The DHC was formed by clergy and parishes belonging to the Anglican Province of Christ the King (APCK).On March 5, 2003, Ash Wednesday, the Diocese of the Holy Cross seceded from the Anglican Province of Christ the King over questions surrounding the successor of Robert S. Morse, James Provence, following a disagreement with the APCK over the election of a divorced and remarried priest to be a bishop in the church.[2][3]
In response to the Apostolic Constitution for a Personal Ordinariate, Bishop Paul Hewett characterized the initiative as "generous, courageous, creative and unprecedented" but determined that the offer needed careful discernment and that it should not be a distraction from "the vital work of setting our own house in order."[8]
On October 6, 2017, at a joint synod in Atlanta, Georgia, the primates of the Anglican Province of America, the Anglican Church in America, the Anglican Catholic Church, and the Diocese of the Holy Cross signed a concordat of full communion, pledging to pursue full, institutional, and organic union.[10][11]
On September 23, 2021, the Diocese of the Holy Cross voted to join the Anglican Catholic Church as a non-geographical diocese.[12] Upon immediate acceptance, the DHC became a constituent diocese of the Anglican Catholic Church.[13]
The diocese currently has 18 parishes and missions in 10 U.S. states.[14]
Leadership
The current bishop of the Diocese of the Holy Cross is Paul Hewett, SSC, who was consecrated on December 4, 2004.[2] Hewett had been a priest in the Episcopal Church until 1978, when he was deposed for aligning with Albert Chambers and the Continuing Anglican movement.[15] Bishop Hewett's father, Rev. Clayton Hewett had also been an early supporter of the Continuing Anglican Movement.[16] Bishop Hewett is based at the Anglican Cathedral Church of the Epiphany, Columbia, South Carolina. The assisting bishop is Timothy Farmer, former rector of St. Francis' Church, Spartanburg, South Carolina.[17] Until his death in 2009, Patrick Murphy served as retired bishop in residence and rector of St. Peter's Anglican Church in Houston, Texas.[18]
The bishop is assisted by a Standing Committee consisting of clergy and laypersons.[19]
Anglican Fellowship of the Delaware Valley
The Anglican Fellowship of the Delaware Valley, so named because it encompassed Anglican churches and missions within the Delaware Valley, was formed in 2003 and was led by Bishop Paul C. Hewett. It was an association of Anglican churches in Pennsylvania, Delaware, and New Jersey that subscribed to the Affirmation of St. Louis and affiliated with Forward in Faith-UK.[20] In 2005, the Anglican Fellowship of the Delaware Valley sponsored the conference The Affirmation of St. Louis: Seeking a Path to Reconciliation and Unity, which brought together traditionalists in the Episcopal Church and members of the continuing movement to discuss a path to jurisdictional unity.[21] The Fellowship continues to organize local events. Alice C. Linsley gave a lecture on April 19, 2023 titled "How the Binary Reasoning of the Bible Informs Christian Morality and Ethics."[22]
News
The official newsletter, the Fortnightly, is published bi-weekly by Bishop Hewett.
^ abHewett, Paul C. (2020). "The First Paradigm – The Continuing Church Movement, 1976-2006: The Epic Journey". The Day-spring from on High. ISBN978-1647535513
^Hewett, Paul (2021-09-23). "Address"(PDF) (Speech). "Synod of the Diocese of the Holy Cross". "Athens, GA". Archived from the original(PDF) on 2021-12-18. Retrieved 2021-12-18.
Hewett, Paul C. (2021). A Mighty Salvation: Cathedral Sermons. ISBN978-1647536343
Hewett, Paul C. (2021). To Perform the Mercy: Notes on the Liturgy of the 1928 Book of Common Prayer and the 1940 Hymnal and the Canons of the Diocese of the Holy Cross. ISBN978-1647536572