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Ordained
Ministry
To obtain
more information about vocations and ordained ministry in the
American Catholic Church please email our director of vocations
and formation at
ACCVocations@americancatholicchurch.org
KNOW SOMEONE INTERESTED IN
PRIESTHOOD, DIACONATE, OR INCARDINATION?
CONSIDER THE DIOCESE OF CALIFORNIA
AMERICAN CATHOLIC CHURCH
No need to relocate.
Collaborative, supportive.
Minister according to your gifts, talents, and interests.
Progressive, diverse, inclusive.
Celibate, single, married, or partnered clergy.
Valid Apostolic Succession and orders.
Worker-priest tradition.
Application for Holy Orders
"Bloom where you are planted"
Diocese of California
American Catholic Church
3900 Cleveland Avenue
San Diego, California 92103
or
Diocese of California
Director of Vocations and Formation
American Catholic Church
1082 Morgan Hill Dr.
Chula Vista, CA 91913
www.americancatholicchurch.org
VOCATION INQUIRIES:
Father Martin De Porres Griffin - Director of Vocations and
Formation
ACCVocations@americancatholicchurch.org
AMERICAN CATHOLIC CHURCH FAQ and the DIOCESE OF CALIFORNIA
--- FAQ
What is the American Catholic Church?
The American Catholic Church, one of many autocephalous
(self-governing) churches within the tradition of the Old
Catholic Church was established in order to minister in the
sacred, sacramental tradition of our Catholic heritage while
offering a more personal, pastoral, approach and progressive
ideology than that of the larger, and more well known, forms of
Catholicism. (Roman Catholic, Orthodox, Anglo-Catholic.) We are
a pilgrim Church, conscious of our time and place, journeying as
a community in an ever-changing world. To this end, the Mission
Statement of our church reflects our commitment to proclaiming
compassion for all, the equal dignity of all, and the
possibility for all persons to know and love God and their
neighbor in a unique way. We are a community open to exploring
new theological horizons while remaining grounded in the "One,
Holy, Catholic and Apostolic" tradition, and yet aware that God
is too big to be contained or limited by human thought or
organization.
We presently have priests or deacons serving in California,
Florida, Nevada and Oregon. Some are serving in parishes, while others
serve in hospital, prison or hospice chaplaincies, as
therapists, teachers or in other professional positions.
In What Way Are You Catholic?
As members of the "One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church," we
preserve an Apostolic Succession of Bishops which is of
unquestioned validity and which is derived from Rome through the
Episcopacy of the Old Catholic Church, established after the
First Vatican Council in 1870. Other lines of succession extend
from the African Orthodox Church deriving its succession from
The Ancient See of St. Peter in Antioch, as well as through the
Roman Catholic Church derived from the Igreja Catholica
Apostolica Brasileria, The Chaldean Patriarchate, the Order of
Corporate Reunion and L'Eglise Johannite des Chretiens
Primitif's. In addition, lines also come from The See of St.
Augustine at Canterbury and the Iglesia Filipina Independiente.
As Catholic Christians, we celebrate the seven sacraments of the
Church, and adhere to the essentials of Catholic doctrine and
practice as these have been expressed in the traditional creeds
of the Catholic Church, in various declarations, and in the
doctrinal formulations of the Ecumenical Councils through to,
and especially including Vatican II. Yet we also listen for the
Word of God responding to the movements of today's world, and
look to see the action and call of the Spirit in the lives of
those around us.
The Old Catholic Church was founded by Bishops at the time of
Vatican I in the 1800s who could not accept the dogma of Papal
Infallibility. Even though we do not believe the Successor of
Peter to be infallible, we acknowledge the primacy of the
Petrine Office and render respect due to the Bishop of Rome as
well as to his authority when he speaks in union with the
Catholic Bishops. The primacy (not supremacy) of the Holy Father
(Pope) is the focus of Old Catholics as well is the issue of
Papal Infallibility.
We have a deep love for our extensive Catholic traditions, and
therefore permit use of the Sacramentaries for the Roman Church,
the Orthodox Church and the Anglo-Catholic Churches, as well as
nurture an openness to liturgical development as laid out by
Vatican II, especially around the issues of cultural
sensitivity, that worship is indeed always "the work of the
people."
So how are you different from other Catholics?
Even as we are grounded in the essentials of Catholic Faith and
practice, we believe we can offer to the world a new and hopeful
Catholicism, a renewed and open Church, which is committed to
furthering the noblest aspirations of the human mind and heart.
In keeping with our respect for the full human dignity of all
persons as well as our desire to offer a more progressive
approach to sacerdotal ministry/ we welcome women and men,
single, celibate, partnered and married persons into the clergy.
We are committed to promoting a leadership of service rather
than one characterized by domination and control. We see
ourselves as a support and facilitator of the relationship
between an individual and the Divine, rather than an
intermediary. The American Catholic Church is not independent
from or dependent on, but rather sees itself as interdependent
with the Roman Catholic Church, Orthodox Churches, and other
Christian faith communities.
How is the Church governed?
We maintain a collegial ecclesiastical structure which, while
preserving the traditional orders of Church governance, allows
for greater equality for a more democratic process, for
diversity in unity and unity in diversity, and which the
voice of the people to be heard. We are committed to an
ecclesiastical policy which genuinely allows the laity to take
their rightful place in the government of the local and
diocesan Church and which gives due respect to their gifts, to
their intelligence, and to their human rights.
Is anyone welcome to your sacraments?
We are committed to creating communities which are inclusive on
the basis not only of gender but also of age, race, ethnic
background, sexual orientation, or physical disability. We seek
to embrace and to reconcile, rather than to condemn and to
alienate those whose circumstances have caused them to
experience rejection by churches as well as by society at-large.
Thus, in accordance with our general policy of ecumenical
openness and of compassion for all our sisters and brothers in
Christ, we do not withhold reception of the Sacraments from any
qualified person who desires to receive them. In particular, we
place no artificial barriers in the way of reception of the
Sacrament of Baptism. Not wishing to impose additional hardships
upon those who are divorced, we consider that remarriage after
divorce does not in itself constitute a barrier to the reception
of any of the sacraments. We are also committed to providing the
Sacrament of Matrimony to all couples who seriously seek it,
regardless of sexual orientation or gender identification.
VOCATION INQUIRIES:
Father Martin De Porres Griffin - Vicar of Vocations and
Formation
Application for Holy Orders
ACCVocations@americancatholicchurch.org |