The experience of the Episcopal Church USA is very sad. It has lost over half its membership since the liberal wing took power at the annual conference in Minnesota in 2003. Lawsuits over property have drained funds. The world wide Anglican Communion was saved by the dioceses in Africa and South America, and the Queen of England's non public influence is said to have slowed the disintegration of its home country church.
An exception is St Martin's Episcopal in Houston of which I am a member. When the split came, the rector and vestry got permission of the Bishop of Texas to style itself as a Windsor Parish, meaning that it was in no way diverting from the traditional teachings on sexuality repeated at a Windsor conference in England. Our ministers do not conduct same sex marriages nor advocate the same and they conduct their public lives in accordance with the traditional rules. It has since grown to be the largest Episcopal church in North America and just completed a $68,000,000 expansion. To my knowledge, it is the lone church to adopt this course. 10 to 15 % left to form Anglican churches in the US originally under African and South American bishops.
Jim Jackson, Minister Emeritus at Chapelwood in Houston, sends out a morning text each day and also teaches and preaches periodically at St Martin's. He indicated he was probably going from being a United Methodist to being an Untied Methodist - only had to switch two letters.
God made the country, and man made the town. William Cowper