
audiobook
by Charles J. (Charles John) Abbey, John Henry Overton
THE ENGLISH CHURCH IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY - BY - CHARLES J. ABBEY - RECTOR OF CHECKENDON: FORMERLY FELLOW OF UNIVERSITY COLLEGE, OXFORD - AND - JOHN H. OVERTON - CANON OF LINCOLN AND RECTOR OF EPWORTH - REVISED AND ABRIDGED - NEW EDITION - LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO. - LONDON, NEW YORK, AND BOMBAY - 1896
PREFACE - TO - THE SECOND EDITION
PREFACE - TO - THE FIRST EDITION
THE ENGLISH CHURCH - IN THE - EIGHTEENTH CENTURY.
CHAPTER I. - INTRODUCTORY.
CHAPTER II. - ROBERT NELSON, HIS FRIENDS, AND CHURCH PRINCIPLES.
CHAPTER III. - THE DEISTS.
CHAPTER IV. - LATITUDINARIAN CHURCHMANSHIP. - (1) CHARACTER AND INFLUENCE OF ARCHBISHOP TILLOTSON'S THEOLOGY.
CHAPTER V. - LATITUDINARIAN CHURCHMANSHIP. - (2) CHURCH COMPREHENSION AND CHURCH REFORMERS.
CHAPTER VI. - THE TRINITARIAN CONTROVERSY.
Listeners are invited into a vivid portrait of the Church of England during a century of change. The work traces how the aftershocks of the Glorious Revolution, the rise of deist critique, and the energy of Methodist and evangelical movements reshaped worship, doctrine, and public debate. Along the way it examines the lingering influence of nonjurors, the clash of high‑church formalism with emerging popular piety, and the ways clergy and laity negotiated authority and tolerance.
The authors present the material as a series of concise essays, each focused on a particular facet of eighteenth‑century religious life, from theological controversies to the impact of political upheavals like the French Revolution. Their tone is scholarly yet accessible, offering clear explanations without assuming prior knowledge. By the close of the first act, the listener gains a solid grounding in the forces that set the stage for later revivals and reforms.
Language
en
Duration
~21 hours (1238K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-10-02
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1833–1919
An Anglican clergyman and church historian, he is best remembered for co-writing a detailed history of the Church of England in the eighteenth century. His work brings together pastoral experience, Oxford scholarship, and a lasting interest in early English religious thought.
View all books1835–1903
A Victorian church historian and Anglican clergyman, he wrote clearly and widely about the Church of England, including studies of John Wesley, William Law, and the religious movements of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
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