The Oxford Movement eBook

Richard William Church
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 377 pages of information about The Oxford Movement.

The Oxford Movement eBook

Richard William Church
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 377 pages of information about The Oxford Movement.
attracted the sympathy of another boast of Cambridge, the great Bishop of New Zealand, and his friend Mr. Whytehead.  Those times were the link between what we are now, so changed in many ways, and the original impulse given at Oxford; but to those times I am as much of an outsider as most of the foremost in them were outsiders to Oxford in the earlier days.  Those times are almost more important than the history of the movement; for, besides vindicating it, they carried on its work to achievements and successes which, even in the most sanguine days of “Tractarianism,” had not presented themselves to men’s minds, much less to their hopes.  But that story must be told by others.

“Show thy servants thy work, and their children thy glory.”

FOOTNOTES: 

[124] Compare Mozley’s Reminiscences, ii. 1-3.

[125] Christian Remembrancer, January 1846, pp. 167, 168.

[126] E.g. the Warden of Merton’s History of the University of Oxford, p. 212.  “The first panic was succeeded by a reaction; some devoted adherents followed him (Mr. Newman) to Rome; others relapsed into lifeless conformity; and the University soon resumed its wonted tranquillity.” “Lifeless conformity” sounds odd connected with Dr. Pusey or Mr. J.B.  Mozley, and the London men who were the founders of the so-called Ritualist schools.

INDEX

Addresses to Archbishop of Canterbury, by clergy and laity
Anglicanism, its features in 1830
  Newman’s views on
  Newman’s interpretation of
Apologia, quotations from
Apostolic Succession
  Newman’s insistence on
  its foundation on Prayer Book
Apostolitity of English Church
Archbishop of Canterbury. See Addresses, and Howley
Arians, the
Arnold, Dr., theories on the Church
  his proposal to unite all sects by law
  attack on Tractarians
  Professorship at Oxford
  his influence shown in rise of third school
Articles, the, and Dissenters
  subscription of. See Dr. Hampden, and Thirty-nine Articles

Baptism, Tract on
Baptistery, the
Bennett, Mr.
Bentham. see Utilitarianism
Bernard, Mr. Mountague
Bishoprics, suppression of ten Irish
Bishops’ attitude to movement
  the first Tract on
Blachford, Lord, reminiscences of Froude
Bliss, James
Blomfield, Bishop
British Association, a sign of the times
British Critic on the movement
British Magazine
Brougham, Lord
Bunsen, M., and the Bishopric of Jerusalem
Burton, Dr.

Cambridge, critical school of theology
Capes, Mr.
Cardwell, Dr.
Catastrophe, the
Catholicity of English Church
Catholicus’s letters to the Times
Celibacy, observations on
Celibate clergy scheme
Changes in movement

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Oxford Movement from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.