Tuesday, February 04, 2014



Anglicanism Alive and Well

by Brian Miller
http://juicyecumenism.com/2014/02/03/anglicanism-alive-and-well/
February 3, 2014

Anglicans have never been very showy people. There was once that G.K. Chesterton fellow, but he eventually moved on. Not that Anglicans don't talk about their faith or excel in their given fields. If it weren't for Anglicans, Anglo-American culture as we know it simply would not exist.

However, it remains a curious fact that most famous Anglicans are not necessarily famous for being Anglicans. Edmund Burke, and even the theologian Richard Hooker, are remembered as great political thinkers. John Donne, Samuel Johnson, W.H. Auden, T.S. Eliot, and countless others are remembered as poets. Even great Anglicans who are remembered primarily for their Christian works are hardly ever remembered as Anglicans per se. The Wesley brothers and George Whitfield are remembered as evangelicals. C.S. Lewis, depending on which circles you run in (and I run in both), is either a great evangelical or an almost Catholic. Similarly, it is often taken for granted that the works of men like John Henry Newman and G.K. Chesterton are all "Catholic Works" when the reality is decades of their writings were produced while they remained members of the Church of England.

Read the full story at www.VirtueOnline.org

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