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The Oxford Movement
Europe and the Wider World 1830–1930
An international team of authors explores the impact of the Oxford Movement on the Church and religious life beyond England.
Stewart J. Brown (Edited by), Peter B. Nockles (Edited by)
9781107016446, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 28 June 2012
288 pages
23.5 x 16 x 1.7 cm, 0.6 kg
'… [an] effective collection of essays … timely and to be welcomed … It succeeds overall in providing a deeper and more nuanced understanding of an important part of the nineteenth-century Anglican identity.' Iain R. Torrance, The Expository Times
The Oxford Movement transformed the nineteenth-century Church of England with a renewed conception of itself as a spiritual body. Initiated in the early 1830s by members of the University of Oxford, it was a response to threats to the established Church posed by British Dissenters, Irish Catholics, Whig and Radical politicians, and the predominant evangelical ethos - what Newman called 'the religion of the day'. The Tractarians believed they were not simply addressing difficulties within their national Church, but recovering universal principles of the Christian faith. To what extent were their beliefs and ideals communicated globally? Was missionary activity the product of the movement's distinctive principles? Did their understanding of the Church promote, or inhibit, closer relations among the churches of the global Anglican Communion? This volume addresses these questions and more with a series of case studies involving Europe and the English-speaking world during the first century of the Movement.
Notes on contributors
Abbreviations
Introduction Stewart J. Brown and Peter Nockles
Prelude
1. The Oxford Movement in an Oxford college: Oriel as the cradle of Tractarianism Peter Nockles
Part I. Beyond England: The Oxford Movement in Britain, the Empire and the United States: 2. Isaac Williams and Welsh Tractarian theology John Boneham
3. Scotland and the Oxford Movement Stewart J. Brown
4. The Oxford Movement and the British Empire: Newman, Manning and the 1841 Jerusalem Bishopric Rowan Strong
5. The Australian Bishops and the Oxford Movement Austin Cooper
6. Anglo-Catholicism in Australia, c.1860–1960 David Hilliard
7. The Oxford Movement and the United States Peter Nockles
Part II. The Oxford Movement and Continental Europe: 8. Europe and the Oxford Movement Geoffrey Rowell
9. Pusey, Tholuck and the reception of the Oxford Movement in Germany Albrecht Geck
10. The Oxford Movement: reception and perception in Catholic circles in nineteenth-century Belgium Jan De Maeyer and Karel Strobbe
11. 'Separated brethren': French Catholics and the Oxford Movement Jeremy Morris
12. The Oxford Movement, Jerusalem and the Eastern question Mark Chapman
13. Ignaz von Döllinger and the Anglicans Angela Berlis
14. Anglicans, Old Catholics and Reformed Catholics in late nineteenth-century Europe Nigel Yates
Index.
Subject Areas: Church history [HRCC2], Christianity [HRC], Early modern history: c 1450/1500 to c 1700 [HBLH]