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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Christianity > Protestantism & Protestant Churches > Anglican & Episcopalian Churches
This book studies the way the central act of Christian worship
(variously known as the Eucharist, the Lord's Supper, the Holy
Communion, and the Mass) has been treated in the thought and
practice of the Evangelical tradition in the Church of England.
Evangelicals are not associated with an emphasis on the Eucharist,
and Dr. Cocksworth's study is important and potentially very
influential because it demonstrates that--at its times of
strength--the Evangelical tradition has held the Eucharist in the
highest regard.
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Fierce
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Katlyn A Davis
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From 1824 to 1843 Newman was an active clergyman of the Church of
England; during this time, he entered the pulpit about 1,270 times.
Newman published 217 of the sermons which he wrote during these
years; a further 246 sermons survive in manuscript in the Archives
of the Birmingham Oratory, some only as fragments but the majority
as full texts. These sermons will be published in a series of five
volumes, the aim being to transcribe them accurately, with
sufficient editorial apparatus for the theological development
within them to be understood, and their historical situation to be
clear. The forty-three sermons contained in Volume I reveal
Newman's attitude to his pastoral charge, his theology of liturgy
based on the Book of Common Prayer; his gradual acceptance of the
doctrine of baptismal regeneration as a substitute for his earlier
belief in conversion as understood by the Evangelicals; the
eventual supremacy of the Eucharist in his own spiritual life; his
growing reserve about preaching on the Atonement; his faith in the
divinity of Christ the Mediator; and finally, his understanding of
the Church as the remedial and mediatorial kingdom of Christ on
earth.
This is a study of the social construction and the impression
management of the public forms of worship of Catholicism and
Anglicanism. Interest centres on the dilemmas of the liturgical
actors in handling a transaction riddled with ambiguities and
potential misunderstandings. Simmel, Berger and Goffman are used in
an original manner to understand these rites which pose as much of
a problem for sociology as for their practitioners.;These rites are
treated as forms of play and hermeneutics is linked to a negative
theology to understand their performative basis. The study is an
effort to link sociology to theology in a way that serves to focus
on an issue of social praxis.
Tractarians and Evangelicals, the extremists of the
nineteenth-century church, have successfully imposed their
propaganda on posterity. Every text assumes that these militants
saved the Church of England from the slough of complacency and
corruption that their most powerful enemies - 'high and dry'
dignitaries - had created.
This book rehabilitates the bishops and deans who are commonly
supposed to have lavished preferment on unworthy friends and
relations. It shows how members of the Hackney Phalanx, the
high-church equivalent of the Clapham Sect, used their patronage to
co-opt the able and energetic sons of rising business and
professional families: ordinands with the talent and ambition to
make a substantial contribution to the church from families that
might have otherwise been lost to dissent. A single clerical
connection, of nine related clergymen revolving round a mid
nineteenth-century Dean of Canterbury, William Rowe Lyall
(1788-1857), illuminates a number of central features of church and
society: patronage; the co-option of new men; and the attraction of
the church as a professional career.
This exceptionally readable book contains vivid pen-portraits of
Dean Lyall and his clients, rigorous economic analysis of the
financial returns of a clerical career.
First critical edition and translation of documents crucial to our
understanding of the English Reformation. The English Reformation
began as a dispute over questions of canon law, and reforming the
existing system was one of the state's earliest objectives. A draft
proposal for this, known as the Henrician canons, has survived,
revealing the state of English canon law at the time of the break
with Rome, and providing a basis for Cranmer's subsequent, and much
better known, attempt to revise the canon law, which was published
by John Foxe under the title `Reformatio legum ecclesiasticarum' in
1571. Although it never became law, it was highly esteemed by later
canon lawyers and enjoyed an unofficial authority in ecclesiastical
courts. The Henrician canons and the `Reformatio legum
ecclesiasticarum' are thus crucial for an understanding of
Reformation church discipline, revealing the problems and
opportunities facing those who wanted to reform the Church of
England's institutional structure in the mid-Tudor period,an age
which was to determine the course of the church for centuries to
come.This volume makes available for the first time full scholarly
editions and translations of the whole text, taking all the
available evidence into consideration, and setting the `Reformatio'
firmly in both its historical and contemporary context. GERALD BRAY
is Anglican Professor of Divinity at Beeson Divinity School,
Samford University.
This wide-ranging and original book makes a significant contribution to our understanding of the Church of England in the period between 1660 and 1828. Through a detailed study of the diocese of the archbishops of Canterbury it explores the political, economic, cultural, intellectual and pastoral functions of the established Church and argues that we should see the Church in a far more positive light than has hitherto been the case.
Described by Pope Pius XII as the most important theologian since
Thomas Aquinas, the Swiss pastor and theologian, Karl Barth,
continues to be a major influence on students, scholars and
preachers today.
Barth's theology found its expression mainly through his closely
reasoned fourteen-part magnum opus, Die Kirchliche Dogmatik. Having
taken over 30 years to write, the Church Dogmatics is regarded as
one of the most important theological works of all time, and
represents the pinnacle of Barth's achievement as a theologian.
Open the ancient door of an old church, says Ronald Blythe, and
framed in the silence is a house of words where everything has been
said: centuries of birth, marriage and death words, gossip, poetry,
philosophy, rant, eloquence, learning, nonsense, the language of
hymn writers and Bible translators - all of it spoken in one place.
This work contains words spoken by Ronald Blythe in the churches he
serves as a Reader in the Church of England, and as the local
writer expected to add his own distinctive voice. Originating as
addresses given at Matins or Evensong, they follow various paths
into old and new liturgies, literature and the local countryside.
They bring together the author's delight in language, his
recollections of farming, his recognition of friends and
neighbours, and the hopes he has found in faith.
Described by Pope Pius XII as the most important theologian since
Thomas Aquinas, the Swiss pastor and theologian, Karl Barth,
continues to be a major influence on students, scholars and
preachers today. Barth's theology found its expression mainly
through his closely reasoned fourteen-part magnum opus, Die
Kirchliche Dogmatik. Having taken over 30 years to write, the
Church Dogmatics is regarded as one of the most important
theological works of all time, and represents the pinnacle of
Barth's achievement as a theologian.
'No better way could have been found to mark the end of the long
unchallenged reign of Cranmer's Prayer Book than Dr Cuming's superb
charting of its history.' Journal of Theological Studies
This book considers the work of Charles Taylor from a theological
perspective, specifically relating to the topic of ecclesiology. It
argues that Taylor and related thinkers such as John Milbank and
Rowan Williams point towards an "Aesthetic Ecclesiology," an
ecclesiology that values highly and utilizes the aesthetic in its
self-understanding and practice. Jamie Franklin argues that
Taylor's work provides an account of the breakdown in Modernity of
the conceptual relationship of the immanent and the transcendent,
and that the work of John Milbank and radical orthodoxy give a
complementary account of the secular from a more metaphysical
angle. Franklin also incorporates the work of Rowan Williams, which
provides us a way of thinking about the Church that is rooted in a
material and historical legacy. The central argument is that the
reconnection of the transcendent and the immanent coheres with an
understanding of the Church that incorporates the material reality
of the sacraments, the importance of artistic beauty and
craftsmanship, and the Church's status as historical, global, and
eschatological. Secondly, the aesthetic provides the Church with a
powerful apologetic: beauty cannot be reduced to the
presuppositions of secular materialism, and so must be accounted
for by recourse to transcendent categories.
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