Selected Works of Edward Newenham Hoare

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, New Age, History, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book Selected Works of Edward Newenham Hoare by Edward Newenham Hoare, Library of Alexandria
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Edward Newenham Hoare ISBN: 9781465612670
Publisher: Library of Alexandria Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Edward Newenham Hoare
ISBN: 9781465612670
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English
As it has pleased Her Majesty to appoint a Royal Commission to consider the subject of Clerical Subscription, the time has clearly come when those who regard the principle of Subscription to be one of essential importance to the well-being of our Church should consider carefully by what arrangements that principle may be best maintained and carried out. It is the opinion of many that the wisest course is to endeavour to secure the present system without alteration, and earnestly to oppose any change of any kind whatever. Under many circumstances, I could believe in the wisdom of so doing; but if it can be shown that there are great objections against the present practice, then I think that, for the sake of the principle, we ought to be prepared to receive with gratitude such a change as may remove well-grounded and reasonable objections. The principle and the practice are so intimately connected in people’s minds that they are almost sure to stand and fall together; so that if there is any great defect in the practice, there is danger of the principle being made to bear the blame of it; and if the practice is such as to give reasonable dissatisfaction to reasonable men, it is almost sure to weaken the hold which the principle has on the public mind. On these grounds I am anxious to call the attention of those Churchmen who believe in the importance of the principle of Subscription to the practice as at present imposed by the Act of Uniformity on the beneficed clergymen of the Church of England; and I do so under the very strong conviction that, in order to maintain the principle and, I might almost add, on every other ground, there should be an united endeavour amongst English Churchmen without delay to effect a change.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
As it has pleased Her Majesty to appoint a Royal Commission to consider the subject of Clerical Subscription, the time has clearly come when those who regard the principle of Subscription to be one of essential importance to the well-being of our Church should consider carefully by what arrangements that principle may be best maintained and carried out. It is the opinion of many that the wisest course is to endeavour to secure the present system without alteration, and earnestly to oppose any change of any kind whatever. Under many circumstances, I could believe in the wisdom of so doing; but if it can be shown that there are great objections against the present practice, then I think that, for the sake of the principle, we ought to be prepared to receive with gratitude such a change as may remove well-grounded and reasonable objections. The principle and the practice are so intimately connected in people’s minds that they are almost sure to stand and fall together; so that if there is any great defect in the practice, there is danger of the principle being made to bear the blame of it; and if the practice is such as to give reasonable dissatisfaction to reasonable men, it is almost sure to weaken the hold which the principle has on the public mind. On these grounds I am anxious to call the attention of those Churchmen who believe in the importance of the principle of Subscription to the practice as at present imposed by the Act of Uniformity on the beneficed clergymen of the Church of England; and I do so under the very strong conviction that, in order to maintain the principle and, I might almost add, on every other ground, there should be an united endeavour amongst English Churchmen without delay to effect a change.

More books from Library of Alexandria

Cover of the book The Realness of Witchcraft in America by Edward Newenham Hoare
Cover of the book The Barber of Paris by Edward Newenham Hoare
Cover of the book Our Little Grecian Cousin by Edward Newenham Hoare
Cover of the book Arcana Coelestia by Edward Newenham Hoare
Cover of the book Wolfert's Roost and Miscellanies by Edward Newenham Hoare
Cover of the book The Portsmouth Road and Its Tributaries To-Day and in Days of Old by Edward Newenham Hoare
Cover of the book Eli's Children: The Chronicles of an Unhappy Family by Edward Newenham Hoare
Cover of the book Jewish Fairy Tales and Legends by Edward Newenham Hoare
Cover of the book Miriam Monfort: A Novel by Edward Newenham Hoare
Cover of the book Animism or, Thought Currents of Primitive Peoples by Edward Newenham Hoare
Cover of the book More Celtic Fairy Tales by Edward Newenham Hoare
Cover of the book Plum Punch: Crime and the Courts by Edward Newenham Hoare
Cover of the book The Daltons, Or, Three Roads in Life (Complete) by Edward Newenham Hoare
Cover of the book Rasputin the Rascal Monk: Disclosing the Secret Scandal of the Betrayal of Russia by the Mock-Monk Grichka and the Consequent Ruin of the Romanoffs With Official Documents Revealed and Recorded for the First Time by Edward Newenham Hoare
Cover of the book Lorraine: A Romance by Edward Newenham Hoare
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy