Looking back and looking ahead: an Anglican-Lutheran Christmas message

In their 2012 Christmas video message, Anglican and Lutheran national leaders give a nod to the past and the future. The video messages are a tradition enjoyed by the Anglican Church of Canada and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada, two churches that are in full communion.

Archbishop Fred Hiltz, Primate of the Anglican Church of Canada, with Bishop Susan Johnson, National Bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada. MICHAEL HUDSON FOR GENERAL SYNOD COMMUNICATIONS
Archbishop Fred Hiltz, Primate of the Anglican Church of Canada, with Bishop Susan Johnson, National Bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada. MICHAEL HUDSON FOR GENERAL SYNOD COMMUNICATIONS

In the short greeting, Archbishop Fred Hiltz, Primate, Anglican Church of Canada, and National Bishop Susan C. Johnson, Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada, first recall their May 2012 visit to Jerusalem where they fostered Anglican-Lutheran cooperation in the region.

Archbishop Hiltz and Bishop Johnson then look forward to the joint national assembly of their two churches, to be held in Ottawa July 3 to 7, 2013, under the theme “Together for the Love of the World.” The video message this year was recorded in Ottawa during a break in joint planning meetings.

Bishop Johnson says that at the assembly, “we hope to act out and act upon the gift that we have received through the birth of Jesus.”

“Jesus calls us to people of love, people of hope, and people of peace,” adds Archbishop Hiltz.

Since 2001, the ACC and the ELCIC have been in a full communion relationship. This means that each church maintains its own autonomy but cooperates in many ways, including using each other’s liturgies and serving as clergy in each other’s churches. Several joint Anglican-Lutheran parishes and cooperative ministries have sprung up across Canada.


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