The purpose of this thesis is to examine the Church of England 's understanding of 'episcopal ' episcopacy and ordained ministry, including their ecclesiological implications and ecumenical consequences. Special attention is given to the refusal of interchangeability of ordained ministers with 'non-episcopal ' churches (whilst allowing inter-communion), on the grounds that they lacked a ' historic succession ' of bishops (cf. The Meissen Declaration and Agreement ). This claim gives the adjective 'episcopal' a denominational, (quasi-)sacramental connotation (hence the inverted commas). Official Anglican statements today claim that the concept of episcopacy in a ' historic succession' is and always has been an integral part of 'Anglican' tea...
From a 'postliberal' perspective I argue that there is no means by which divine truth can incontrove...
The rites for the consecration (ordination) of bishops in the churches listed in the title are exami...
This paper interprets an under-explored aspect of seventeenth-century English episcopal thought, in ...
The purpose of this thesis is to examine the Church of England’s understanding of ‘episcopal’ episco...
This paper investigates the purpose and the power of the reformed episcopate in seventeenth-century ...
This paper investigates the purpose and the power of the reformed episcopate in seventeenth-century ...
Anglo-Catholicism was the major occasion of strife within the Church of England, 1880-1914. Between ...
This thesis will explore the historical roots of alternative episcopal oversight as it affects the C...
While puritan displeasure at bishops as being a so-called 'Popish Dreg' is much discussed in modern ...
In the 1990s, various Lutheran and Anglican churches in Europe and North America entered into full c...
This graduation thesis deals with the different status of episcopate and service of bishops in the S...
This thesis examines the various ways in which the Church of England engaged with English politics a...
This article examines how the episcopal ministry and related concepts such as ‘episkopé’, ‘installat...
This dissertation examines how leaders in the Church of England sought to reorganize the colonial ch...
This thesis sets out to analyse the size, distribution and character of the clerical profession in t...
From a 'postliberal' perspective I argue that there is no means by which divine truth can incontrove...
The rites for the consecration (ordination) of bishops in the churches listed in the title are exami...
This paper interprets an under-explored aspect of seventeenth-century English episcopal thought, in ...
The purpose of this thesis is to examine the Church of England’s understanding of ‘episcopal’ episco...
This paper investigates the purpose and the power of the reformed episcopate in seventeenth-century ...
This paper investigates the purpose and the power of the reformed episcopate in seventeenth-century ...
Anglo-Catholicism was the major occasion of strife within the Church of England, 1880-1914. Between ...
This thesis will explore the historical roots of alternative episcopal oversight as it affects the C...
While puritan displeasure at bishops as being a so-called 'Popish Dreg' is much discussed in modern ...
In the 1990s, various Lutheran and Anglican churches in Europe and North America entered into full c...
This graduation thesis deals with the different status of episcopate and service of bishops in the S...
This thesis examines the various ways in which the Church of England engaged with English politics a...
This article examines how the episcopal ministry and related concepts such as ‘episkopé’, ‘installat...
This dissertation examines how leaders in the Church of England sought to reorganize the colonial ch...
This thesis sets out to analyse the size, distribution and character of the clerical profession in t...
From a 'postliberal' perspective I argue that there is no means by which divine truth can incontrove...
The rites for the consecration (ordination) of bishops in the churches listed in the title are exami...
This paper interprets an under-explored aspect of seventeenth-century English episcopal thought, in ...