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Convocation
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==Ecclesiastical convocations== A [[synod]]ical assembly of a church is at times called "Convocation". ===Convocations of Canterbury and York=== [[File:Bag piper, Padre, Currie Hall, Royal Military College of Canada, fall 2011.jpg|right|150px|thumb|A cadet of the [[Royal Military College of Canada]] plays [[bagpipes]] in [[Currie Hall]] during the College's fall Convocation.]] {{main article|Convocations of Canterbury and York}} The Convocations of [[Province of Canterbury|Canterbury]] and [[Province of York|York]] were the synodical assemblies of the two Provinces of the [[Church of England]] until the [[Church Assembly]] was established in 1920.<ref name="odcc-conv1">''Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church'' (1974) art. "Convocations of Canterbury and York"</ref> Their origins date back to the end of the seventh century when [[Theodore of Tarsus]] (Archbishop of Canterbury, 668-690) reorganized the structures of the English Church and established a national synod of bishops. With the recognition of York as a separate province in 733, this synod was divided into two.<ref name="odcc-conv1"/> In 1225, representatives of the cathedral and monastic chapters were included for the first time and in 1285 the membership of the Convocation of Canterbury assumed the basic form which it retained till 1921: Bishops, Abbots (till the 1530s and the [[Dissolution of the Monasteries]]), Deans, and Archdeacons, plus one representative of each cathedral chapter and two for the clergy from each diocese.<ref name="odcc-conv1"/> By the fifteenth century, each convocation was divided into an upper house (the Bishops) and a lower house (the remaining members).<ref name="odcc-conv1"/> In 1921, the number of proctors (elected representatives) of the diocesan clergy was increased to make them a majority in the lower houses. The Convocation of York was a relatively small part of the Church in [[England]] and [[Wales]] with only five member dioceses in Henry VIII's reign.{{efn|York, Durham, Carlisle, Chester, and Man. In medieval times there were only four: Galloway, York, Durham and Carlisle. (Kemp ''Counsel and Consent'' pp.247,248) Only with the establishment of the Diocese of Ripon in 1836 did the number increase.}} In 1462 it decided that all the provincial constitutions{{efn|''Ad hoc'' decisions which amplified the canon law of the Western Church to meet local conditions}} of Canterbury which were not repugnant or prejudicial to its own should be allowed in the Northern Province<ref name="CaC-0">Kemp, Eric Waldram ''Counsel and Consent'' SPCK (1961) pp 111, 118 and 174 respectively</ref> and by 1530 the Archbishop of York rarely attended sessions and the custom that York waited to see what Canterbury had decided and either accepted or rejected it was well established. The Convocation of York was, in practice, taking second place to that of Canterbury<ref name="CaC-0"/> so much so that in 1852 the Archbishop of York [[Thomas Musgrave (bishop)|Thomas Musgrave]] stated that since the time of [[Henry VIII of England|Henry VIII]] the archbishop had only attended personally two sessions (in 1689 and 1708).<ref name="CaC-0"/> The legislative powers of the convocations varied considerably over the centuries. Until 1664, they (not Parliament) determined the taxes to be paid by the clergy, but their powers in general were severely curtailed by [[Henry VIII of England|Henry VIII]] in 1532/4;{{efn|They could only meet at the royal pleasure; they needed royal permission to discuss and make canons; no action of theirs could go against the sovereign's prerogative, or the customs, laws and statutes of the realm.}} and from the time of the Reformation till 1965 they were summoned and dissolved at the same time as Parliament.<ref name="odcc-conv1"/> Under Henry VIII and his successor [[Edward VI of England|Edward VI]] between 1534 and 1553 the Convocations were used as a source of clerical opinion but ecclesiastical legislation was secured by statute from Parliament.<ref name="CaC">Kemp, Eric Waldram ''Counsel and Consent'' SPCK (1961) pp 158 and 159 respectively</ref> Later, between 1559 and 1641, Elizabeth I, James I and Charles I gave the force of law to decisions of Convocation without recourse to Parliament by letters patent under the great seal, notably the [[Thirty-Nine Articles]] (1571) and the 141 Canons of 1603.<ref name="CaC"/> The Convocations were abolished during the Commonwealth but restored on the accession of Charles II in 1660 and they synodically approved the [[Book of Common Prayer]], which was imposed by the Act of Uniformity in 1662.