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The Church of England and Divorce

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 August 2024

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Divorce In Britain, a trickle in the second half of the nineteenth century, has become a flood which has already done irreparable harm to the national life and threatens to do still more in the future. The Anglican attitude to this evil is often criticized as ambiguous and inconsistent, but it is only fair to recognize that the corporate influence of the Church of England has been, and still is a real and important check to the further spread of this erosive tide of divorce. While most non-Catholic bodies in England have long since ceased to offer any effective resistance to the practice, the Church of England continues, in the face of ever growing criticism, to maintain her ban on the rege marriage in her churches of divorced persons who have a former partner still living. This ruling has been lately reaffirmed by an Act of Convocation.

Type
Comment: I
Copyright
Copyright © 1958 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

Footnotes

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We reprint this COMMENT from Unitas, the International Quarterly Review of the Unitas Association, by kind permission of the Editor.

References

1 Theology, August 1957, page 312.