American Episcopalians have long prided themselves on their love
of consensus and their position as the church of American elites.
They have, in the process, often forgotten that during the
nineteenth century their church was racked by a divisive struggle
that threatened to tear apart the very fabric of the Episcopal
Church. On one side of this struggle was a powerful and aggressive
Evangelical party who hoped to make the Episcopal Church into the
democratic head of "the sisterhood of Evangelical Churches" in
America; on the other side was the Oxford Movement, equally
powerful and aggressive but committed to a range of Romantic
principles which celebrated disillusion and disgust with
evangelicalism and democracy alike. The resulting conflict--over
theology, liturgy, and, above all, culture--led to the schism of
1873, in which many Evangelicals left the church to form the
Reformed Episcopal Church. For the Union of Evangelical Christendom
tells this largely forgotten story using the case of the Reformed
Episcopalians to open up the ironic anatomy of American religion at
the turn of the century.
Today, as the Episcopal Church once again finds itself enmeshed
in cultural and religious crisis, the remembrance of a similar
crisis a century ago brings an eerily prophetic ring to this
remarkable work of cultural and religious history.
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