Aachen , in French, Aix-la-Chapelle, the name by which the city is generally known in Latin Aquæ Grani, later Aquisgranum, is the capital of a presid

 Aaron

 Abaddon

 Abandonment

 Pedro Abarca

 Abarim

 Abba

 Antoine d'Abbadie

 Abban

 Abbé

 Jean Baptiste Abbeloos

 Abbess

 Abbey

 Abbo Cernuus

 St. Abbon

 Abbot

 Henry Abbot

 Methods of Abbreviation

 Ecclesiastical Abbreviations

 Abbreviators

 Abdera

 Abdias

 Abdias of Babylon

 Abdication

 Sts. Abdon and Sennen

 Abduction

 Abecedaria

 Abecedarians

 Abel (1)

 Abel (2)

 Peter Abelard

 Louis Abelly

 Abenakis

 Abraham-ben-Méir Aben-Ezra

 Inscription of Abercius

 John Abercromby

 Robert Abercromby

 Diocese of Aberdeen

 University of Aberdeen

 Moritz von Aberle

 Legend of Abgar

 Abiathar

 Abila

 Abbey of Abingdon

 Thomas Abington

 Missions among the Abipones

 Abisai

 Abjuration

 Abo

 Abner

 Abomination of Desolation

 Abortion

 Physical Effects of Abortion

 Charles François d'Abra de Raconis

 Don Isaac Abrabanel

 Abraham

 Abraham (in Liturgy)

 Bosom of Abraham

 Abraham a Sancta Clara

 Abraham Ecchelensis

 Abrahamites

 Nicholas Abram

 Abrasax

 Absalom

 Absalon of Lund

 Absinthe

 Absolute

 Absolution

 Abstemii

 Abstinence

 Physical Effects of Abstinence

 Abstraction

 Abthain

 Theodore Abucara

 Abundius

 Abydus

 Abyss

 Abyssinia

 Acacia

 Acacians

 Acacius, Bishop of Beroea

 Acacius, Bishop of Caesarea

 Acacius, Patriarch of Constantinople

 St. Acacius

 Roman Academies

 French Academy

 Acadia

 Acanthus (see)

 Acanthus (plant)

 Acathistus

 St. Acca

 Accaron

 Accentus Ecclesiasticus

 Acceptance

 Acceptants

 Accession

 Diocese of Arras

 Councils of Arras

 Pablo José Arriaga

 Juan Arricivita

 Nicola Arrighetti

 Nicolò Arrighetti

 Arsacidæ

 Arsenius Autorianos

 St. Arsenius

 Arsinoe

 Accessus

 Artemon

 James Arthur

 Thomas Arthur

 Articles of Faith

 Organic Articles

 Artoklasia

 Bachelor of Arts

 Faculty of Arts

 Master of Arts

 Seven Liberal Arts

 Acciajuoli

 Artvin

 Thomas Arundel

 Thomas Arundell

 St. Asaph

 Ascalon

 Ascelin

 Ascendente Domino

 Ascension

 Feast of the Ascension

 Asceticism

 Accident

 Joseph, Ritter von Aschbach

 Diocese of Ascoli-Piceno

 Diocese of Ascoli, Satriano, and Cirignola

 Aseity

 Aseneth

 Aser

 Asgaard

 Ash Wednesday

 George Ashby

 Thomas Ashby

 Acclamation

 Ashes

 Ven. Ralph Ashley

 John Ashton

 Ven. Roger Ashton

 Asia

 Asia Minor

 Asiongaber

 Robert Aske

 Asmodeus

 Aspendus

 Acclamation (in Papal Elections)

 Asperges

 Martin Aspilcueta

 The Ass (in Caricature of Christian Beliefs and Practices)

 Prefecture Apostolic of Assam

 Assemani

 Assemblies of the French Clergy

 John Asser

 Feast of Asses

 Assessor of the Holy Office

 Assessors

 Biblical Accommodation

 St. Assicus

 Assideans

 Physiological Assimilation

 Psychological Assimilation

 Diocese of Assisi

 Assistant at the Pontifical Throne

 Assize of Clarendon

 Volume 1

 Volume 3

 Assizes of Jerusalem

 Accomplice

 Ignaz Assmayer

 Right of Voluntary Association

 Association of Ideas

 Association of Priestly Perseverance

 Pious Associations

 Assuerus

 Little Sisters of the Assumption

 Sisters of the Assumption

 Feast of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary

 Assur (1)

 Francesco Accursius

 Assur (2)

