Series Foreword
Preface Sarah Foot
1. Why the 'establishment' of the Church of England is Good for a
Liberal Society Nigel Biggar
2. Opportunity Knocks: Church, Nationhood and Establishment Martyn
Percy
3. The Dog that Didn't Bark: the Failure of Disestablishment since
1927 Matthew Grimley
4. A Free Church in a Free State: Anglo-Catholicism and
Establishment Mark D. Chappman
5. The Gospel Opportunity or Unbiblical Relic? The Established
Church through Anglican Evangelical Eyes Andrew Atherstone
6. Gender and Establishment: Parliament, 'Erastianism' and the
Ordination of Women1993-2010 Judith Maltby
7. The Establishment, Multiculturalism and Social Cohesion Elaine
Graham
8. A Uniform British Establishment Iain McLean and Scot
Peterson
9. Methodists and Establishment David Carter
10. Anglican Establishment, Roman Catholics, and Receptive
Ecumenism Philip Endean SJ
11. What future for Establishment? William Whyte
Index
A fresh look at the issue of establishment of the Church of England in an ecumenical, multi-cultural and secular context.
Mark Chapman is Vice-Principal of Ripon College
Cuddesdon, Oxford, and a Reader in Modern Theology at the
University of Oxford, UK. He has written widely on modern church
history, ethics and theology. His books include Ernst Troeltsch and
Liberal Theology, The Coming Crisis, Blair's Britain and
Anglicanism: A Very Short Introduction.
Judith Maltby is Chaplain and Fellow of Corpus Christi College,
Oxford, and Reader in Church History in the University of
Oxford.
It almost seems axiomatic in public discussion these days that the
Church of England should be disestablished -- yet this lively and
varied set of essays suggests that such smug certainty needs
vigorous questioning. Here are some refreshingly robust defences of
establishment, as well as friendly candour from beyond Anglican
boundaries. Don't write off the C of E as by Law Established just
yet.
*Prof Diarmaid N.J. MacCulloch, DD, FBA, St Cross College,
Oxford*
This is not simply an outstanding set of essays on the conundrum of
establishment of the Church of England, but it is also a gateway
into history, philosophy, ecumenism, and multiculturalism. In this
volume, we discover that the English tradition of great collections
of essays that speak to a particular question at the right time is
alive and well. This is a truly great book. All the essays are
exceptional, illuminating, informed, and accessible. Anyone
searching for a rich, thoughtful, insightful discussion of the
established Church of England must read this book. For Americans
curious about this supposed anachronism, this is the book that will
help them see the world differently.
*The Very Rev Dr. Ian Markham, Dean and President of Virginia
Theological Seminary, USA*
'Here's where you look for the ecclesiology of the Church of
England: Oxford historians, theologians, politics teachers and
social anthropologists pierce the fog that veils the Established
Church's place and possibilities in the nation's past, present and
future. The shafts of their prism illuminate where that combination
of post-Thatcher politics and the selfish gene have got us to: the
limits to "multiculturalism" as a governing model and why it's
often the Church of England that remains Her Majesty's loyal
opposition. Establishment may be costly for the church, but can the
state afford to be without it? Every aspiring politician and civil
servant should read this book' - The Rt Revd Dr David Stancliffe,
UK.
*David Stancliffe*
Extract featured
*Standpoint Magazine*
Title mentioned in article in The Church of England Newspaper.
This is an impressive and timely collection of essays: impressive,
because the quality is consistently high; timely, because the
organic relationship between religion and State in British society
is currently undergoing (from renewal of civic society to the
reform of the House of Lords) a period of accelerated
evolution.
*The Expository Times*
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