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affirms apostolic succession. Some would prefer the term “historic episcopate,” believing this to be the primitive model, yet recognizing that they cannot actually historically trace such a succession to the first and second generations of church leadership. See Brand and Norman, Perspectives on Church Government, 298; Saucy, Church in God’s Program, 106. The Anglican Church’s understanding of early ecclesiastical structures is largely shaped by its own form of government, which was inherited from the Roman Catholic Church. As a result of its determination to find biblical support for its own structure, the Anglican Church can miss the unique nature of the early years of the church. So when the apostles are involved in ordaining ministers, matters of church discipline, or restoration of repentant church members, the Anglican position sees only the authority possessed by the apostles to command such actions, completely missing the vital role that the local church played in each situation and the care with which the apostles exhorted the church, rather than ruling over them. Unfortunately, this thinking runs counter to passages like Eph 2:19–22, which plainly state that Christ’s job, along with those of the apostles and prophets, was to erect a solid foundation for the new building—the church. Chapter 4 will discuss apostolic succession further.

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