<ref name="CaC2">Kemp, Eric Waldram ''Counsel and Consent'' SPCK (1961) pp 165; 166-7; 168-9 respectively</ref> Formal sessions at the start of each parliament continued but no real business was discussed until after the Revolution of 1688 which brought William III and Mary II to the throne, when attempts to include some of the Protestant dissenters met such resistance in the lower house that the government abandoned them and the Convocations resumed their purely formal meetings.<ref name="CaC2"/> In 1697 [[Francis Atterbury]] published his ''Letter to a Convocation Man concerning the Rights, Powers and Privileges of that Body'' which, in essence, claimed that the Convocation was an estate of the realm like Parliament and that the lower clergy were being illegally disfranchised and denied its proper voice in government.<ref>Gibson, William ''The Church of England 1688-1832'' Routledge (2001) p. 71</ref> Business was resumed in 1701 and by the time Queen Anne died in 1714 draft canons and forms of service had been drawn up for royal assent.<ref name="CaC2"/> However, there was an inherent tension between the two houses: the lower house was mainly [[Tory]] in its politics and [[high church]] in its doctrine, while the upper house was mainly [[Whig (British political party)|Whig]] and [[latitudinarian]] and therefore in favour of toleration for Protestant dissenters and their possible reincorporation into the Church of England; feelings ran high until in 1717 the session was prorogued by Royal Writ to avoid the censuring of Bishop [[Benjamin Hoadly]] by the lower house (see the [[Bangorian controversy]]) and, with the exception of an abortive session in 1741, the Convocations met only for formal business at the beginning of each parliament until the middle of the nineteenth century, when Canterbury (in 1852) and York (in 1861) began to discuss issues of the day. The resumption of proper business was brought about by the political changes which had taken place some twenty years earlier. Until the [[Great Reform Bill]] of 1832, Parliament had been theoretically an Anglican body,<ref name="Angl">Neill, Stephen. ''Anglicanism'', London Pelican(1960), p. 254 and 227 respectively</ref> and many churchmen began to argue that neither Parliament nor the bishops in the House of Lords expressed the mind of the Church as a whole<ref name="VC1">Chadwick, Owen. ''The Victorian Church I'' A&C Black (1966) p. 309; 310; 311 respectively</ref> In 1847 the routine session at the beginning of a new Parliament coincided with the polemical nomination of [[Renn Dickson Hampden|Dr Hampden]] to the see of Hereford. The formal address to the Queen was debated for six hours and an amendment carried praying the Crown to revive the active powers of convocation.<ref name="VC1"/> The driving force behind the campaign to achieve this was the London banker, [[Henry Hoare (1807–1866)|Henry Hoare]], who dedicated himself to the task.<ref name="CaP1">Carpenter, S.C. ''Church and People:1789-1889'' SPCK (1937) p.268</ref> The opposition was formidable: half the clergy and most of the laity rejected the idea, many politicians were against it and the two archbishops—[[John Bird Sumner]] and Thomas Musgrave—had no desire to revive Convocation.<ref name="VC1"/><ref name="CaP1"/> The legal basis of the resistance was the claim that convocation could only discuss such business as was expressly specified by the Crown. Over the next eight years it was established that it could debate and act provided it did not try to discuss or frame canons and that the archbishop could only prorogue (adjourn) a session with the consent of his fellow diocesans. In 1851, Canterbury received a petition, in 1853 it appointed committees and by 1855 Archbishop Sumner was convinced of the value of Convocation and those bishops who had opposed the revival were taking part positively in its debates. Archbishop Musgrave maintained his opposition until his death in 1860—he even locked the room where it was due to meet—and the Northern Convocation remained inactive until his successor took office. The Convocations have always been exclusively clerical assemblies. However, in 1885 the Convocations agreed to the establishment of parallel Houses of Laity elected by the lay members of the diocesan conferences. These were not part of Convocation; they had no constitutional status and were merely advisory.<ref name="Angl"/> At the beginning of the twentieth century, both Convocations together with their respective houses of laity began to meet as a Representative Council which however had no legal authority or position. This was superseded in 1920 by the [[Church Assembly]] which was given the right to propose measures to Parliament by the "[[Church of England Assembly (Powers) Act 1919|Enabling Act of 1919]]". The Convocations still exist and their members constitute the two clerical houses of the [[General Synod of the Church of England|General Synod]] but, apart from some residual and formal responsibilities, all legal authority is now vested in the Synod which was established in 1970.
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