 Assyria

 Asterisk

 Asterius

 Diocese of Asti

 Aston

 Diocese of Astorga

 Astrology

 Astronomy

 Astronomy in the Bible

 Paul-Thérèse-David d'Astros

 Acephali

 Jean Astruc

 Atahuallpa

 Juan Santos Atahualpa

 Atavism

 Vicariate Apostolic of Athabasca

 Athanasian Creed

 St. Athanasius

 Atheism

 Abbey of Athelney

 Athenagoras

 Archdiocese of Acerenza

 Athenry

 Christian Athens

 Modern Diocese of Athens

 Joseph Athias

 Mount Athos

 Juan de Atienza

 James Atkinson

 Nicholas Atkinson

 Paul Atkinson of St. Francis

 Sarah Atkinson

 Achab

 Ven. Thomas Atkinson

 Atom

 Atomism

 Day of Atonement

 Doctrine of the Atonement

 Atrib

 Atrium

 Attainder

 St. Attala

 Attalia

 Achaia

 Michael Attaliates

 Atticus

 Councils of Attigny

 Attila

 Jean Denis Attiret

 Atto

 Atto of Pistoia

 Atto of Vercelli

 St. Attracta

 Divine Attributes

 Achaicus

 Attrition

 Attuda

 Jean-Michel-d'Astorg Aubarède

 Jean-Antoine d'Aubermont

 Joseph Aubery

 François Hédelin, Abbé d'Aubignac

 Pierre d'Aubusson

 Archdiocese of Auch

 Diocese of Auckland

 Auctorem Fidei

 Achaz

 Pontifical Audiences

 Giovanni Battista Audiffredi

 J. M. Vincent Audin

 Guglielmo Audisio

 Auditor

 Audran

 Leopold Auenbrugger

 Jobst Bernhard von Aufsees

 Edmond Auger

 Augilæ

 Lucas d'Achéry

 Diocese of Augsburg

 Synods of Augsburg

 Augusta

 Augustin von Alfeld

 Rule of Saint Augustine

 St. Augustine of Canterbury

 St. Augustine of Hippo

 Teaching of St. Augustine of Hippo

 Works of St. Augustine of Hippo

 Augustinians of the Assumption

 Antonius Augustinus

 Augustinus-Verein

 Achiacharus

 Augustopolis

 Augustus

 Aumbry

 St. Aunarius

 Aurea

 Aurelian

 Aureliopolis

 Aurelius

 Marcus Aurelius Antoninus

 Petrus Aureoli

 Achimaas

 Auriesville

 Giovanni Aurispa

 Aurora Lucis Rutilat

 Ausculta Fili

 Decimus Magnus Ausonius

 John Austin

 Australia

 St. Austrebertha

 St. Austremonius

 Austro-Hungarian Monarchy

 Achimelech

 Authentic

 Authenticity of the Bible

 Civil Authority

 Authorized Version

 Autocephali

 Autos Sacramentales

 Ambrose Autpert

 Joseph Autran

 Diocese of Autun

 Auxentius

 Achitopel

 Councils of Auxerre

 Auxiliary Bishop

 Auxilius of Naples

 Ava

 Nicola Avancini

 Avarice

 Avatār

 Pierre du Bois, Baron d'Avaugour

 Ave Maris Stella

 Ave Regina

 Diocese of Achonry

 Diocese of Avellino

 Avempace

 Fernando Avendano

 Averroes

 Diocese of Aversa

 Avesta

 Theological Aspects of Avesta

 Avicebron

 Avicenna

 Avignon

 Achor Valley

 University of Avignon

 Diocese of Avila

 Francisco de Avila

 Sancho de Avila

 St. Avitus

 Order of Aviz

 Council of Avranches

 Philippe Avril

 Axum

 Diocese of Ayacucho

 Achrida

 Fray Francisco de Ayeta

 Lucas Vásquez de Ayllón

 James Ambrose Dominic Aylward

 Aymará

 Aymeric of Piacenza

 Féliz de Azara

 Aristaces Azaria

 Brother Azarias

 Luiz de Azevedo

 Juan Azor

 Johann Heinrich Achterfeldt

 Azores

 Azotus

 Aztecs

 Azymes

 Azymites

 Theodore William Achtermann

 Valens Acidalius

 Diocese of Aci-Reale

 Leopold Ackermann

 Acmonia

 Acoemetae

 Acolouthia

 Acolyte

 Joaquín Acosta

 José de Acosta

 Diocese of Acquapendente

 Acquaviva

 Claudius Acquaviva

 Diocese of Acqui

 Acre

 Acrostic

 Acta Pilati

 Acta Sanctæ Sedis

 Acta Sanctorum Hiberniæ

 Acta Triadis Thaumaturgæ

 Act of Settlement (Irish)

 Charles Januarius Acton

 John Acton

 John Emerich Edward Dalberg Acton, Baron Acton

 John Francis Edward Acton

 Canonical Acts

 Human Acts

 Indifferent Acts

 Acts of the Apostles

 Acts of Roman Congregations

 Actus et Potentia

 Actus primus

 Actus Purus

 Acuas

 St. Adalard

 Adalbert

 Adalbert I

 St. Adalbert (of Bohemia)

 St. Adalbert (of Germany)

 Ad Apostolicae Dignitatis Apicem

 Ad Limina Apostolorum

 Ad Sanctam Beati Petri Sedem

 Ad Universalis Ecclesiae

 Adam

 Adam in Early Christian Liturgy and Literature

 Books of Adam

 Adam of Bremen

 Adam of Fulda

 Adam of Murimuth

 Adam of Perseigne

 Adam of St. Victor

 Adam of Usk

 John Adam

 Nicholas Adam

 Adam Scotus

 Andrea Adami da Bolsena

 Adamites

 St. Adamnan

 James Adams

 Ven. John Adams

 Diocese of Adana

 Adar

 Ferdinando d'Adda

 Addas

 Liturgy of Addeus and Maris

 Ecclesiastical Addresses

 Archdiocese of Adelaide

 St. Adelaide, Abbess

 St. Adelaide (Adelheid)

 John Placid Adelham

 Adelmann

 Adelophagi

 Vicariate Apostolic of Aden

 Adeodatus

 Pope St. Adeodatus

 Adeste Fideles

 Adjuration

 Administrator

 Administrator (of Ecclesiastical Property)

 Canonical Admonitions

 Admont

 St. Ado of Vienne

 Adonai

 Adonias

 Adoption

 Canonical Adoption

 Supernatural Adoption

 Adoptionism

 Adoration

 Perpetual Adoration

 Francis Adorno

 Adoro Te Devote

 Diocese of Adria

 Pope Adrian I

 Pope Adrian II

 Pope St. Adrian III

 Pope Adrian IV

 Pope Adrian V

 Pope Adrian VI

 St. Adrian of Canterbury

 Adrian of Castello

 Adrianople

 Christian Kruik van Adrichem

 Adso

 Diego Francisco Aduarte

 Adullam

 Adulteration of Food

 Adultery

 Advent

 Adventists

 Book of Advertisements

 Advocates of Roman Congregations

 Advocates of St. Peter

 Advocatus Diaboli

 Advocatus Ecclesiæ

 Advowson

 Adytum

 St. Aedan of Ferns

 Aedh of Kildare

 Bl. Aegidius of Assisi

 Ægidius of Viterbo

 Aelfric, Abbot of Eynsham

 Ælnoth

 St. Ælred

 Æneas of Gaza

 St. Aengus (the Culdee)

 Ænon

 Æons

 Aër

 Aërius of Pontus

 Æsthetics

 Æterni Patris (Pius IX)

 Æterni Patris (Leo XIII)

 Aëtius

 Affinity (in the Bible)

 Affinity (in Canon Law)

 Affirmation

 Afflighem

 Denis Auguste Affre

 St. Afra

 Africa

 Early African Church

 African Liturgy

 African Synods

 Agabus

 Agape

 Agapetae

 Agapetus

 Pope St. Agapetus I

 Pope Agapetus II

 William Seth Agar

 St. Agatha

 Agathangelus

 Agathias

 Pope St. Agatho

 Agaunum

 Agostini Agazzari

 Council of Agde

 Canonical Age

 Age of Reason

 Diocese of Agen

 Agents of Roman Congregations

 Aggeus (Haggai)

 Unjust Aggressor

 Raymond d'Agiles

 St. Agilulfus

 Agios O Theos

 Giuseppe Agnelli

 Fra Guglielmo Agnelli

 Bl. Agnellus of Pisa

 Andreas Agnellus of Ravenna

 St. Agnes of Assisi

 Bl. Agnes of Bohemia

 St. Agnes of Montepulciano

 St. Agnes of Rome

 Maria Gaetana Agnesi

 Agnetz

 Agnoetae

 Agnosticism

 Agnus Dei

 Agnus Dei (in Liturgy)

