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GENERAL SYNOD

(Redirected from General Synod of the Church of England)
The 'General Synod' is the title of the governing body of some church organizations.

Contents
Church of England
Episcopal Church of the United States
Other Churches
Other uses
External links
See Also

Church of England


In the Church of England, General Synod was instituted in 1970 and is the culmination of a process of rediscovering self-government for the Church of England that had started in the 1850s.
The General Synod is unique in that it is the only body to which Parliament has delegated the power to pass Measures, which become part of English law. Prior to 1919, any change to the Church's worship or governance had to be by Act of Parliament. In 1919, following a period when Parliament could rarely be bothered to make time for legislating on church business, the Church Assembly, the predecessor of the General Synod, was given the power to create legislation on most matters to do with the Church of England. If Parliament accepts a Measure, then it becomes law; if MPs or members of the House of Lords are not happy with a Measure then they can vote to reject it, but not amend it. Once a measure has been agreed ("deemed expedient") by both Houses of Parliament, it is presented for the Royal Assent, and printed with the Acts of parliament for the year in question.
General Synod is elected every five years by a system of Single Transferable Vote and each session is officially opened by the monarch.
The Synod is divided into the House of Bishops, the House of Clergy and the House of Laity. All diocesan bishops are members of the House of Bishops ex-officio; in addition, seven suffragan bishops are elected by all suffragan bishops. Members of the House of Clergy are elected by the clergy in each Diocese. Members of the House of Laity are elected by lay members of the Deanery Synod in each Diocese. There are 482 General Synod members in total.
There are two or three synodical sessions per year (4-5 days each), one or two in Church House, Westminster, the other at the University of York.
General Synod deals with three main areas:

★ Central church business

★ Relations with other churches

★ Public issues
The General Synod elects some members to the Archbishops' Council.
At the last group of sessions members made frequent reference to an 'elephant in the room'. This, rather than being a metaphor, was in reference to a large African Elephant named Bess, which occupied Central Hall at York University. Bess was being experimented on by the zoology department and the only suitable place to keep her was Central Hall with the Synod (often likened to a zoo).
'General Synods of other churches within the Anglican Communion'

Anglican Church of Australia

Anglican Church of Canada

Church of Ireland

Anglican Church in Aotearoa, New Zealand and Polynesia

Scottish Episcopal Church

Episcopal Church of the United States


In the Episcopal Church in the United States of America, the equivalent is General Convention.

Other Churches


The United Church of Christ in the United States also calls their main governing body a General Synod. It meets every two years and consists of over 600 delegates from various congregations and conferences.
The Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church has as its highest Church court the General Synod. The ARP General Synod meets yearly (in recent years, it has, almost without exception, been held at Bonclarken). The delegates to the General Synod of the ARP Church are the elder representatives elected from each church's Session and all ministers from all presbyteries that comprise the Church (excluding ministers and elders from the independent ARP Synods of Mexico and Pakistan).

Other uses


In the North American Lutheran tradition, 'General Synod' refers to a church body (denomination) which existed from 1820-1918. See General Synod (Lutheran).

External links



Queen's Speech at inauguration of seventh General Synod

Church of England's General Synod website

List of current members
United Church of Christ General Synod 25 (2005)

Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church Government

See Also



How the Church of England is organised

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