LDS is a cult built upon the deception of an occultic man who plagiarized Christian truth, then claimed to be a prophet while distorting it and the gospel. Their beliefs demand works to earn them godhood so one would expect that they would be "service-oriented."
“And we talk of Christ, we rejoice in Christ, we preach of Christ, we prophesy of Christ, and we write according to our prophecies, that our children may know to what source they may look for a remission of their sins.”
The Book of Mormon, 2 Nephi 25: 26
The LDS is a heretical cult. They are in no way Christian and should never be associated with Christ’s one Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church.
Mormonism is a manifestation of man’s ego and hubris. It is not of God. It must be put to extinction and those followers brought to repentance and admittance into the actual Bride of Christ.
Latter-day Saints are among the most patriotic, service-oriented individuals in our country. They are also unequivocally Christian—just look at who is in the name of the Church.
It is unacceptable for a government entity to characterize a faith in a manner that contradicts the religion’s own foundational tenets. I am working now to ensure a correction is made.
The murder of Henry Nowak is not merely the tragedy of one young life cut short; it is a warning bell tolling through the conscience of a nation.
An eighteen-year-old son, a student with his whole future before him, lay dying in the street crying for help, and yet institutional bias, and falsehood obscured the simple duty of justice and mercy. When a society reaches the point where truth becomes secondary to ideology, where appearances matter more than reality, and where the wounded are not immediately recognised as the wounded, something has gone profoundly wrong in the soul of that society.
We must be clear, the taking of Henry’s life was an evil act. The court has rightly convicted his killer, although the sentence is far too lenient. But the deeper question now confronting Britain is not only how a young man was murdered, but how a nation has become so uncertain of itself that it struggles to recognise innocence, guilt, victim, and aggressor with the clarity that justice requires.
I pray for Henry’s family, whose grief cannot be measured in words. I pray also that this nation will resist every temptation to turn this tragedy into fuel for hatred. Justice without truth becomes vengeance; truth without mercy becomes cruelty. We must have neither. We must instead recover the moral courage to speak honestly, judge rightly, and act fearlessly.
For every civilisation ultimately stands or falls upon a simple foundation, that truth is true, evil is evil, and every human life bears the image of Almighty God.
May Henry Nowak rest in peace, and may God grant Britain the wisdom to learn the lessons written in such terrible sorrow.
✠Ceirion
Anglicanism in Crisis
Anglicanism in both North America, England, and Globally is in a crisis.
It revolves upon on singular issue: the purported ordination of women.
This is a systemic problem in Anglicanism and the Anglican Church in North America (ACNA) has repeated the problem.
An ACNA Bishop needs to step out. Period. Who has the strength?
Not a ‘statement’ from FIF or ACNA. Is there a single, non WO Bishop in the ACNA, that will state the truth, step out, and make themselves vulnerable?
The Anglican Missionary Church (AMC) was conceived in 2025 as a response to the shifting theological landscape of North American Anglicanism. To understand our mission, one must look at the history of the movement over the last several decades.
Following the progressive shifts within the Church of England and the Episcopal Church, the 1977 Congress of Saint Louis prompted a significant realignment, leading to the formation of several 'Continuing' Anglican bodies. Today, these jurisdictions are largely represented by the 'G2,' which includes the Anglican Catholic Church (ACC) and the Anglican Province of America (APA).
While these groups sought to preserve the faith, they have increasingly adopted a narrow expression of Anglicanism that is strictly Anglo-Catholic or Anglo-Papalist in character. The AMC values the Anglo-Catholic tradition, but we do not believe it should be the exclusive expression of our faith. Instead, we seek to recover the broad, orthodox churchmanship that formerly characterized the Episcopal Church and the Church of England before their theological decline. A notable shift in these Continuing bodies is the abandonment of the Book of Common Prayer for the celebration of the Eucharist in favor of the Anglican or American Missals. While these liturgies possess aesthetic beauty, they were never the primary standard for the English or American Church. We believe that a return to the historic Prayer Book tradition is essential for authentic Anglican identity.