 Agonistici

 Agony of Christ

 Paolo Agostini

 Bl. Agostino Novello

 Charles Constance César Joseph Matthieu d'Agoult

 Archdiocese of Agra

 Agram

 Agrapha

 Agrarianism

 Maria de Agreda

 Agria

 St. Agricius

 Alexander Agricola

 George Agricola

 Rudolph Agricola

 Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa of Nettesheim

 Agrippinus

 Diocese of Aguas Calientes

 Joseph Saenz de Aguirre

 Ahicam

 Ahriman and Ormuzd

 Johann Caspar Aiblinger

 Gregor Aichinger

 St. Aidan of Lindisfarne

 Duchess of Aiguillon

 Mary Aikenhead

 St. Ailbe

 St. Aileran

 Family of d'Ailleboust

 Pierre d'Ailly

 Mateo Aimerich

 Diocese of Aire

 Giacomo Maria Airoli

 Aisle

 Aistulph

 Archdiocese of Aix

 Councils of Aix-en-Provence

 Diocese of Ajaccio

 Akhmin

 Michael and Nicetas Akominatos

 Alabama

 Alabanda

 Alabaster

 Diocese of Alagoas

 Pietro Alagona

 Alain de l'Isle

 Alalis

 Lucas Alaman

 Niccolò Alamanni

 Alan of Tewkesbury

 Alan of Walsingham

 Alanus de Rupe

 Alaska

 Diocese of Alatri

 Alb

 Diocese of Alba Pompeia

 St. Alban

 Albanenses

 Albania

 Albani

 Albano

 Diocese of Albany

 Diocese of Albenga

 Niccolo Albergati

 Alberic of Monte Cassino

 Alberic of Ostia

 Albero de Montreuil

 Giulio Alberoni

 Albert

 Albert II

 Bl. Albert

 St. Albert

 Bl. Albert Berdini of Sarteano

 Albert of Aachen

 Albert of Brandenburg

 Albert of Castile

 Albert of Stade

 Leandro Alberti

 Leone Battista Alberti

 Nicolò Albertini

 John Baptist Albertrandi

 Bl. Albertus Magnus

 Archdiocese of Albi

 Council of Albi

 Juan de Albi

 Sigismund Albicus

 Albigenses

 Albinus

 Johann G. Albrechtsberger

 Albright Brethren

 Afonzo de Albuquerque

 University of Alcalá

 Military Order of Alcántara

 Antonio de Alcedo

 Alchemy

 St. Alcmund

 Andrea Alciati

 Alcimus

 John Alcock

 Alcoholism

 Alcuin

 St. Aldegundis

 Aldersbach

 Aldfrith

 St. Aldhelm

 St. Aldric

 Ulissi Aldrovandi

 Leonard Alea

 Phillipe Alegambe

 Francisco Xavier Alegre

 Joseph Sadoc Alemany

 Giulio Alenio

 Archdiocese of Aleppo

 Diocese of Ales and Terralba

 Diocese of Alessandria della Paglia

 Galeazzo Alessi

 Diocese of Alessio

 Alexander

 Alexander (Early Bishops)

 Pope St. Alexander I

 Pope Alexander II

 Pope Alexander III

 Pope Alexander IV

 Pope Alexander V

 Pope Alexander VI

 Pope Alexander VII

 Pope Alexander VIII

 St. Alexander

 St. Alexander (II)

 St. Alexander (of Alexandria)

 Bl. Alexander Briant

 Alexander Natalis

 Alexander of Abonoteichos

 Alexander of Hales

 Alexander of Lycopolis

 Bl. Alexander Sauli

 Dom Jacques Alexandre

 Alexandria

 Councils of Alexandria

 Church of Alexandria

 Diocese of Alexandria

 Alexandrian Library

 Alexandrine Liturgy

 Alexian Nuns

 Alexians

 St. Alexis Falconieri

 St. Alexius

 Count Vittorio Alfieri

 Pietro Alfieri

 Alfonso de Zamora

 Alfonso of Burgos

 Michael Alford

 Alfred the Great

 St. Alfrida

 St. Alfwold

 Alger of Liége

 Diocese of Alghero

 Archdiocese of Algiers

 Algonquins

 Diocese of Alife

 Alimentation

 Alimony

 Aliturgical Days

 All Hallows College

 All Saints

 All Souls' Day

 Allah

 Diocese of Allahabad

 Paul Allard

 Leo Allatius

 Joseph Allegranza

 Antonio Allegri

 Gregorio Allegri

 Alleluia

 Jean Allemand

 Edward Patrick Allen

 Frances Allen

 George Allen

 John Allen (I)

 John Allen (II)

 William Allen

 August Allerstein

 Thomas William Allies

 Joseph Franz Allioli

 William Allison

 Allocution

 Allori

 William Allot

 Claude Allouez

 Alma

 Alma Redemptoris Mater

 Diego de Almagro

 John Almeida

 Diocese of Almeria

 Camillo Almici

 Ven. John Almond

 John Almond

 Oliver Almond

 Alms and Almsgiving

 St. Alnoth

 Alogi

 St. Aloysius Gonzaga

 A and Ω

 Alpha and Omega (in Jewish Theology)

 Christian Use of the Alphabet

 St. Alphonsus Liguori

 St. Alphonsus Rodriguez

 Prospero Alpini

 Alsace-Lorraine

 Diego Francisco Altamirano

 Altamura and Acquaviva

 Altar (in Liturgy)

 Altar (in the Greek Church)

 Altar (in Scripture)

 History of the Christian Altar

 Bl. Altmann

 St. Alto

 Diocese of Alton

 Diocese of Altoona

 Altruism

 Alumnus

 Niccolò Alunno

 Fernando Alvarez de Toledo, Duke of Alva

 Pedro d'Alva y Astorga

 Alonzo de Alvarado

 Fray Francisco de Alvarado

 Pedro de Alvarado

 Balthazar Alvarez

 Diego Alvarez

 Manoel Alvarez

 Alvarez de Paz

 St. Alypius

 José Antonio Alzate

 Johann Baptist Alzog

 Ama

 Giovanni Antonio Amadeo

 Dioceses of Amadia and Akra

 Amalarius of Metz

 St. Amalberga (1)

 St. Amalberga (2)

 Amalec

 Archdiocese of Amalfi

 Amalricians

 Amalricus Augerii

 St. Amandus

 Amasia

 Amastris

 Thaddeus Amat

 Amathus

 Diocese of Amazones

 Peter Ambarach

 Ambition

 Ambo

 Ambo (in the Russian and Greek Church)

