- The Archbishops' Council
The Archbishops' Council is part of the governance of the
Church of England . By the National Institutions Measure 1998, the Council was set up in 1999 to streamline the Church's machinery of policy-making and directing resources. Most of the central functions of the Church of England, previously directly the responsibility of theGeneral Synod , now come under the auspices of the Council, in four divisions: Ministry, Education, Mission and Public Affairs, and Cathedral and Church Buildings.It has 19 members:
* the Archbishops of the provinces of Canterbury and York (the place of the apostrophe in the title conveying that it is the Council of both Archbishops);
* the Prolocutors from each province (the chairs of the house of clergy in each province in General Synod);
* the chair and vice-chair of the house of laity in General Synod;
* six elected members of the General Synod (two bishops, two clergy, two lay);
* a Church Commissioner; and
* six members appointed by the Archbishops.The senior officer is the Secretary General, who is also Secretary General of the General Synod.
External links
* [http://www.cofe.anglican.org/about/archbishopscouncil/ Archbishops' Council]
* [http://www.cofe.anglican.org/about/archbishopscouncil/members.html Members of the Archbishops' Council]
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