Pacandus

 Bartolommeo Pacca

 St. Pachomius

 George Michael Pachtler

 Pacificus

 Bl. Pacificus of Ceredano

 St. Pacificus of San Severino

 Lucas Pacioli

 Diocese of Paderborn

 Juan de Padilla

 Diocese of Padua

 University of Padua

 Paganism

 Mario Pagano

 Ven. Anthony Page

 Antoine Pagi

 Santes Pagnino

 Religious Painting

 Pakawá Indians

 Palæography

 Palæontology

 Juan de Palafox y Mendoza

 Ven. Thomas Palasor

 Rhenish Palatinate

 Palatini

 Prefecture Apostolic of Palawan

 Diocese of Palencia

 Paleopolis

 Gabriele Paleotti

 Archdiocese of Palermo

 University of Palermo

 Diocese of Palestrina

 Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina

 Frederick Apthorp Paley

 Pall

 Andrea Palladio

 St. Palladius

 Palladius

 Pietro Sforza Pallavicino

 Pallium

 Ven. Vincent Mary Pallotti

 Palma Vecchio

 William Palmer

 Domenico Palmieri

 Luigi Palmieri

 Palm in Christian Symbolism

 Palm Sunday

 Palmyra

 Francisco Palou

 Paltus

 Peter Paludanus

 Pamelius

 Diocese of Pamiers

 St. Pammachius

 St. Pamphilus of Cæsarea

 Diocese of Pamplona

 Republic and Diocese of Panama

 Pandects

 Pandulph

 Panemotichus

 Pange Lingua Gloriosi

 Francesco Panigarola

 Arnold Pannartz and Konrad Sweinheim

 Pano Indians

 Panopolis

 Panpsychism

 Pantænus

 St. Pantaleon

 Pantheism

 Onofrio Panvinio

 Gregorio Panzani

 Ven. Angelo Paoli

 Papacy

 Pápago Indians

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 Paphnutius

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 Bernardus Papiensis

 Nicholas Papini

 Parables

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 Theophrastus Paracelsus

 Paraclete

 François Para du Phanjas

 Parætonium

 Paraguay

 Books of Paralipomenon

 Diocese of Parahyba

 Parallelism

 Psycho-Physical Parallelism

 Paralus

 Diocese of Paraná

 Parasceve

 Paray-le-Monial

 Ignace-Gaston Pardies

 Pardons of Brittany

 Ambroise Paré

 Francisco Pareja

 Parents

 Diocese of Parenzo-Pola

 Giuseppe Parini

 Paris

 University of Paris

 Alexis-Paulin Paris

 Gaston-Bruno-Paulin Paris

 Matthew Paris

 Parish

 Parium

 Abbey of the Park

 Anthony Parkinson

 Parlais

 Filippo Parlatore

 Diocese of Parma

 Antoine-Augustin Parmentier

 Il Parmigiano

 Parnassus

 Parochial Mass

 Parœcopolis

 Dominique Parrenin

 Parsis

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 Paolo Paruta

 Blaise Pascal

 St. Pascal Baylon

 Pasch or Passover

 Pope Paschal I

 Pope Paschal II

 Paschal III

 Paschal Candle

 Paschal Tide

 St. Paschasius

 St. Paschasius Radbertus

 Carlo Passaglia

 Diocese of Passau

 Ven. Joseph Passerat

 Domenico Passignano

 Domenico Passionei

 Passionists

 Passion Music

 Commemoration of the Passion of Christ

 Passion Offices

 Devotion to the Passion of Jesus Christ

 Passion of Jesus Christ in the Four Gospels

 Passion Plays

 Passions

 Passion Sunday

 Passiontide

 Passos

 Louis Pasteur

 Diocese of Pasto

 Pastor

 Crusade of the Pastoureaux

 Patagonia

 Patara

 Paten

 Ven. William Patenson

 Mental Pathology

 Coventry Patmore

 Patmos

 Patras

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 Patriarch and Patriarchate

 Patrician Brothers

 St. Patrick

 Francis Xavier Patrizi

 Patrology

 Feast of the Patronage of Our Lady

 Patron and Patronage

 Patron Saints

 Diocese of Patti

 St. Paul

 Pope Paul I

 Pope Paul II

 Pope Paul III

 Pope Paul IV

 Pope Paul V

 St. Paula

 Johannes Pauli

 Paulicians

 St. Paulinus

 St. Paulinus, Bishop of Nola

 St. Paulinus II, Patriarch of Aquileia

 Paulinus a S. Bartholomaeo

 Paulinus of Pella

 Paulists

 Paul of Burgos

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 Paul of Samosata

 St. Paul of the Cross

 St. Paul the Hermit

 St. Paul the Simple

 Paulus Diaconus

 Paulus Venetus

 Diocese of Pavia

 Nicolas Pavillon

 Pax

 Pax in the Liturgy

 Mariano Payeras

 Peter Pázmány

 Peace Congresses

 War of the Peasants (1524-25)

