 children: 6-12 years old). Last year this association also
started a service that has been providing meals, various activities
and home support for 60 older people.
The Social Center of Sagrada Família, in Queluz, near
Lisbon, which has a Day Center for older people who come from
an area with many social problems. The former priest of the
Parish of Sagrada Família promoted the building of 40
houses for people who were living in bad conditions.
The Bartimeau Mission, based in St. Paul's Cathedral, in Lisbon,
which is just beginning. The aim of this institution is to spread
the Gospel and to promote social and cultural activities among
blind people. This mission is coordinated by a blind man, Carlos
Araya, who was ordained Deacon of the Lusitanian Church in November
1997.
Ecumenical Commitment
The Lusitanian Church is one of the three founding churches
of the Portuguese Council of Christian Churches (COPIC). It
regularly takes part in the Ecumenical and Interconfessional
Meetings in Portugal involving the Roman Catholic Church, COPIC
and the Portuguese Evangelical Alliance. The Lusitanian Church
is also a member of the World Council of Churches and the Conference
of European Churches.
Statistics
Places of worship 16 (divided into two arch-deaconries: 6 in
the North and 10 in the South)
Baptized members 5 000
Communicants 1 500
Canonically active priests 8
Missionary priest 1
Canonically active deacons 6 (3 of them women)
Lay readers 9 (3 of them women)
Two final comments
We are a Church where words such as availability, service and
commitment in a voluntary way are fully understood and practised.
Of the eight active priests and six deacons two are university
professors, one is a secondary school teacher, two are accountants
and two are clerks; even the Diocesan Bishop was a bank officer
until 1996. Because we are small and financially weak, we depend
heavily on non-stipendiary or part-time clergy and lay volunteers.
In contrast to many Anglican Churches which are integral parts
of central state structures and in some cases have a form of
religious civil service, the Lusitanian Church, because of its
great lack of material and financial means, has based its modus
vivendi on koinonia (communion and service) rather than on structure.
This is a picture of a very small Church which has been living
for more than a century in a hostile environment, ever faithful
to the promise of Jesus: "I am with you till the end of
time" (Matthew 28:20), and ever committed to carrying out
Jesus' mission to the Portuguese people.
Fernando Soares
Bishop
April 1998
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