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Yes I worship at the Church of Saint Mary at the Castle.
My repudiation of the papal claim to be the successors of Saint Peter is based on the Epistles of Saint Peter in the New Testament, who proclaimed Mark his son, with the spiritual meaning of successor. This successor is Mark the Evangelist.
My interpretation of the English Church is intended as the Church of the English, who descend from the Celts and the Anglo-Saxons-Jutes. Therefore, the English Church was founded by King Ethelbert who converted to the Christian Faith of his wife Queen Bertha of the Franks.
He established the first Church of the English in Canterbury, and restored to ecclesiastic function a former Celtic church in Canterbury - dedicated to St. Martin of Tours.
Previous Christianity in Britain (and its later development) is referred to by me as Celtic Church, or Celtic Churches, namely the Christianity of the Britons, the Scots and Picts and the Irish.
In fact I have written articles on Celtic saints, such as Saint Ninian and Saint Kentigern.
Prior to the arrival of the Anglo-Saxons-Jutes, the country was called Britain, up to the Wall, beyond which the Scotic and Pictish kingdoms were situated, as well as the Briton kingdom of Lothian (people who had possibly settled there from south of Hadrian's Wall).
Britons, Scots, Picts and Irish are all Celts, hence I make a distinction between Celtic Churches and the English Church.
Finally, the English Church, whose history starts with King Ethelbert and Queen Bertha, could not have had queen Elizabeth as its head, Keith. You're referring to the ecclesiastic establishment initiated by Henry VIII, however, our priories and many of our churches in Dover existed long before Henry VIII.
So too did Canterbury Cathedral and so many other churches and priories in England.
While I appreciate you have difficulty in understanding this, Keith, the English Church was conceived in the Spirit in the sixth century in Kent, when a Kentish King accepted the Faith made known to him by his royal Consort who carried the Gospel over to our shores.
Neil, as stated above, this does not detract in any way from the Celtic Churches, of which I am also a member spiritually.
I may add, that the Light Tower Church at the Castle is dedicated to Saint Mary Mother of Jesus, not to the queen.
This was also the case long before Henry VIII.
Neil, in order to understand better my point, it's worth considering that the Celtic Christians at first did not send missionaries to the English (Angles, Saxons and Jutes); and when these three tribes settled in Britain, it's also probable that not all Britons were Christians. Those who were had no ecclesiastic communion with the Germanic speaking English and had not started a mission to bring Christianity to them.
Hence King Ethelbert in the 6th century received knowledge of the Faith from his Frankish wife.
However, in the seventh century, the Northumbrian Church was established by way of Celtic missionaries coming from Scotland, who the Northumbrian (English) King Oswald had called over. King Oswald had previously sought refuge on the Monastic Isle of Iona in the Hebrides, where he and his brother had converted to the Christian Faith.
In fact, Saint Aidan, the Irish Abbot of Iona, founded the Monastery of Lindisfarne on a Northumbrian island.
My article: Celtic origins of the English Church, has been used as a source for scholarly research.