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The North American Old Catholic Church is a catholic denomination in the worldwide, universal church of Jesus Christ.

Background

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The North American Old Catholic Church was founded in 2007 but has spread to a dozen states (10/2008). Parishes are located in Auburndale FL, Athens TN, Baltimore MD (3), Bethlehem PA, Dallas TX, Denver CO, New Port Richey FL, Omaha NE, Ontario CA, Seward NE, Wakefield VA, and Washington DC.[1]


Focus

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Dedicated to “Fostering a continued, strong commitment to catholic tradition and the search for contemporary meaning,” our parishes and ministries throughout the US reach out to and embrace all of God’s Children. Our ministries are transparent - no one is turned away from learning about God’s love and acceptance. The clergy of North American Old Catholic Church work in a wide variety of ministries either as part of, or independently from their parish community.


Diversity

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The North American Old Catholic Church and it’s ministries, parishes and works are equal employment, participation and educational opportunity ministries and does not discriminate based on age, citizenship, color, creed, physical or mental disability (including HIV status), ethnicity, family responsibilities, gender identity and expression, marital status, matriculation, national origin, physical appearance, race, political affiliation, sex, sexual orientation, union membership, veteran status or other unlawful factors, with respect to recruiting, hiring, ordination, job assignment, promotion, discipline, discharge, compensation, and other terms, conditions and privileges of employment, participation in ministerial and educational offering and opportunities.[2]


Organization

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The Congregation of Bishops is the supreme earthly authority of the North American Old Catholic Church. The congregation consists of diocesan bishops, retired bishops, rector of St Wolbodo Seminary and the superiors of religious Orders.

The chief executive of the church is the Presiding Bishop, Archbishop Michael V. Seneco. The Very Rev. Hal Barkley is his Vicar General, and The Rt. Rev. Wynn Wagner is the Coadjutor.[3]

Primary Ministries

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References

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Hello, and welcome to Wikipedia. We appreciate your contributions to the North American Old Catholic Church article, but for legal reasons, we cannot accept copyrighted text or images borrowed from other web sites or printed material, and as a consequence, your addition will most likely be deleted.

You may use external websites as a source of information, but not as a source of sentences. This part is crucial: say it in your own words.

If the external website belongs to you, and you want to allow Wikipedia to use the text — which means allowing other people to modify it — then you must include on the external site the statement "I, (name), am the author of this article, (article name), and I release its content under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 and later."

You might want to look at Wikipedia's policies and guidelines for more details, or ask a question at the "Help Desk". You can also leave a message on my talk page. —Angr 18:01, 29 October 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Suggested Reading

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I have seen your editing of your own user page. Please read Wikipedia's autobiography policy. God bless you and your ministry, Father. 138.251.228.230 (talk) 18:16, 10 May 2010 (UTC)[reply]

AfD listing

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After much confusion I have listed the Wynn Wagner article for deletion here. I've done so for a couple of reasons:

1) the vast majority of the article refers to articles that you published 2) the rest either don't mention the topic, or don't work at all 3) the majority of the content was written by you 4) with the exception of Opus, there's no argument for notability

So what happens now? Well basically you have lots of time to address this. If you can find more sources, please list them on the AfD article. You don't actually have to do anything in the article, you simply have to demonstrate that such sources exist. These would have to be:

1) other people talking about you, outside your personal circles and your local area. A blog post won't do, a New York Times article will. 2) at least one of these has to be significantly about you, that is, an article on this topic, not just passing mention

Maury Markowitz (talk) 18:04, 6 June 2013 (UTC)[reply]