The Transformation of Anglicanism
This book examines the various contexts - historical, social, cultural, and ideological - which have shaped the modern efforts of the Anglican tradition at self-understanding. The author's thesis is that modernity and world mission have changed Anglicanism in ways that are deep and pervasive, just as other Christian traditions have also been profoundly affected by worldwide extension. In the case of the Anglican tradition, however, a distinctive way of relating Christianity to local culture and a distinctive kind of indigenous leader produced a church identity different from other forms of Christendom. Dr Sachs' aim is to contrast Anglicanism both with the style of Roman Catholicism and with the characteristically Protestant emphasis upon individual conversion apart from concern for the Church and its tradition.
- The first accessible treatment of what makes Anglicanism Anglicanism
- Preface by the Archbishop of Canterbury
- Topical and timely in its attention to the ways modern culture has shaped, and has itself been shaped by, Anglicanism
Product details
May 1993Hardback
9780521391436
400 pages
229 × 152 × 25 mm
0.76kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Acknowledgements
- 1. The dawn of modernity
- 2. New visions of establishment
- 3. The adjustment of church and state
- 4. The struggle to define the church and its belief
- 5. The church and empire
- 6. Anglicanism confronts cultural diversity
- 7. The crisis of church and culture
- 8. The search for the authentic church
- Notes
- Index.