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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Christianity > Protestantism & Protestant Churches > Anglican & Episcopalian Churches > General
On the eve of WWI the well-known explorer and writer Sir Clements
Markham decided to pay tribute to his father, the Reverend David
Markham, by putting pen to paper. In tracing his father's life
story he provided a detailed account of his life and work at
Stillingfleet, Great Horkesley, and Windsor, and his interactions
with an extensive list of friends and family. As a well-connected,
highly-educated and wealthy individual, David Markham was able to
indulge his passion for travelling, collecting, and painting. The
family home was filled with cabinets of coins, fossils, shells and
other curiosities, as well as many fine works of art. His keen
interest in heraldry and family history meant a great deal of time
being devoted to tracing the rich history of the family. Clements
Markham's story of his father's life provides the reader with a
rich depiction of a true Victorian antiquarian: someone with a
lifelong passion for learning and interest in a broad spectrum of
fields. In doing so he has provided the reader with a rich source
of Victorian local, family and social history.
John Neville Figgis, CR (1866-1919) was a brilliant Anglican
theologian, historian, political thinker and preacher; he was also
a monk. This volume of a dozen freshly commissioned essays by
eminent scholars retrieves, expounds and critiques his thought and
relates it to the culturally pluralist theological, ethical and
political situation in which we find ourselves in the twenty-first
century. Although Figgis' significance is widely acknowledged by
scholars, little has been written about him. Figgis has an
uncontested place in Anglican and Episcopal thought and is overdue
for a concerted study of the many facets of his work and
importance.
In The Anglican Eucharist in Australia, Brian Douglas explores the
History, Theology, and Liturgy of the Eucharist in the Anglican
Church of Australia. The story begins with the first white
settlement in 1788 and continues to the present day. The three
eucharistic liturgies used in the ACA, and the debates that led to
them, are examined in depth: The Book of Common Prayer (1662); An
Australian Prayer Book (1978); and A Prayer Book for Australia
(1995). The deep sacramentality of the Aboriginal people is
acknowledged and modern issues such as liturgical development, lay
presidency and virtual Eucharists are also explored. The book
concludes with some suggestions for the further development of
eucharistic liturgies within the ACA.
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Mel
(Paperback)
Danny Sarros
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R268
Discovery Miles 2 680
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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