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Anglican Network in Europe

The Anglican Network in Europe (ANiE) is a Christian denomination in the Anglican tradition with churches in Europe. Formed as part of the worldwide Anglican realignment, it is a member jurisdiction of the Global Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans (GAFCON) and is under the primatial oversight of the chairman of the GAFCON Primates Council. ANiE runs in parallel with the Free Church of England (RECUK). GAFCON recognizes ANiE as a "proto-province" operating separately from the Church of England, the Scottish Episcopal Church, the Church in Wales and other Anglican Communion jurisdictions in Great Britain and the European continent. ANiE is the body hierarchically above the preexisting Anglican Mission in England; the former is the equivalent of a province whilst the latter is a convocation, the equivalent of a diocese.

History
ANiE's origins date to 2013, when Anglican bishops at the second Global Anglican Future Conference in Nairobi endorsed the provision of episcopal oversight for Anglicans who could not in good conscience remain in their local dioceses or provinces. "We commit ourselves to the support and defence of those who in standing for apostolic truth are marginalized or excluded from formal communion with other Anglicans in their dioceses. We have therefore recognized the Anglican Mission in England (AMiE) as an expression of authentic Anglicanism both for those within and outside the Church of England," the 2013 GAFCON communique said. AMiE was initially "authorised by the GAFCON Primates to work within and, where necessary, outside the structures of the Church of England as a missionary society." Anglican priest Andy Lines was designated general secretary for AMiE, for which episcopal oversight was provided by a panel of bishops led by John Ellison, a retired Bishop of Paraguay. In 2015, Ellison was investigated by the Diocese of Salisbury due to his service as an overseer for AMiE's Christ Church Salisbury. In 2016, AMiE unveiled a plan to plant 25 churches by 2025 and 250 churches by 2050. In 2017, in anticipation of the Scottish Episcopal Church becoming the first Anglican church in the British isles to approve same-sex marriage, the GAFCON Primates Council meeting in Lagos authorized the consecration of a missionary bishop for Europe to support Anglican clergy and churches in Great Britain that could no longer in good conscience remain within the Canterbury-aligned church structures: During our meeting, we considered how best to respond to the voice of faithful Anglicans in some parts of the Global North who are in need of biblically faithful episcopal leadership. Of immediate concern is the reality that on 8th June 2017 the Scottish Episcopal Church is likely to formalize their rejection of Jesus' teaching on marriage. If this were to happen, faithful Anglicans in Scotland will need appropriate pastoral care. In addition, within England there are churches that have, for reasons of conscience, been planted outside of the Church of England by the Anglican Mission in England (AMiE). These churches are growing, and are in need of episcopal leadership. Therefore, we have decided to consecrate a missionary bishop who will be tasked with providing episcopal leadership for those who are outside the structures of any Anglican province, especially in Europe. On June 30, 2017, Anglican Church in North America Primate Foley Beach consecrated Lines as missionary bishop to Europe on behalf of GAFCON. The consecration was attended by 1,400 Anglican representatives from all over the world, including 11 primates, 3 archbishops, and 13 bishops. The Primates who attended were Nicholas Okoh (Nigeria), Stanley Ntagali (Uganda), Daniel Deng Bul (Sudan and South Sudan), Jacob Chimeledya (Tanzania), Jackson Ole Sapit (Kenya), Onesphore Rwaje (Rwanda), Zacharie Masimango Katanda (Congo), Daniel Sarfo (West Africa), Gregory Venables (South America), Ng Moon Hing (Southeast Asia), and Mouneer Anis (Jerusalem and the Middle East). Lines ordained the first clergy specifically called to AMiE in December 2017 In 2020, the GAFCON Primates Council voted to establish the Anglican Network in Europe as a "proto-province" with a presiding bishop and two convocations: the AMiE and the newly formed Anglican Convocation Europe (ACE). In 2022, four new assistant bishops were appointed to assist Lines in AMiE and ACE. In 2024, the Church of Nigeria released Anglican Missionary Congregations (AMC), a group of congregations serving Nigerian expatriates in Europe, to the jurisdiction of ANiE. AMC became the ANiE's third convocation. ==Beliefs==
Beliefs
In its canons and constitution, ANiE "receives and accepts as its Doctrinal Basis the Canonical books of the Old and New Testaments as the inspired Word of God, containing all things necessary for salvation, and the final authority and unchangeable standard for Christian faith and life." As "faithful expressions of this doctrine," ANiE accepts the faith as summarized in the Apostles' Creed, the Nicene Creed and the Athanasian Creed; the 1662 Book of Common Prayer and the Ordinal; the Thirty-Nine Articles of Religion agreed in 1562 and finalized upon incorporation into the BCP in 1571; and GAFCON's Jerusalem Statement and Declaration of 2008. ==Structure==
Structure
ANiE encompasses three convocations that function as dioceses, each with its own character; field of operation; and its own constitution, canons and synod. The network is governed by a presiding bishop and a synod including representatives, clergy and lay, from the member convocations. The basic level of organization is the local congregation. Each congregation is part of a convocation led by bishops. The two convocations, AMiE and ACE, may have overlapping jurisdictions, with at least one ACE congregation located in England. ANiE's operations remain provisional, and according to the network's canons, "ANiE looks forward to the day, when under God, this provincial framework becomes a fully operational Province where the Presiding Bishop and the Province take their place in the councils of the Church." Convocations ==Churchmanship==
Churchmanship
ANiE's structure and canons allow for a range of Anglican churchmanship and doctrinal distinctives within the framework of the doctrinal commitments summarized above. For example, AMiE represents the conservative evangelical thread in Anglicanism often represented by Reform in the Church of England or the Anglican Diocese of Sydney. AMiE's canons forbid Anglo-Catholic vesture, take a strict approach to remarriage after divorce, and require doctrinal subscription for church membership. The ACE canons are looser and encompass the Anglo-Catholic and charismatic traditions within Anglicanism. ==Ecumenical relations==
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