The historic Anglican faith, renewed for North America
A directory and chronicle of the Anglican Church in North America — twenty-eight dioceses, more than one thousand congregations, one Communion in the apostolic tradition.
A church for orthodox Anglicans in North America
The Anglican Church in North America was inaugurated in June 2009 in Bedford, Texas, gathering Anglicans across the United States, Canada, and Mexico into a single jurisdiction committed to the historic faith and practice of the Anglican tradition. It is a Province of the Global Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans (GAFCON), in communion with the majority of the world's Anglicans, and stands within the One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church.
Its founding came after years of discernment among parishes and dioceses that could no longer remain within the Episcopal Church or the Anglican Church of Canada with a clear conscience, owing to the departure of those bodies from received Anglican teaching on Scripture, the creeds, and the moral tradition of the Church. Bishops, clergy, and lay people from the American Anglican Council, the Anglican Mission in the Americas, the Convocation of Anglicans in North America, the Anglican Network in Canada, and the Reformed Episcopal Church — along with several Episcopal dioceses that had voted to leave — came together as common-cause partners and, by the will of the Global South Primates, were constituted as a new Province.
"To reach North America with the transforming love of Jesus Christ."
— Vision of the Anglican Church in North America
The Confessing Anglican Way
The Anglican Church in North America identifies seven elements as essential to authentic Anglican faith: the canonical Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments as the inspired Word of God; the two Sacraments ordained by Christ; the historic episcopate; the three Catholic Creeds — Apostles', Nicene, and Athanasian; the Book of Common Prayer of 1662 with its Ordinal as a standard of worship; the Thirty-Nine Articles of Religion of 1562 as a doctrinal touchstone; and the Jerusalem Declaration of 2008 as a contemporary affirmation of the faith once delivered to the saints.
This is the Anglican Way as it has come down to us — Reformed and Catholic, biblical and sacramental, ancient and ever new. The Province ordains bishops, priests, and deacons in continuity with the historic three-fold ministry, and orders its common life by the prayer book tradition. In 2019 it published its own Book of Common Prayer, a fresh expression of that same patrimony.
From founding to present
The first Archbishop and Primate of the Province was the Most Rev. Robert Duncan, formerly Bishop of Pittsburgh, who served from 2009 until 2014. He was succeeded by the Most Rev. Foley Beach, Bishop of the Anglican Diocese of the South, who led the Province through a decade of consolidation and growth. In June 2024 the College of Bishops elected the Most Rev. Steve Wood, Bishop of the Carolinas, as the third Archbishop.
From a beginning of roughly 700 congregations, the Anglican Church in North America has grown to more than a thousand parishes, missions, and church plants across twenty-eight dioceses. Some dioceses are gathered by region — the Diocese of the Mid-Atlantic, the Anglican Diocese of the South, the Diocese of the Carolinas, the Gulf Atlantic Diocese, the Diocese of the Upper Midwest, and others — while a number serve constituencies that cross geography: C4SO for church-planting communities, the Reformed Episcopal Church dioceses for that historic stream within the Province, and the Anglican Diocese of All Nations and the Diocese of Christ Our Hope for parishes drawn from particular missionary heritages.
What you will find here
This site exists to help you find a faithful Anglican parish near you, to introduce inquirers to the dioceses of the Province, and to chronicle the witness of the Church in this part of the world. Our directory draws upon the Province's own listings and is updated as parishes are planted, transferred, or amended. If you serve in a congregation and wish to update your entry, see the corrections page.
Whether you are an inquirer who has never set foot in a liturgical church, a Christian seeking the riches of the prayer book tradition, or an Anglican looking for your spiritual home in a new city — we hope this site will help you find a parish where Christ is preached, the sacraments are faithfully administered, and the prayer book is loved.
Seven marks of our common life
Holy Scripture
The canonical books of the Old and New Testaments as the inspired Word of God, containing all things necessary for salvation.
The Sacraments
Holy Baptism and the Supper of the Lord, the two great sacraments ordained by Christ Himself in the Gospel.
Historic Episcopate
The godly historic episcopate as integral to the apostolic faith and the fullness of the Body of Christ.
The Three Creeds
The Apostles', Nicene, and Athanasian Creeds — the historic faith of the undivided Church.
The Book of Common Prayer
The 1662 prayer book and its Ordinal as the standard for Anglican doctrine, discipline, and worship.
The Articles of Religion
The Thirty-Nine Articles of 1562, taken in their literal and grammatical sense, as the foundational principles of Anglican belief.
The Jerusalem Declaration
The 2008 affirmation of the Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans, a contemporary statement of the historic faith.