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Churches of Scotland and England reach first formal pact | Churches of Scotland and England reach first formal pact |
(about 5 hours later) | |
An "historic" agreement has been reached between the Church of England and the Church of Scotland - marking their first formal working arrangement. | |
A document - the Columba Declaration - will be debated by the ruling bodies of both Churches next year. | |
It commits the Churches to "grow together in communion and to strengthen their partnership in mission". | |
Founded in two different branches of Protestantism, England's Church is Anglican and Scotland's Presbyterian. | |
The declaration has been authored by Kirk minister the Reverend John McPake, and the Church of England's Bishop of Chester, Peter Forster. | The declaration has been authored by Kirk minister the Reverend John McPake, and the Church of England's Bishop of Chester, Peter Forster. |
'Common reality' | 'Common reality' |
They say the agreement will allow clergy and lay people from each Church to be welcomed into the other when they move across the border. | |
The pact also recognises that the two Churches have constitutional responsibilities in separate parts of the UK. | |
"We face the common reality that constitutional change could have a significant impact on our own identity and relationships," the 15-page declaration says. | "We face the common reality that constitutional change could have a significant impact on our own identity and relationships," the 15-page declaration says. |
In a joint statement from both authors they said they hoped the pact would "affirm and strengthen our relationship at a time when it is likely to be particularly critical in the life of the UK". | In a joint statement from both authors they said they hoped the pact would "affirm and strengthen our relationship at a time when it is likely to be particularly critical in the life of the UK". |
They also said they wanted it to "enable us to speak and act together more effectively in the face of the missionary challenges of our generation". | |
The Church of England's ruling body - the General Synod - will discuss the document in February, while the Church of Scotland's General Assembly will go through the same process in May. | The Church of England's ruling body - the General Synod - will discuss the document in February, while the Church of Scotland's General Assembly will go through the same process in May. |
Both Churches were formed separately during the Reformation - which began in 1517 and focused on ways to reform the Catholic Church. | |
The new agreement is the first between the Churches - which both describe themselves as part of "one holy catholic and apostolic church" - but have significant ecclesiological differences. | |
The Church of England retained more vestiges of Catholicism, has Catholic and evangelical wings, and is governed by bishops. | The Church of England retained more vestiges of Catholicism, has Catholic and evangelical wings, and is governed by bishops. |
Meanwhile, the Church of Scotland is Presbyterian in structure and has no bishops or cathedrals. | Meanwhile, the Church of Scotland is Presbyterian in structure and has no bishops or cathedrals. |
This year the two Churches established the Churches' Mutual Credit Union as a response to concerns that low-income families needed access to low-cost banking and loans. |