The Oxford Movement, though concerned with the Church and theology, was important in the spheres of politics, society, and empire in nineteenth-century Britain. Considering that England defined itself as a Protest nation with an Established Church, many found the movement's vision of Anglicanism to be too catholic.
The Oxford Movement, though concerned with the Church and theology, was important in the spheres of politics, society, and empire in nineteenth-century Britain. Considering that England defined itself as a Protest nation with an Established Church, many found the movement's vision of Anglicanism to be too catholic.
Benjamin J. King became Duncalf-Villavoso Professor of Church History, Seminary of the Southwest, Austin, Texas in 2023. He previously taught Christian history for fourteen years at the School of Theology, University of the South, Sewanee, Tennessee. He is author of Newman and the Alexandrian Fathers (2009), and co-editor with Frederick D. Aquino of Receptions of Newman (2015) and The Oxford Handbook of John Henry Newman (2018). He has also written numerous articles and lectured internationally. He has contributed to the Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church and serves on the editorial board of the journal Anglican and Episcopal History .
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Acknowledgements Introduction 1: Tracking down the Tractarian Laity 2: Providence and Colonial Slavery 3: Ecclesiology and Church Establishment 4: Consensus Fidelium and Synods 5: Episcopacy and Empire 6: Spirituality and the American Civil War Conclusion Bibliography
Acknowledgements Introduction 1: Tracking down the Tractarian Laity 2: Providence and Colonial Slavery 3: Ecclesiology and Church Establishment 4: Consensus Fidelium and Synods 5: Episcopacy and Empire 6: Spirituality and the American Civil War Conclusion Bibliography
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