 Peba Indians

 John Pecham

 Reginald Pecock

 Pectoral

 Pectorale

 Pednelissus

 Pedro de Cordova

 Pelagia

 Pope Pelagius I

 Pope Pelagius II

 Pelagius and Pelagianism

 Ambrose Pelargus

 Paul Pelisson-Fontanier

 Pella

 Pierre-Joseph Pelletier

 Silvio Pellico

 Guillaume Pellissier

 Diocese of Pelotas

 Théophile-Jules Pelouze

 Madeleine de La Peltrie

 Pelusium

 Diocese of Pembroke

 Francisco Peña

 Penal Laws

 Luis Ignatius Peñalver y Cardenas

 Penance

 Henry Pendleton

 Penelakut Indians

 Los Hermanos Penitentes

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 Feast of Pentecost (of the Jews)

 Diocese of Peoria

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 Pepin the Short

 John Percy

 Peregrinus

 Benedict Pereira

 Juan Perez

 Ginés Pérez de Hita

 Christian and Religious Perfection

 Pergamus

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 Giovanni Battista Pergolesi

 Pericui Indians

 Diocese of Périgueux

 Periodi

 Periodical Literature

 Perjury

 Franz Michael Permaneder

 Joseph Maria Pernter

 Religious of Perpetual Adoration

 Religious of the Perpetual Adoration

 Sisters of the Perpetual Adoration

 Perpetual Adorers of the Blessed Sacrament

 Sisters of Our Lady of Perpetual Help

 Our Lady of Perpetual Succour

 St. Perpetuus

 Diocese of Perpignan

 Adolphe Perraud

 Charles Perrault

 Claude Perrault

 Henri Perreyve

 Giovanni Perrone

 Stephen Joseph Perry

 Persecution

 Coptic Persecutions

 Final Perseverance

 Persia

 Ignatius Persico

 Person

 Ecclesiastical Person

 Personality

 Robert Persons

 Diocese of Perth

 Publius Helvius Pertinax

 Peru

 Archdiocese of Perugia

 Perugino (Pietro Vannucci)

 Baldassare Peruzzi

 Diocese of Pesaro

 Pescennius Niger

 Tilmann Pesch

 Diocese of Pescia

 Pessimism

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 Pestalozzi and Pestalozzianism

 Denis Pétau

 St. Peter

 Epistles of St. Peter

 Sarah Peter

 Sts. Peter Baptist and Twenty-five Companions

 Peterborough Abbey

 Diocese of Peterborough

 Bl. Peter Canisius

 Peter Cantor

 Peter Cellensis

 St. Peter Chrysologus

 St. Peter Claver

 Peter Comestor

 St. Peter Damian

 Peter de Blois

 Peter de Honestis

 St. Peter de Regalado

 Peter de Vinea

 Bl. Peter Faber

 St. Peter Fourier

 Peter Fullo

 St. Peter Gonzalez

 Bl. Peter Igneus

 Peter Lombard (2)

 Bl. Pierre-Louis-Marie Chanel (1)

 Peter Mongus

 St. Peter Nolasco

 St. Peter of Alcántara

 St. Peter of Alexandria

 Peter of Aquila

 St. Peter of Arbues

 Peter of Auvergne

 Peter of Bergamo

 Peter of Poitiers

 St. Peter of Sebaste

 St. Peter of Verona

 Peterspence

 Gerlac Peterssen

 Peter the Hermit

 St. Peter Urseolus

 Petinessus

 Matthieu Petit-Didier

 Petitions to the Holy See

 Petra

 Francesco Petrarch

 Family of Petre

 Petrobrusians

 St. Petronilla

 St. Petronius

 Diocese of Petropolis

 Ottavio dei Petrucci

 Petrus Alfonsus

 Petrus Bernardinus

 Petrus Diaconus

 Petrus de Natalibus

 Petun Nation

 George von Peuerbach

 Conrad Peutinger

 William Peyto

 Pez

 Franz Pfanner

 Johannes Pfefferkorn

 Adolf Pfister

 Julius von Pflug

 Pforta

 Phacusa

 Pharao

 Pharbætus

 Pharisees

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 Phaselis

 Phasga

 Phenomenalism

 Philadelphia

 Archdiocese of Philadelphia

 Philanthropinism

 St. Philastrius

 Philemon

 St. Philip the Apostle

 Volume 13

 Philip II (Augustus)

