This website is best viewed with CSS and JavaScript enabled.

The Latin wave in the Anglican Church

Posted on: November 20, 2013 4:31 PM
The Revd Fabian Villalobos greets parishioners at Christ Episcopal Church in Oak Cliff. Villalobos will be the first Latino rector of the Anglican church which was founded in 1890.
Photo Credit: David Wilfong
Related Categories: USA

From the Latino Post

You can't get much more "Anglo" than the Anglican Communion, known in the United States as the "Episcopal Church." But in border areas like Texas, this church is starting to show the effects of an influx of Hispanics into its congregations. Long associated with attending Roman Catholic churches, the Hispanic Episcopalians reflect a growing trend of Latinos in Protestant churches across the U.S.

Episcopalians are not known to be quite as adoring of the Virgin Mary as the Roman Catholics; but in the Episcopal Diocese of Dallas, a portrait of the Virgin of Guadalupe, in her trademarked green cloak, is prominently displayed in the front of St. Matthew's Cathedral. It was installed during a special bilingual ceremony in 2003.

The Virgin is a symbol that the Latino community has carried with it, a part of their tradition that the former Catholics have brought with them into this faith that is closely related to the one they've left behind.

Latinos have actually been filling the pews in the Episcopal churches of North Texas for years, though fast figures on the trend can be hard to come by.

To read the full article visit http://www.latinopost.com/articles/1122/20131120/the-latin-wave-in-the-anglican-church-latino-hispanic-episcopal.htm