 George d'Amboise

 Our Lady of Ambronay

 August Wilhelm Ambros

 St. Ambrose

 St. Ambrose of Camaldoli

 Bl. Ambrose of Sienna

 Ambrosian Basilica

 Ambrosian Chant

 Ambrosian Hymnography

 Ambrosian Library

 Ambrosian Liturgy and Rite

 Ambrosians

 Ambrosiaster

 Ambulatory

 Diocese of Amelia

 Denis Amelote

 Amen

 Amende Honorable

 Veit Amerbach

 America

 Pre-Columbian Discovery of America

 American College in Rome

 American College at Louvain

 South American College

 American Protective Association

 Francis Kerril Amherst

 Ven. John Amias

 Amice

 Antonio Amico

 Francesco Amico

 Diocese of Amida

 Diocese of Amiens

 Joseph Maria Amiot

 Amisus

 Daniel Ammen

 St. Ammon

 Ammon

 Ammonian Sections

 Ammonites

 Amorbach

 Amorios

 Amorrhites

 Eusebius Amort

 Amos

 Amovibility

 Vicariate Apostolic of Amoy

 André Marie Ampère

 Amphilochius of Iconium

 Amphilochius of Sida

 Amphoræ

 Abbey of Ampleforth

 Ampullæ

 Diocese of Ampurias

 Amra

 Amrah

 Amraphel

 Amsterdam

 Amulet

 Use and Abuse of Amulets

 Amyclae

 Jacques Amyot

 Anabaptists

 Pope St. Anacletus

 Anacletus II

 Anæsthesia

 Diocese of Anagni

 Analogy

 Analysis

 Anaphora

 Anarchy

 St. Anastasia

 Anastasiopolis

 St. Anastasius (1)

 Pope St. Anastasius I

 Pope Anastasius II

 Pope Anastasius III

 Pope Anastasius IV

 St. Anastasius (2)

 St. Anastasius Sinaita

 Anathema

 Anathoth

 St. Anatolia

 St. Anatolius (1)

 St. Anatolius (2)

 Anatomy

 Anazarbus

 Pedro de Añazco

 Joseph Anchieta

 Anchor

 Anchorites

 Ancient of Days

 Ancilla Dei

 Ciriaco d'Ancona

 Diocese of Ancona and Umana

 Ancren Riwle

 Ancyra

 Councils of Ancyra

 Andalusia

 William Henry Anderdon

 Anthony Maria Anderledy

 Henry James Anderson

 Lionel Albert Anderson

 Patrick Anderson

 James Anderton

 Ven. Robert Anderton

 Roger Anderton

 Thomas Anderton

 Heinrich Bernhard, Freiherr von Andlaw

 Ven. William Andleby

 Alonso Andrada

 Antonio de Andrada

 Diego Andrada de Payva

 Bernard André

 Yves Marie André

 Giovanni d'Andrea

 Bl. Andrea Dotti

 Andrea Pisano

 Andreas of Ratisbon

 Felix de Andreis

 Juan Andres

 St. Andrew (1)

 St. Andrew (2)

 St. Andrew Avellino

 Bl. Andrew Bobola

 St. Andrew Corsini

 Andrew of Caesarea

 St. Andrew of Crete

 Andrew of Lonjumeau

 Andrew of Rhodes

 St. Andrew the Scot

 William Eusebius Andrews

 Diocese of Andria

 Anemurium

 Felice Anerio

 Giovanni Francesco Anerio

 Filippo Anfossi

 Ange de Saint Joseph

 Ange de Sainte Rosalie

 Angel

 St. Angela Merici

 Bl. Angela of Foligno

 Francesco degli Angeli

 Girolamo degli Angeli

 Angelicals

 Fra Angelico

 Bl. Angelo Carletti di Chivasso

 Angelo Clareno da Cingoli

 Early Christian Representations of Angels

 Angels of the Churches

 Angelus

 Angelus Bell

 Angelus Silesius

 Anger

 Diocese of Angers

 University of Angers

 Notre Dame des Anges

 St. Angilbert

 Francesco Angiolini

 Priory of Anglesea

 Anglican Orders

 Anglicanism

 Timothy Warren Anglin

 Anglo-Saxon Church

 Anglona-Tursi

 Angola and Congo

 Diocese of Angora

 Diocese of Angoulême

 Diocese of Angra

 Pedro Angulo

 Vicariate Apostolic of Anhalt

 Pope St. Anicetus

 College and Church of the Anima (in Rome)

 Anima Christi

 Animals in Christian Art

 Animals in the Bible

 Animism

 Giovanni Animuccia

 Anise

 Anna

 Anna Comnena

 Ecclesiastical Annals

 Annas

 François Annat

 Annates

 St. Anne

 Sainte Anne d'Auray

 Sainte Anne de Beaupré

 Diocese of Annecy

 Joseph Annegarn

 Annibale d'Annibaldi

 Giuseppe d'Annibale

 Annius of Viterbo

 St. Anno

 Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary

 Feast of the Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary

 Orders of the Annunciation

 Louis-Pierre Anquetil

 Casto Innocenzio Ansaldi

 Giordano Ansaloni

 St. Anschar

 Councils of Anse

 Ansegisus

 St. Ansegisus

 St. Anselm (1)

 St. Anselm (2)

 Anselm of Laon

 Anselm of Liège

 St. Anselm of Lucca, the Younger

 Antoine Anselme

 Reyer Anslo

 Thomas Chisholm Anstey

 Antediluvians

 Pope St. Anterus

 Joseph Anthelmi

 Anthemius

 St. Anthony

 Orders of Saint Anthony

 St. Anthony of Padua

 Anthony of Sienna

 Anthony of the Mother of God

 Anthropomorphism

 Antichrist

 Antidicomarianites

 Antidoron

 Diocese of Antigonish

 Antimensium

 Antinoe

 Antinomianism

 Church of Antioch

 Antioch

 Antiochene Liturgy

 Antiochus of Palestine

 Antipater of Bostra

 Antipatris

 Antiphellos

 Antiphon

 Antiphon (in the Greek Church)

 Antiphon (in Greek Liturgy)

 Antiphonary

 Gregorian Antiphonary

 Antipodes

 Antipope

 Archdiocese of Antivari

 Vicariate Apostolic of Antofogaste

 Paul Gabriel Antoine

 Anton Ulrich

 Giacomo Antonelli

 Leonardo Antonelli

 Nicolò Maria Antonelli

 Giovanni Antoniano

 Silvio Antoniano

 Charles Antoniewicz

 St. Antoninus

 Antoninus Pius

 St. Antonio Maria Zaccaria

 Maria Antonio of Vicenza

 Antonius

 Franz Joseph Antony

 Antwerp

 Fray Domingo de la Anunciación

 Fray Juan de la Anunciación

 Diocese of Aosta

 Apaches

 Apameia

 Antonio Aparisi y Guijarro

 Apelles

 St. Aphian

 Aphraates

 Apiarius of Sicca

 Apocalypse

 Apocatastasis

 Apocrisiarius

 Apocrypha

 Apodosis

 Apollinarianism

 St. Apollinaris (1)

 St. Apollinaris (2)

 Apollinaris (the Elder)

 St. Apollinaris Claudius

 St. Apollonia

 Apollonius of Ephesus

 Apologetics

 Apolysis

 Apolytikion

 Apophthegmata Patrum

 Ferrante Aporti

 Apostasy

 Apostle (in Liturgy)