 Philip II

 Philip IV

 St. Philip Benizi

 St. Philip of Jesus

 Philip of the Blessed Trinity

 Philippi (1)

 Philippi (2)

 Epistle to the Philippians

 Philippine Islands

 Philippopolis (1)

 Philippopolis (2)

 St. Philip Romolo Neri

 Peter Philips

 Philip the Arabian

 Philistines

 Robert Phillip

 George Phillips

 Philo Judæus

 Philomelium

 St. Philomena

 Philosophy

 Philoxenus

 Phocæa

 Phœnicia

 Photinus

 Photius of Constantinople

 Phylacteries

 History of Physics

 Physiocrats

 Physiologus

 Diocese of Piacenza

 Giambattista Pianciani

 Giovanni da Pianô Carpine

 Piatto Cardinalizio

 Diocese of Piauhy

 Diocese of Piazza Armerina

 Giuseppe Piazzi

 Ven. John Pibush

 Jean Picard

 Alessandro Piccolomini

 Jacopo Piccolomini-Ammannati

 Pichler

 Vitus Pichler

 Ven. Thomas Pickering

 Bernardine a Piconio

 François Picquet

 Louis-Edouard-Désiré Pie

 Piedmont

 Peter Piel

 Pie Pelicane, Jesu, Domine

 Pierius

 Bl. Pierre de Castelnau

 Pierre de Maricourt

 Jean Pierron

 Philippe Pierson

 Pietism

 Albert (Pigghe) Pighius

 Ven. Giuseppe Maria Pignatelli

 Ven. William Pike

 Nuestra Señora Del Pilar

 Pontius Pilate

 Ven. Thomas Pilchard

 Pilgrimage of Grace

 Pilgrimages

 Piligrim

 Pillar of Cloud

 Pima Indians

 Pinara

 Diocese of Pinar del Rio

 Ippolito Pindemonte

 John de Pineda

 Diocese of Pinerolo

 Alexandre Guy Pingré

 Mattheus Pinna da Encarnaçao

 Fernão Mendes Pinto

 Pinturicchio

 Martín Alonso Pinzón

 Sebastiano del Piombo

 St. Pionius

 Pious Fund of the Californias

 Pious Society of Missions

 Giambattista Piranesi

 Ernricus Pirhing

 Pirkheimer

 Piro Indians

 Archdiocese of Pisa

 University of Pisa

 Council of Pisa

 Piscataway Indians

 Piscina

 Charles Constantine Pise

 Pisidia

 Synod of Pistoia

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 Johann Pistorius

 Pierre Pithou

 Joseph Pitoni

 Jean-Baptiste-François Pitra

 John Pitts

 Diocese of Pittsburg

 Pityus

 Pope St. Pius I

 Pope Pius II

 Pope Pius III

 Pope Pius IV

 Pope St. Pius V

 Pope Pius VI

 Pope Pius VII

 Pope Pius VIII

 Pope Pius IX

 Pope Pius X

 Piusverein

 Francisco Pizarro

 Galla Placidia

 St. Placidus

 Plagues of Egypt

 Plain Chant

 Henry Beaufort Plantagenet

 Christophe Plantin

 Plants in the Bible

 Diocese of Plasencia

 Bartolomeo Platina

 Plato and Platonism

 Pierre-Guillaume-Frédéric Le Play

 Plegmund

 Plenarium

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 Joseph-Octave Plessis

 Georgius Gemistus Plethon

 Diocese of Plock

 Charles Plowden

 Edmund Plowden

 Francis Plowden

 Robert Plowden

 Thomas Plowden

 Thomas Percy Plowden

 Charles Plumier

 Ven. Oliver Plunket

 Pluscarden Priory

 Diocese of Plymouth

 Plymouth Brethren

 Pneumatomachi

 Hebrew Poetry of the Old Testament

 Giovanni Francesco Poggio Bracciolini

 Diocese of Poggio Mirteto

 Pogla

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 Poland

 John Bede Polding

 Reginald Pole

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 Giovanni Poleni

 Poles in the United States

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 Lancelot Politi

 Politian

 Science of Political Economy

 Antonio and Piero Benci Pollajuolo

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 Polyglot Bibles

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 Pomaria

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 John Ponce

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 Joseph Anthony de la Rivière Poncet

