Article contents
Anglicanism on the Eve of the Oxford Movement
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2009
Extract
1. The Erastian Bondage of the Church:
The promise of Magna Charta “that the English Church shall be free and have her rights entire and her liberties inviolate,” went largely unfulfilled. The autonomy of the Church was dreamt of by men like Stephen Langton and Robert Grosseteste, but it was never realized. In the Middle Ages it was restricted by the assertion of the jurisdiction of the Pope on the one hand, and of the King on the other. Magna Charta marked the humiliation of the King and met with the prompt condemnation of the Pope. By a long series of events between ca. 1350 and ca. 1570, the Pope's cause in England was lost, and in the same course of events the royal power was greatly enhanced. So far as constitutional autonomy was concerned the Church was now in a weaker state than before. The gates of a prison-house of Erastianism closed about her. A blight fell upon her governing institutions. Her Convocations were not permitted to function, and after 1718 were discontinued, except for pro forma meetings held for the purpose, as Edmund Burke phrased it, “of making some polite ecclesiastical compliments to the King.” Burke spoke for the politicians of his century when he added: “It is wise to permit its legal existence only.” Because Convocation's last acts had been attended by strife, the fear that its revival would mean a renewal of unseemly contention was habitually invoked as an answer to the few who ventured to suggest that step.
- Type
- Articles
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © American Society of Church History 1934
References
1 Letter to the Sheriffs of Bristol, 1777. The lucid and penetrating study of DrSwitzer, Gerald B., The Struggle for Autonomy in the Church of England, 1932Google Scholar, a typewritten dissertation in the library of the Divinity School of the University of Chicago, contains a highly useful account of Convocation.
2 Boswell, , Life of Johnson, Oxford, 1922, I, 310Google Scholar; Switzer, , op. cit., p. 61.Google Scholar
3 Coleridge, , Works, VI, 88. Cf. p. 77.Google Scholar
4 “The Property and Government of the Church of England,” Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, XXVIII, 1830, 784–811.Google Scholar
5 Coleridge, , Essays on His Own Times, I, 128.Google Scholar
6 Anecdotes of Richard Watson, Philadelphia, 1818, p. 214.Google Scholar
7 Remains of Richard Cecil, ed. Joseph Pratt, 1826, p. 105.Google Scholar
8 The History of the Church of Christ, Philadelphia, 1845, I, 343–351.Google Scholar
9 The History of the Church of Christ, I, 350.Google Scholar
10 . Charles Simeon, London, 1905, p. 108Google Scholar. Cf. also Binns, L. E., The Evangelical Movement in the English Church, “Faiths” series, 1928, Ch. VIII.Google Scholar
11 The Secret Story of the Oxford Movement, London: Skeffington, 1933.Google Scholar
12 Both poems are in Volume I of George Crabbe's Poems, edited by A. W. Ward. Cf. Huchon, René, George Crabbe and His Times.Google Scholar
13 Tayler, Charles B., Facts in a Clergyman's Life, pp. 9ff.Google Scholar
14 Memoirs of Edward and Catherine Stanley, Edited by Stanley, A. P.. London 1879, pp. 7ff.Google Scholar
15 Op. cit. p. 38.
16 Christian Observer, X (1811), pp. 708–720; 778–795.Google Scholar
17 See review in British Critic, New Series, X, 1818, pp. 1–25.Google Scholar
18 The Works of Jeremy Bentham. Ed. John Bowring. Eleven volumes. Edin. 1843.Google Scholar
19 Quarterly Review, XXI, 1819, pp. 167–177Google Scholar. British Critic, New Series, X, 1818, pp. 519–528.Google Scholar
20 History of the Middle and Working Classes, p. 82.Google Scholar
21 Statutes of the Realm, 36 Geo. IV. c. 83.Google Scholar
22 43 Geo. III, c. 84. July 7, 1803, Cf. Cobbett, W., Parliamentary History of England, XXXVI, 443ff; 882ff.Google Scholar
23 Wright's Petition presented against Bragge Bathurst's bill, 1813, as abstracted in the Journals of the House of Commons, LXIX, 72.Google Scholar
24 54 Geo. III c. 6. An Act to Stay. … Proceedings.
25 See Journals of the House of Commons, LXIX, (1813–1814)Google Scholar under dates mentioned.
26 54 Geo. III. e. 175.
27 Extraordinary Black Book, pp. 30ff; 35f.Google Scholar
28 53 Geo. III. c. 149. July 20, 1813.
29 Hansard, 1st Ser. XXVI, 210, 295, 1115, 1171, 1197.
30 57 Geo. III, c. 99 (10 July 1817).
31 The Pamphleteer, Vol. XVII, pp. 172–199.Google Scholar
32 English Church Reform, 1815–1840, Ch. IGoogle Scholar
33 Extraordinary Black Book, p. 78.Google Scholar
34 Christian Observer, 1833. Philadelphia Edition, pp. 131; 159; 243; 267.Google Scholar
35 Ibid., pp. 132, 241.
36 Miscellaneous Works of Thomas Arnold, 2nd American Edition, 1846, pp. 75–130Google Scholar. The Preface is dated Jan. 9, 1833.
37 Ibid., pp. 213–235.
38 pp. 160ff.
39 Quarterly Review, XLVIII (1832), pp. 560ff.Google Scholar
40 British Critic, XIV, 394ff.Google Scholar
41 Chalmers, although in 1843 he felt bound to lead the Disruptionists in Scotland, remained devoted to the principle of an established church.
42 British Critic, 3rd Series, VII, (1830), p. 315.Google Scholar
43 Blackwood's, XXXI. pp. 392ff.Google Scholar
44 Works of the Reverend Sydney Smith, Boston, 1857, p. 437.Google Scholar
45 Blackwood's, XXIV (1828), pp. 404–440.Google Scholar
46 Ibid., XXV (1829), p. 617.
47 Ibid., XXVIII (1830), pp. 794–811.
48 Cornish, F. W., The English Church in the Nineteenth Century, Part I, p. 81.Google Scholar
- 1
- Cited by