 Apostle Spoons

 Apostles

 Apostles' Creed

 Twelve Apostles of Erin

 Apostleship of Prayer

 Apostolic Camera

 Apostolic Churches

 Apostolic Church-Ordinance

 Apostolic Constitutions

 Apostolic Fathers

 Apostolic Letters

 Apostolic Majesty

 Apostolic See

 Apostolic Succession

 Apostolic Union of Secular Priests

 Apostolicae Curae

 Apostolicae Sedis Moderationi

 Apostolicæ Servitutis

 Apostolici

 Apostolici Ministerii

 Apostolici Regiminis

 Apostolicity

 Apostolicum Pascendi Munus

 Apotactics

 Apotheosis

 Apparitor

 Appeal as from an abuse

 Appeals

 Appetite

 Approbation

 Appropriation

 Apse

 Apse Chapel

 Apsidiole

 Council of Apt

 Aquarians

 Archdiocese of Aquila

 Aquila and Priscilla

 Aquileia

 Councils of Aquileia

 Diocese of Aquino, Sora, and Pontecorvo

 Arabia

 Vicariate Apostolic of Arabia

 Councils of Arabia

 Arabian School of Philosophy

 Arabici

 Arabissus

 Arad

 Monastic School of Aran

 Council of Aranda

 Philip Aranda

 Arason Jón

 Arator

 Prefecture Apostolic of Araucania

 Araucanians

 Antonio de Araujo

 Francisco de Araujo

 Arawaks

 Ignacio de Arbieto

 Arbitration

 St. Arbogast

 Abbey of Arbroath

 Missal of Arbuthnott

 Arca

 Our Lady of Arcachon

 Jacob Arcadelt

 Arcadiopolis

 Arcae

 Arcanum

 Arch

 Commission of Sacred Archæology

 Archange de Lyon

 Archbishop

 Archconfraternity

 Archdeacon

 Richard Archdeacon

 Archdiocese

 Archelais

 James Archer

 Court of Arches

 Archiereus

 Archimandrite

 Filippo Archinto

 Ecclesiastical Archives

 Archontics

 Archpriest

 Arcosolium

 Arculf

 Diocese of Ardagh

 Ardbraccan

 Priory of Ardchattan

 Edward Arden

 Notre Dame des Ardilliers

 Prince Charles d'Aremberg

 Areopagus

 Areopolis

 Diocese of Arequipa

 Arethas of Caesarea

 Arethusa

 Faustino Arévalo

 Rodríguez Sanchez de Arévalo

 Diocese of Arezzo

 Pierre de Voyer d'Argenson

 Argentine Republic

 Charles du Plessis d'Argentré

 Argos

 Luis Antonio Argüello

 Diocese of Argyll and the Isles

 John Argyropulos

 St. Arialdo

 Arianism

 Diocese of Ariano

 Francis Arias

 Pedro Arias de Avila

 Benedictus Arias Montanus

 Ariassus

 Aribo

 Arindela

 Ludovico Ariosto

 Aristeas

 Aristides

 Aristotle

 Arius

 Arizona

 Ark

 Arkansas

 Fray José Arlegui

 Synods of Arles

 Spanish Armada

 Archdiocese of Armagh

 Book of Armagh

 School of Armagh

 Georges d'Armagnac

 Mariano Armellino

 Armenia

 Armenierstadt

 Fray Nicolás Armentia

 Diocese of Armidale

 Arminianism

 Arnauld

 Thomas Augustine Arne

 Arni Thorlaksson

 Arnobius

 Arnold

 Arnold of Brescia

 Alberto Arnoldi

 Bartholomäus Arnoldi

 Arnolfo di Cambio

 Peter Joseph Arnoudt

 Veit Arnpeck

 Arnulf of Bavaria

 Arnulf of Lisieux

 St. Arnulf of Metz

Anglicanism


A term used to denote the religious belief and position of members of the established Church of England, and of the communicating churches in the British possessions, the United States, and elsewhere. It includes those who have accepted the work of the English Reformation as embodied in the Church of England or in the offshoot Churches which in other countries have adhered, at least substantially, to its doctrines, its organization, and its liturgy. Apart from minor or missionary settlements, the area in which Anglicanism is to be found corresponds roughly with those portions of the globe which are, or were formally, under the British flag. The number of Catholics in the world (1910) is said to exceed 230,000,000 (estimates by M. Fournier de Flaix, see The American Statistical Association Quarterly for March 1892). The number belonging to the Greek and Eastern Churches is about 100,000,000. The number of Anglicans in all countries is something less than 25,000,000. Thus the relative proportion of those three Christian bodies which are sometimes grouped as being Episcopalian in constitution may be fairly stated by the three figures 23, 10, 2.5. The growth of Anglicanism has followed mainly upon the expansion of the Anglo-Saxon race. Its area may be said to include, besides the three nucleal countries (England, Ireland, Scotland), six others, namely: the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, and India. But the bulk of its membership, in fact more than two-thirds, is to be found in England. In all the other countries of its areas it is in a minority of the Christian population. In five of them-Ireland, Scotland, the United States, Canada, and India-its numbers are considerably exceeded by those of the Catholic Church. Its foreign missions are very generously supported, and have extended their activity far into the heathen countries. The following table is compiled from comparatively recent statistics. The numbers given are of members, except when it is stated to be of communicants. The ratio of communicants to members may be anything between 1 in 3 and 1 in 8.


COUNTRYTOTAL
CHRISTIAN
POPULATION
NUMBER OF
ANGLICANS
England32,526,075Between 13 and 17 millions or 2,223,207 communicants
Ireland4,458,775581,089
Scotland4,472,103134,155 (Epis. Ch of Scotland - Year Book, 1906)
United States76,303,387823,066 communicants
Canada5,371,051680,346
Australia3,774,2821,256,673
New Zealand772,719315,263
South Africa1,135,735Under 300,000 or 48,487 communicants
India2,923,241453,462


The foregoing statistics concerning the Christian population of England and her dependencies are, with the exception of Australia and New Zealand, taken from the Census, 1901 (British Empire Official Year Book, which is also to be consulted for the Anglican population of Ireland, Canada, New Zealand, and India). The figures for the Christian populations of Australia, in 1901, and New Zealand are given respectively in "Whitaker's Almanac", 1906, which includes 6,851 aborigines, and the "New Zealand year Book", 1904, which excludes the Maoris. The Christian population of the United States is based on the Abstract of the twelfth Census, and that of South Africa on the European population, 1904, as contained in "Whitaker's Almanac", 1906. For several decades there has been no return of religious denominations in the British Government Census. The Church of England is popularly estimated to include about 17,000,000. Its official "Year Book" (1906), which is also the authority for the number of communicants in the United States and South Africa, gives the number of communicants in England, as 2,223,207. This multiplied by 6 would give a membership of 13,339,242. The same authority give the number of baptisms as 615,621. This, upon the usual multiple of 22.5, would give a membership of 13,860,000. The number belonging to the Church of England would thus seem to be between thirteen and seventeen millions. For the number of Anglicans in Australia in 1901, refer again to "Whitaker's Almanac", 1906.