 Archdiocese of Pondicherry

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 Pontifical Colleges

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 Abbey of Pontigny

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 Diocese of Pontremoli

 Pontus

 Pools in Scripture

 Diocese of Poona

 Care of Poor by the Church

 Little Sisters of the Poor

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 Poor Catholics

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 Poor Servants of the Mother of God

 Archdiocese of Popayán

 Alexander Pope

 Pope

 Election of the Popes

 Chronological Lists of Popes

 The List of Popes

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 Popular Devotions

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 Giovanni Antonio Pordenone

 Odoric of Pordenone

 Ven. Thomas Pormort

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 Carlo Porta

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 Diocese of Portalegre

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 Archdiocese of Port-au-Prince

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 Diocese of Porto Alegre

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 Portraits of the Apostles

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 Positivism

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 Franz Isidor Proschko

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 Karl Proske

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 Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America

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 Johann Ladislaus von Oberwart Pyrker

 Pyrrhonism

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 Pyx

Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America


The history of this religious organization divides itself naturally into two portions: the period of its dependence upon the Church of England and that of its separate existence with a hierarchy of its own.


I. BEFORE THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION

The Church of England was planted permanently in Virginia in 1607, at the foundation of the Jamestown Colony. There had been sporadic attempts before this date — in 1585 and 1587, under the auspices of Walter Raleigh in the Carolinas, and in 1607, under the auspices of Chief Justice Popham and Sir Ferdinando Gorges in Maine. The attempt to found colonies had failed, and with it, of course, the attempt to plant the English ecclesiastical institutions.

During the colonial period the Church of England achieved a quasi-establishment in Maryland and Virginia, and to a lesser extent in the other colonies, with the exception of New England, where for many years the few Episcopalians were bitterly persecuted and at best barely tolerated. In the Southern states — notably in Virginia and Maryland, in the latter of which the Church of England has dispossessed the Catholics not only of their political power, but even of religious liberty — the Church of England, although well provided for from a worldly point of view, was by no means in a strong state, either spiritually or intellectually. The appointment to parishes was almost wholly in the hands of vestries who refused to induct ministers and so give them a title to the emoluments of their office, but preferred to pay chaplains whom they could dismiss at their pleasure. This naturally resulted in filling the ranks of the ministry with very unworthy candidates, and reduced the clergy to a position of contempt in the eyes of the laity.

As there were no bishops in America, the churches in the colonies were under the jurisdiction of the Bishop of London, who governed them by means of commissaries; but, although among the commissaries were men of such eminence as Dr. Bray in Maryland, and Dr. Blair, the founder of William and Mary College in Virginia, the lay power was so strong and the class of men willing to undertake the work of the ministry so inferior that very little could be done. Even the efforts of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel proved of very little effect in the South, though in Pennsylvania, New York, and New Jersey it bore much better fruit.

But, while the Anglican church was sunk in spiritual and intellectual lethargy in the South, and while it had a rather attenuated existence in the Middle states, an event occurred in New England in 1722 which was of the greatest promise for the future of Anglicanism, and which shook Congregationalism in New England to its very foundations. Timothy Cutler, the rector of Yale College, with six other Congregational ministers, all men of learning and piety, announced to their brethren in the Congregational ministry of Connecticut that they could no longer remain out of visible communion with an Episcopal Church: that some of them doubted of the validity, while others were persuaded of the invalidity, of Presbyterian ordinations. Three of them were subsequently persuaded to remain in the Congregational ministry, the rest becoming Episcopalians, and three of them, Messrs. Cutler, Johnson, and Brown, were ordained to the ministry of the Anglican Church.

During the Revolution. During the period of the Revolution the Church of England in America suffered greatly in the estimation of Americans by its strong attachment to the cause of the British Crown. But there were not wanting both clergymen and laymen most eminent in their loyalty to the cause of the colonies and in the patriotic sacrifices which they made to the cause of independence. Among the clergy two such men were Mr. White, an assistant of Christ Church, Philadelphia, and Mr. Provost, assistant of Trinity Church, New York. The rectors of these churches being Tories, these gentlemen subsequently succeeded them in the pastorate of their respective parishes.