The further moral and doctrinal erosion of the broader Anglican Communion—marked by the departure from biblical sexual ethics and the introduction of women into the episcopate—transformed many churches into institutions that resemble secular humanitarian groups more than the historic Church. In 2009, the Anglican Church in North America (ACNA) was established to counter these trends. While the ACNA and the subsequent Global Anglican Future Conference (GAFCON) were born of good intentions, we believe they possess a fundamental theological inconsistency: the continued practice of ordaining women.
Over the past twenty years, this practice has led to internal division, compromised leadership, and legal challenges within the ACNA and GAFCON. We believe these institutions have reached a point of systemic crisis. While we pray for their success in spreading the Gospel, we are convinced that the time has come for a new alternative—one that restores the vibrancy of the English tradition without compromise. The Anglican Missionary Church stands on the conviction that the ordination of women is a novelty that must be set aside for the sake of the Church’s future. Furthermore, we believe Anglicanism should be neither 'boutique' nor monochrome.
We encourage the use of diverse Books of Common Prayer (1662, 1662 IE, 1662 Contemporary, 1928, 1962 Canadian, 2019 Contemporary and Traditional), hymnals, and musical supplements that foster growth and spiritual health. Our concern is not liturgical rigidity, but rather the preservation of valid apostolic faith and practice. Though we maintain fraternal bonds with certain faithful ACNA dioceses, such as the Diocese of Ft. Worth, the Reformed Episcopal Church, and the Missionary Diocese of All Saints, we cannot remain within a body that accepts the ordination of women.
We also recognize that many Continuing jurisdictions currently suffer from a lack of formal education and stable leadership, often drifting toward Old Catholicism rather than true Anglicanism. Our goal is simple: to return to the Anglicanism of past generations—a tradition defined by holiness, beauty, and renewal. We are committed to a streamlined structure focused on church planting and the Great Commission, rather than bureaucratic institutionalism. If you desire a church that is firmly rooted in tradition yet passionate about the future, there is a place for you here. We welcome you to join us as we grow our witness and serve the Lord.
The Episcopal Church of the 1960s and before did not ordain women. The Continuing Anglican churches do not ordain women. The integrity of the sacraments is essential to the preservation of Anglicanism, because it’s essential to the preservation of the Church
Breaking: @AnglicanReform has issued a response to the ACNA's appointment of a pro-WO interim to lead the DWGC:
"The vast majority of our bishops & our seminarian leadership have shown their true colors and have failed to uphold their vows to the apostolic ministry of the word."
Breaking: @The_ACNA's college of bishops appointed Fmr Abp Robert Duncan as interim bishop of the DWGC.
Duncan is one of the strongest advocates for ordaining women as priests.
Can a man with Fr Sharpe's Biblical convictions become a bishop in the ACNA?
The answer is NO.
@JaymesLackey Oh I get you now. 1900 years of church teaching, tradition, and doctrine was wrong. Lucky for us, you’ve got it right at last. Say no more.
This is the natural progression of WO. WO necessitates liberal progressivism in order to justify the practice.
It’s not a slippery slope, it’s a cliff edge to woke ideology that denies the Resurrection, divinity of Christ, the doctrine of the Trinity, and erodes the absolute authority of Scripture.
How many times must we watch it play out before we stop it?
If the Anglican Church in North America (ACNA) does not address women’s ordination once and for all, the episcopate will be next. It’s coming, regardless of the Constitution and Canons, they can and will be amended under pressure, and likely within a decade.
You keep mentioning schism in regards to those who have kept the faith and rejected heresy. The only “new church” is the one led by woke ideology. Innovation is schism not the continuation of the faithful.
If you sir are among that rabble I pray you look to St Paul teachings 1 Corinthians 5:11-13 and repent.
“But now I have written unto you not to keep company, if any man that is called a brother be a fornicator, or covetous, or an idolater, or a railer, or a drunkard, or an extortioner; with such an one no not to eat. For what have I to do to judge them also that are without? do not ye judge them that are within? But them that are without God judgeth. Therefore put away from among yourselves that wicked person.”
@JaymesLackey WO heresy is bigger than any organization. It is the gateway to complete corruption of the Church as we have seen for 60 years. The Global Anglicans must take responsibility for purging their parishes of these false teachings.
@JaymesLackey Dude we’re the Church planted by Aristobulus, consecrated by St Paul. The heir of the One Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church in Britannia. Who are you calling new?