BELIEFS

To form a general idea of Anglicanism as a religious system, it will be convenient to sketch it in rough outline as it exists in the Established Church of England, bearing in mind that there are differences in detail, mainly in liturgy and church-government, to be found in other portions of the Anglican communion.

  • The members of the Church of England are professed Christians, and claim to be baptized members of the Church of Christ.
  • They accept the Scriptures as contained in the Authorized Version, as the Word of God.
  • They hold the Scriptures to be the sole and supreme rule of faith, in the sense that the Scriptures contain all things necessary to salvation and that nothing can be required of anyone as an article of faith which is not contained therein, and cannot be proved thereby.
  • They accept the Book of Common Prayer as the practical rule of their belief and worship, and in it they use as standards of doctrine the three Creeds-the Apostles', the Nicene, and the Athanasian.
  • They believe in two sacraments of the Gospel-Baptism and the Lord's Supper -as generally necessary to salvation.
  • They claim to have Apostolic succession and a validly ordained ministry, and only persons whom they believe to be thus ordained are allowed to minister in their churches.
  • They believe that the Church of England is a true and reformed part, or branch, or pair of provinces of the Catholic Church of Christ.
  • They maintain that the Church of England is free from all foreign jurisdiction.
  • They recognize the King as Supreme Governor of the Church and acknowledge that to him "appertains the government of all estates whether civil or ecclesiastical, in all causes."
  • The clergy, before being appointed to a benefice or licensed to preach, subscribe and declare that they "assent to the Thirty-nine Articles, and to the Book of Common Prayer, and of Ordering of Bishops, priests, and deacons, and believe the doctrine of the Church of England as therein set forth to be agreeable to the Word of God".
  • One of the Articles (XXV) thus subscribed approves the First and Second Book of Homilies as containing "a godly and wholesome doctrine necessary for these times", and adjudges them to be read in churches "diligently and distinctly".

To these general characteristics we may add by way of corrective that while the Bible is accepted much latitude is allowed as to the nature and extent of its inspiration; that the Eucharistic teaching of the Prayer Book is subject to various and opposed interpretations; that Apostolic succession is claimed by many to be beneficial, but not essential, to the nature of the Church; that the Apostles' Creed is the only one to which assent can be required from the laity, and that Articles of Religion are held to be binding only on the licensed and beneficed clergy.


CHIEF GOVERNMENT

Inside these outlines, which are necessarily vague, the constitution of the Church of England has been largely determined by the events which attended its settlement under the Tudors. Before the breach with Rome under Henry VIII there was absolutely no doctrinal difference between the faith of Englishmen and the rest of Catholic Christendom, and "Anglicanism", as connoting a separate or independent religious system, was unknown. The name Ecclesia Anglicana, or English Church, was of course employed, but always in the Catholic and Papal use of the term as signifying that part or region of the one Catholic Church under the jurisdiction of the Pope which was situated in England, and precisely in the same way as the Church in Scotland was called the Ecclesia Scotticana, the Church in France, the Ecclesia Gallicana, and the Church in Spain the Ecclesia Hispanica. That such national or regional appellations were a part of the style in the Roman Curia itself, and that they in no sense could have implied any indication of independence from Rome, is sufficiently well known to all who are familiar with pre-Reformation records.

Pope Honorius III, in 1218, in his Bull to King Alexander speaks of the Scottish Church (Ecclesia Scotticana) as "being immediately subject to the Apostolic See" (Papal Letters I, 60), and the abbots and priors of England in their letter to Innocent IV, in 1246, declared that the English Church (Ecclesia Anglicana) is "a special member of the Most Holy Church of Rome" [Matthew Paris (Rolls Series), IV, 531]. In 1413 Archbishop Arundel, with the assent of Convocation, affirmed against the Lollards the faith of the English Church in a number of test articles, including the Divine institution of the Papacy and the duty of all Christians to render obedience to it (Wilkins, Concilia, III, 355). In 1521, only thirteen years before the breach, John Clerk, the English Ambassador at Rome, was able to assure the Pope in full consistory that England was second to no country in Christendom, "not even to Rome itself", in the "service of God: and of the Christian Faith, and in the obedience due to the Most Holy Roman Church" (Clerks' oration, ed. Jerome Emser).

The first point of severance was clearly one of Erastianism. When news of the papal decision against the divorce reached England, Henry VIII gave his assent to four anti-papal statutes passed in Parliament in the spring of 1534, and in November the statute of the Royal Supremacy declared the King to be Supreme Head of the English Church (without the limiting clause of 1532), and an oath was prescribed, affirming the Pope to have no jurisdiction in the realm of England. The actual ministry of preaching and of the sacraments was left to the clergy, but all the powers of ecclesiastical jurisdiction were claimed by the sovereign.

The Act of Supremacy required that the King, as Supreme Head of the Church, "shall have full power and authority from time to time to visit, repress, redress, reform, order, correct, restrain, and amend all such errors, heresies, abuses, offences, contempt, enormities whatsoever they be which by any manner, spiritual authority or jurisdiction ought or may be lawfully reformed" (26 Henry VIII, i). The bishops were made to sue out their faculties from the King, and, that the meaning of this humiliation should be unmistakable, the very form of the license granted them affirmed the plain Erastian principle that the Crown was the source of their jurisdiction, "seeing that all authority of jurisdiction, and indeed jurisdiction of all kinds, both that which is called ecclesiastical and that which is secular, is originally derived from the royal power, as from the Supreme Head and foundation, and source of magistracy within our Kingdom" (Wilkins, Concilia, III, 799). The bishops and clergy in convocation were forbidden to make canons except when the King, by his "Letters of Business", gave them permission to do so, and even then the canons so made were to have effect only when approved by the King. Another statute secured to the Crown the absolute control in the appointment of bishops. The chapters were bound under penalties of Proemunire to elect the person named by the King and no other, and the Archbishop was bound under the same shameful penalties to consecrate the person so named within twenty days after receipt of the King's writ (Significavit) commanding him to do so. This enactment, which an Anglican bishop in recent times has aptly described as "the Magna Charta of tyranny" remains in force to the present day. Within the last few years the Law Courts have ruled that no opposition to the episcopal confirmation of a person nominated by the Crown can be allowed.

Thus the chief note of Henrician settlement is the fact that Anglicanism was founded in the acceptance of the Royal, and the rejection of the Papal Supremacy, and was placed upon a decidedly Erastian basis.

When the Act of Royal Supremacy, which had been repealed by Queen Mary, was revived by Elizabeth, it suffered a modification in the sense that the Sovereign was styled "Supreme Governor" instead of "Supreme Head". In a subsequent "Admonition", Elizabeth issued an interpretation of the Royal Supremacy, to the effect that she laid claim "to no power of ministry of divine offices in the Church". At the same time she reasserted in the full the claim made by Henry VIII as to the Authority of the Crown in matters ecclesiastical, and the great religious changes made after her accession were carried out and enforced in a royal visitation commissioned by the royal authority. In 1628, Charles I, in a Royal Declaration prefixed to the Articles, stated that it belonged to the kingly office "to conserve and maintain the Church committed to our charge, in unity of religion and the bond of peace", and decreed that differences arising as to the external policy of the Church were to be settled in Convocation, but its ordinances were to be submitted to the Crown for approval, which would be given to them if they were not contrary to the laws of the land.