II. AFTER THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION

The Seabury Faction. At the close of the war, Episcopalians, as they were already commonly called, realized that, if they were to play any part in the national life, their church must have a national organization. the greatest obstacle to this organization was the obtaining of bishops to carry on a national hierarchy. In Connecticut, where those who had gone into the Episcopal Church had not only read themselves into a belief in the necessity of Episcopacy, but had also adopted many other tenets of the Caroline divines, a bishop was considered of absolute necessity, and, accordingly, the clergy of that state elected the Rev. Samuel Seabury and requested him to go abroad and obtain the episcopal character.

It was found impossible to obtain the episcopate in England, owing to the fact that the bishops there could not by law consecrate any man who would not take the oath of allegiance, and, although during the War of the Revolution, Seabury had been widely known for his Tory sympathies, it would have been impossible for him to return to America if he had received consecration as a British subject. Upon the refusal of the English bishops to confer the episcopate, he proceeded to Scotland, where, after prolonged negotiations, the Nonjuring bishops consented to confer the episcopal character upon him.

These bishops were the remnant of the Episcopal Church which the Stuarts had so ardently desired to set up in Scotland and which had lost the protection of the State, together with all its endowments, by its fidelity to James II. Their religious principles were looked upon by Scottish Presbyterians as scarcely less obnoxious than those of Catholics and politically they were considered quite as dangerous. They were indeed exceedingly High Churchmen, and had made such alterations in the liturgy as brought their doctrine of the Holy Eucharist very near to that of the Catholic Church. They had even been known to use chrism in confirmation, and they were strong believers in the sacerdotal character of the Christian ministry and in the necessity of Apostolic succession and episcopal ordination. Dr. Seabury was consecrated by them in 1784, and, being of very similar theological opinions himself, he signed a concordat immediately after his consecration, where by he agreed to do his utmost to introduce the liturgical and doctrinal peculiarities of the Nonjurors into Connecticut. Upon his return to his own state he proceeded to organize and govern his diocese very much as a Catholic bishop would do; he excluded the laity from all deliberations and ecclesiastical councils and, as much as he could, from all control of ecclesiastical affairs.

The White and Provost Factions. But if sacerdotalism was triumphant in Connecticut, a very different view was taken in New York, Pennsylvania, and Virginia. Dr. White, now rector of Christ Church, and a doctor of divinity, believed that if the Episcopal Church was ever to live and grow in America it must assent to, and adopt as far as possible, the principle of representative government. He would have been willing to go on without the episcopate until such time as it could have been obtained from England, and in the meantime to ordain candidates to the ministry by means of Presbyterian ordination, with the proviso, however, that upon the obtaining of a bishop these gentlemen were to be conditionally re-ordained. This last suggestion, however, found little favour among Episcopalians, and at last, after considerable difficulty, an Act was passed in Parliament whereby the English bishops were empowered to confer the episcopate upon men who were not subject to the British Crown. Accordingly, Dr. White, being elected Bishop of Pennsylvania, and Dr. Provost, Bishop of New York, proceeded to England and received consecration at the hands of the then Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. Moore, on Septuagesima Sunday, 1787;

Tenuous Union of the Various Factions. Upon their return to America, although there were now three bishops in the United States, there were so many differences between the Connecticut churchmen and those of the Middle and Southern states, especially with regard to the presence of laymen in ecclesiastical councils, that it was not until 1789 that a union was effected. Even after that date, when Dr. Madison was elected by Virginia to be its bishop, he proceeded to England for his consecration because Bishop Provost, of New York, refused to act in conjunction with the Bishop of Connecticut. The union, however, was finally cemented in 1792, when Dr. Claggert being elected Bishop of Maryland, and there being three bishops in the country of the Anglican line exclusive of Dr. Seabury, the Bishop of New York withdrew his objections as far as to allow Dr. Seabury to make a fourth. If Dr. Seabury had not been invited to take part in the consecration of Dr. Claggert, a schism between Connecticut an the rest of the country would have been the immediate result.


III. THE THREE PARTIES OF EPISCOPALIANS

Almost from the very beginning of its independent life, the tendencies which have shown themselves in the three parties in the Episcopal Church of the present day were not only evident, but were even embodied in the members of the Episcopate.

