The Anglican Catholic Church

Anglican.

Catholic.

Faithful.

Traditional.

St. Vincent of Lerins in the early fifth century defined the Catholic Faith as “what has been believed everywhere, always, and by all”. In other words, to be Catholic is to be “complete”—not lacking in any element of the Faith that our Lord Jesus Christ left to his Apostles.

It is by this test that we are Catholic, together with the Eastern Orthodox, Roman Catholic, and Old Catholic Churches. The seal of catholicity is the Apostolic Succession, the consecration of our Bishops at the hands of other Bishops tracing their consecrations back to the Apostles themselves.

Our theology is that of the seven Ecumenical Councils of the ancient Church, the three historic creeds, together with the common understanding of the great Churches of Rome and the Orthodox East today. We stress the underlying unity of faith and order with this early Church and judge contemporary issues in the light of Holy Scripture and Holy Tradition.

We are Anglican because our practice of that Faith—our liturgical and spiritual heritage—is derived from the long history of the Church amongst the English peoples. We are the inheritors of a rich treasury of theology and devotion, claiming for our own Caedmon the Bard, Hilda the Abbess, Julian the Visionary, Anselm the great theologian, King Charles and Archbishop Laud the martyrs, the King James Bible, and The Book of Common Prayer.

We preach an individual living faith in Jesus Christ, but stress a life lived out by service and common prayer in the Church, the community of saints. We exalt the Lord Christ above all—yet we recognize the proper honour due to the Blessed Virgin Mary the Mother of God, as well as to the beloved Saints who have gone before us. We hold to traditional Christian morals, yet provide ready Confession and Absolution to the penitent sinner. In short, we embrace the Catholic faith, the faith once delivered to the saints (Jude 3).

Interior of a church with wooden pews, an altar at the front with candles, a crucifix, and stained glass windows on the sides.

All Saints Church

All Saints Church in Aiken, South Carolina, was founded in 1977 to be a bastion of traditional Anglican Catholicism in the CSRA.

The church building was constructed in 1939 in a Gothic Revival style to be a satellite congregation of St. Thaddeus Episcopal Church.

When the original church was closed, the building was repurposed for various secular uses until purchased by the All Saints congregation in 1977. A new pulpit and lectern were acquired, which date to 1750 from a small parish church in Kent County, England.

We are a parish serious about our faith, our worship, our community, and each other. Whether you have a long-time familiarity with our tradition, or are a newcomer, we most warmly invite you to join us.

Three tall, gold candlesticks with white candles on an ornate wooden altar decorated with pink and white flowers.