Archbishop Laud, in 1640, had a series of canons drawn up in Convocation and duly published, but this attempt at spiritual independence was speedily suppressed. The indignation of Parliament was so great that he himself begged leave to withdraw them, and the House of Commons passed a resolution unanimously declaring that "the Clergy in Convocation assembled has no power to make any canons or constitutions whatsoever in matters of doctrine, discipline or otherwise to bind the Clergy and laity of the land without the common consent in Parliament" (Resolution, 16 December, 1640).

The effect of the legislation under Henry VIII, revived by Elizabeth, and confirmed in subsequent reigns, has been, as Lord Campbell pointed out in his famous Gorham judgment, in April, 1850, to locate in the Crown all that decisive jurisdiction which before the Reformation had been exercised by the Pope. Until the year 1833, the Crown exercised this supreme jurisdiction through a special body called the Court of Delegates. Its members were appointed under the great Seal, and consisted of lay judges, with whom might be associated a number of bishops or clergymen. In 1833 this Court was abolished, and its powers were transferred to the King in Council. Hence matters which come under its purview are now decided by the King upon the advice of that part of the Privy Council which is known as the Judicial Committee. The statute (2 and 3 William IV, xcii) expressly states that its decisions are final, and are not subject to any commission of review.

It must be observed that this tribunal does not profess theoretically to decide articles of faith, or to pronounce upon the abstract orthodoxy or heterodoxy of opinions. "Its duty extends only to the consideration of that which is by law established to be the doctrine of the Church of England, upon the due and legal construction of there Articles and formularies" (Gorham decision, March 1850). But upon this ground the Crown decided that the views of Mr. Gorham, whose notorious rejection of the doctrine of baptismal regeneration had shocked his bishop and scandalized the Tractarians, were "not contrary or repugnant to the declared doctrine of the Church of England as by law established". Numerous protests and appeals were made by high Churchmen, but all attempts to reverse the decision were unavailing, and Mr. Gorham duly received institution to the benefice which his bishop had refused him. In like manner in 1849, when vehement opposition was made to the appointment of Dr. Hampden to the See of Hereford, the Prime Minister of the day insisted on the right of the Crown, and the Vicar-General of the Archbishop ruled that no exception could be suffered against one whom the Crown had duly nominated, and the Court of Queen's Bench sustained his ruling.

Thus, whatever views or aspirations have been held theoretically by Anglican divines on the spiritual authority of the Anglican Church, the Royal Supremacy remains an effective reality, and the Crown, supported by Parliament and the Law Courts, both as to the doctrines which may be taught, and the persons who shall be put in office to teach them, has possession of the practical and substantial control. It is characteristic of the Anglican Reformation that the supreme and far reaching regulative jurisdiction which was exercised by the Holy See was, after the severance from Rome, taken over, to all intents and purposes, by the Crown, and was never effectively entrusted to the Anglican Spirituality, either to the Primate, or to the Episcopate, or even to Convocation. As a result, there is to this day the lack of a living Church Spiritual Authority which has been to the Anglican Church a constant source of weakness, humiliation, and disorder.

In 1904 a royal commission was appointed to investigate the complaints against ecclesiastical discipline, and in July 1906, it issued its report, in which it points out that at no time in the past have the laws of public worship been uniformly observed, and recommends the formation of a Court which while exercising the Royal Jurisdiction, would be bound to accept the episcopate on questions of doctrine or ritual. This, if granted, would be the first step towards the partial emancipation of the Spirituality from the thraldom of the civil power, in which it has been held for more than three centuries.

It will be observed that Anglicanism as a religious system is separable from the doctrine of Royal Supremacy, which is an outcome of its union with the State, and of the circumstances of the English Reformation. In countries outside of England the Wales Anglican Churches exist, and, it is said, all the more prosperously from being untrammelled by the State connection. But even in those countries the decisive voice in the government of the Anglican Church is not entrusted to the Episcopate alone, and in some of them the lay power in the synods has made itself felt, and has shown that it can be as really a master as any Tudor sovereign invested with royal supremacy. The supremacy of the Spirituality in the domain of doctrine, as the sole guarantee of true religious liberty, is still lacking in the Anglican system, and the problem of supplying it remains unsolved, if not insoluble.


DOCTRINAL AND LITURGICAL FORMULARIES

The doctrinal position of the Anglican Church, in like manner, can only be adequately studied in its history, which divides itself into a number of stages or periods. The first, or Henrician, period (1534-47) includes the breach with Rome, the setting up of an independent national church, and the transfer of the supreme Church authority from the Papacy to the Crown. The Edwardian (1547-53) and the Elizabethan (1558-1603) periods carried the work of separation much further. Both accepted the Henrician basis of rejection of the Papacy and erection of the Royal Supremacy, but built upon it the admission of the doctrinal and liturgical changes which make up mainly the Anglican Reformation, and brought the nation within the great Protestant movement of the sixteenth century.

Although the policy of Henry VIII, after the breach with Rome, was ostensibly conservative, and his ideal seemed to be the maintenance of a Catholic Church in England, minus the Pope, it is incontestable that in other ways his action was in fatal contradiction to his professions. By raising to power, and by maintaining in positions of unique influence, his three great agents, Thomas Cromwell, Thomas Cranmer, and Edward Seymour, all of whom were always, and as openly as they dared, in sympathy with the Reformation, Henry VIII, whether by intention or the by the indifference of his latter days, undoubtedly prepared the way and opened the gates to the Protestantism which came in under Edward and Elizabeth. In 1535 Henry sent agents to negotiate an agreement with the Reformers in Germany, and in 1537 he was led by Cromwell, in connivance with Cranmer, into further negotiations with the Protestant princes assembled at Smalkald. He wrote to Melanchthon to congratulate him on the work which he had done for religion, and invited him to England. Melanchthon was unable to come, but in 1538 three German divines, Burkhardt, Boyneburg, and Myconius, were sent to London, where they remained some months, and held conferences with the Anglican bishops and clergy. The Germans presented as a basis of agreement a number of Articles based on the Lutheran Confession of Augsburg. On the doctrinal part of these Articles, the first thirteen, both parties came to an agreement (Letter of Myconius to Cromwell, 8 September, 1538). On the second part, the "Abuses" (viz., private Masses, celibacy of the Clergy, invocation of Saints) the King would not give way, and finally dissolved the conference. Although the negotiations thus formally came to an end, the Thirteen Articles on which agreement with the Germans had been made were kept by Archbishop Cranmer, and afterwards by Archbishop Parker, and were used as test articles to which the preachers whom they licensed were required to subscribe. Eventually they became the nucleus of the Articles of Religion which were authorized under Edward VI and Elizabeth. Hence the almost verbal correspondence between these Articles and the Lutheran Confession of Augsburg, from which they were originally taken. By the death of Henry VIII (27 January, 1547) the main obstle to the reforming influence was removed. With the accession of Edward VI, who had been brought up in the reformed faith, with Seymour, also a Protestant, omnipotent in the Council, and Cranmer, now able to show his hand and work his will, the party of the Reformation became possessed of all the resources of national power, and during the five years of the reign (1547-53) remained triumphantly in the ascendant. This period witnessed the introduction of the great doctrinal and liturgical changes.