Bishop Provost, of New York, represented the rationalistic temper of the eighteenth century, which has eventuated in what is called the Broad Church Party.

Bishop White represented the Evangelical Party, with its belief in the desirability rather than the necessity of Apostolic succession and its desire to fraternize as nearly as possible with the other progeny of the Reformation.

Bishop Seabury, on the other hand, represented the traditional High Church position, intellectual rather than emotional, and laying more stress upon the outward ecclesiastical organization of the Church than upon emotional religion.

High Church Party. This school has played a very important part in the history of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States; and, while it was undoubtedly influenced to a large extent by the Oxford Movement, it was existent and energetic long before 1833. Indeed, in the twenties Bishop Hobart was already presenting that type of evangelical piety, united with high sacramental ideas, which has been the principal characteristic of the party ever since.

The Oxford Movement, however, was not without its influence, and as early as 1843 the disputes between the extreme High Churchmen and the rest of the Episcopal Church had reached a condition of such acerbity that when the Rev. Arthur Cary, in his examination for orders, avowed the principles of "Tract 90" — and in spite of that fact was not refused ordination — the controversy broke out into an open war. The Bishop of Philadelphia, Dr. Onderdonk, was suspended from his office on a charge of drunkenness, the real reason being his sympathy with High Churchmen; and his dispossession was so unjust that it was declared by the famous legal authority, Horace Binney, to be absolutely illegal. He was not, however, restored to the exercise of his functions for more than ten years. His brother bishop of New York fared even worse. Charges of immorality were preferred against him, and he was suspended from his office for the rest of his life, despite the fact that the vast majority of his fellow-citizens, whether they belonged to his communion or not, firmly believed in his innocence. An attempt, however, to suspend a third bishop of High Church views, the father of the late Monsignor Doane, failed after he had been presented four times. Bishop Doane, not only by his unrivalled diplomatic skill, but by the goodness and probity of his life, made an ecclesiastical trial impossible.

In 1852 the Bishop of North Carolina, Dr. Ives, resigned his position in the Episcopal Church and submitted to the Apostolic See, and he was followed into the Catholic Church by a considerable number, both of clergymen and laymen. His secession drew out of the Episcopal Church all those of distinctly Roman sympathies, but the High Church Party lived on, grown, and in some degrees prospering, in spite of hostile legislation, while in course of time a pro-Roman party sprang up again. After the passing of the open-pulpit canon in the General Convention of 1907, some twenty clergymen and a large number of the laity submitted to the Catholic Church.

Evangelical Party. On the other hand, the extreme Evangelical Party, disturbed by the growth of ritualism, and unable to drive out High Churchmen in any large numbers, themselves seceded from the Protestant Episcopal Church in 1873, and formed what is known as the Reformed Episcopal Church. Unlike many of the Protestant bodies, the Episcopal Church was not permanently disrupted by the Civil War, for with the collapse of the Confederacy the separate organization of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the Confederate States ceased.

Broad Church Party. The Broad Church party, however, have remained in the Protestant Episcopal Church, and of late years have seriously affected its attitude towards such subjects as higher criticism and the necessity of episcopal ordination. The most outspoken advocates of this school, who in their conclusions differed little or not at all from the extreme modernists, have not been able seriously to alter the teaching of the Episcopal Church upon such fundamental truths as the Trinity and Incarnation; and in a few cases the High Church Party and the Evangelical, by combining, have been strong enough to exclude them from the Episcopal Church. The party, however, is gaining strength; its clergymen are men of intellect and vigour, and the laity who support the party are in the main people of large means. To it the future of Anglicanism belongs more than to any other school of thought within the Anglican body.


IV. STATISTICS

In 1907, the Protestant Episcopal Church of the United States of America possessed a hierarch of 5413 clergy, 438 candidates for orders, and 946,252 communicants. These communicants should be multiplied at least three times in order to give an idea of the adherents of the Protestant Episcopal Church. It possessed nine colleges and universities and fifteen theological seminaries.

TIFFANY, Hist. of the Prot. Episc. Church in the U.S. of America, in American Church History Series, VII (New York, 1907); McCONNEL, Hist. of the Am. Ep. Church from the Planting of the Colonies to the End of the Civil War (New York, 1890); WHITE, Memoirs of the Prot. Ep. Church in the U.S. (New York, 1880); COLEMAN. The Church in America (New York, 1895).

SIGOURNEY W. FAY