View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Anglicanism.

Anglicanism

Anglicanism meaning

The beliefs and practices of the Anglican Church. | Attachment to England or English institutions.

Synonyms of Anglicanism

Example sentences (20)

Others have left Anglicanism altogether for the Roman Catholic or Eastern Orthodox churches, in the belief that liberal doctrinal changes in the Anglican churches have resulted in Anglicanism no longer being a true branch of the "Church Catholic".

These Fourteen Theses represent an attempt to sketch a providential history of global Anglicanism over the past twenty-five years.

A convert from Anglicanism and a speaker and author, Father Longenecker brought his wife and four children with him into the Catholic Church.

His wife is not thought to have converted from Anglicanism yet, although one friend says he believes she may do so in future.

A characteristic of Anglicanism is that it has no international juridical authority.

Adherents of Anglicanism are called "Anglicans".

Although James had tried to get the Scottish Church to accept some of the High Church Anglicanism of his southern kingdom, he met with limited success.

Anglicanism Anglican usage styles the bishop who heads an independent church as its "primate", though commonly they hold some other title (e.g. archbishop, presiding bishop, or moderator).

Anglicanism constitutes the largest religion, with 47.8% of the population.

Anglicanism main In the Anglican Communion and the Continuing Anglican movement, the title of Saint refers to a person who has been elevated by popular opinion as a pious and holy person.

Book of Common Prayer The 1596 Book of Common Prayer The Book of Common Prayer (BCP) is the foundational prayer book of Anglicanism.

Conflicts within Anglicanism A changing focus on social issues after the Second World War led to Lambeth Conference resolutions countenancing contraception and the remarriage of divorced persons.

Example in art; Out of Mass, Joan Ferrer Miró Mass in Anglicanism seeAlso "Mass" is one of many terms used to describe the Eucharist in the Anglican tradition.

Finally, the extension of Anglicanism into non-English cultures, the growing diversity of prayer books and the increasing interest in ecumenical dialogue, has led to further reflection on the parameters of Anglican identity.

Historically, the most influential of these – apart from Cranmer – has been the 16th century cleric and theologian Richard Hooker who after 1660 was increasingly portrayed as the founding father of Anglicanism.

In 1740, Whitefield published attacks on “the works of two of Anglicanism's revered seventeenth-century authors”.

In recent decades, however, reservations about Freemasonry have increased within Anglicanism, perhaps due to the increasing prominence of the evangelical wing of the church.

It is this " Elizabethan Religious Settlement " which largely formed Anglicanism into a distinctive church tradition.

James P. Jordan argued for the importance of Anglicanism to Linebarger's works back to 1949.

Marian devotion similar to this kind is also found in Eastern Orthodoxy and sometimes in Anglicanism, though not in the majority of denominations of Protestantism.