One of the cardinal principles of the Reformation which the German delegates had brought over in 1538 was that "the Mass is nothing but a Communion or synaxis" (Tunstall's Summary, M.S. Cleop. E. V., 209). Cranmer vehemently upheld this conception of the Eucharist. One of the first Acts under Edward VI was the introduction of a new English Communion Service, which was to be inserted at the end of the Mass, and which required Communion to be given under both kinds. This was soon after followed by a Book of Common Prayer, with a Communion Service entirely taking the place of the Latin Mass. Cranmer was the chief author of this book. Whether it ever received the assent of Convocation has been questioned, but it was approved by Parliament in 1549. Gardiner, Bishop of Winchester, in opposing Cranmer's denial of the Real Presence and of the Sacrifice of the mass, argued that even certain passages in the new Prayer Book implied the acceptance of these doctrines; whereupon Cranmer and his fellow-reformers drew up a new Prayer Book, still more Protestant in tone and character. In it the order of the parts of the Communion Service was considerably altered, and the passages used by Gardiner as apparently favouring the Catholic doctrine were studiously eliminated, or so changed as to preclude in future any such interpretation, and all allusion to Altar or Sacrifice was carefully omitted (Gasquet and Bishop, Edward VI and the Book of Common Prayer, 289). In 1552, this, the second Prayer Book of Edward VI, was authorized by Parliament. A new Ordinal or Order for making bishops, priests, and deacons was compiled, from which in like manner all mention of the sacrificial office of the priesthood was rigorously excluded. It was approved by Parliament in 1552. In 1551, quite in harmony with this liturgical reform, an Order in Council issued to Bishop Ridley required the altars to be torn down, and movable tables substituted, while a statement of reasons was to be made to the people explanatory of the change, namely, "that the form of a table may more move and turn the simple from the old superstition of the Mass and to the right use of the Lord's Supper".

By Royal Proclamations and episcopal visitations, a multitude of Catholic practices and sacramentals, such as lights, incense, holy water, and palms, were suppressed. These reforms, proceeding tentatively but rapidly, were initiated and carried out mainly by Cranmer and his set, and the reflected his beliefs and that of this fellow-reformers. In 1553, a royal decree was issued requiring the bishops and clergy to subscribe forty-two Articles of Religion which embodied in great part what had been contained in the Thirteen Articles agreed upon with the Germans. The article on the Eucharist had been significantly changed to agree, as Hooper attests, with the teachings of the Swiss reformer, Bullinger.

In November, 1558, Queen Elizabeth succeeded Queen Mary, and immediately proceeded to restore the work of Henry VIII and Edward VI. The new settlement of religion was based, not on the First Prayer Book of 1549, but on the more Protestant one of 1552. The latter was adopted with a few slight modifications, and it remains for the most part substantially unchanged to the present day. The statement that Pius IV offered to approve the Prayer Book is devoid of all historical foundation. It has not a vestige of contemporary evidence to support it. Camden, the earliest Anglican historian who mentions it, says: "I never could find it in any writing, and I do not believe any writing of it to exist. To gossip with the mop is unworthy of any historian" (History, 59). Fuller, another Anglican historian, describes it as the mere conjecture "of those who love to feign what they cannot find". In 1563 the Edwardian Articles were revised in Convocation under Archbishop Parker. Some were added, others altered or dropped, and the number was reduced to Thirty-eight. In 1571, the XXIXth Article, despite the opposition of Bishop Guest, was inserted, to the effect that the wicked do not eat the Body of Christ. The Articles, thus increased to Thirty-nine, were ratified by the Queen, and the bishops and clergy were required to assent and subscribe thereto. During the whole of Elizabeth's long reign, the prevailing tone of Anglican teaching and literature was decidedly Genevan and Calvinistic (Dr. Prothero, English Hist. Rev., October, 1886). In 1662 a reaction set in against Puritanism, and the Prayer Book, which had been suppressed during the Commonwealth, was brought back and subjected to revision in Convocation and Parliament. The amendments made were numerous, but those of doctrinal significance were comparatively few, and of a kind to emphasize the Episcopal character of Anglicanism as against Presbyterianism. The most notable were the reinsertion, with altered wording, of the Black Rubric (omitted by Elizabeth) and the introduction in the form of the words, "for the office of a Bishop" and "for the office of a Priest", in the Service of Ordination.

The historic meaning and doctrinal significance of the Anglican formularies can only be determined by the candid and competent examination of the evidence as a whole,

  • first, by the study of the plain meaning of the text;
  • secondly, by the study of the historical setting and the circumstances in which they were framed and authorized;
  • thirdly, by the known beliefs of their chief authors and of those by whom they were accepted;
  • fourthly, by comparison with the Catholic pre-Reformation formularies which they supplanted;
  • fifthly, by the study of their sources and the exact value of their doctrinal terminology as found in the controversies of the time;
  • sixthly-if the examination is not to be hopelessly narrow-by the study of general Reformation in Europe, of which the English Reformation, albeit with local and national characteristics, was both a part and a result.

Here it is only possible to state the conclusions arising from such an inquiry in briefest outline.


CONNECTION WITH THE PARENT MOVEMENT OF REFORMATION

There can be no doubt that the English Reformation is substantially a part of the great Protestant Reformation upheaval of the sixteenth century, and that its doctrine, liturgy, and chief promoters were to a very considerable extent derived from, and influenced by, the Lutheran and Calvinistic movements on the Continent. There was first of all the living or personal connection. The great English Reformers who took the leading part in the work of Reformation in England-Cranmer, Barlow, Hooper, Parker, Grindal, Scory, May, Cox, Coverdale, and many others-were men who lived and laboured amongst the Protestants of the Continent, and remained in constant and cordial touch and communication with them. (See Original Letters of the Reformation.) Reciprocally, continental reformers, like Peter Martyr and Martin Bucer, were welcomed to England and made professors of Divinity at the universities. Others, like John a Lasco, and Paul Fagius, become the friends and guests of Cranmer.

A second bond was the adoption of the same essential doctrines. The great principles and tenets set forth in the works of Luther, Melanchthon, and Calvin, or Zwingli, are reproduced with or without modifications, but substantially, and often almost verbatim in the literature of the English Reformation. The chief doctrines which are essentially and specifically characteristic of the Protestant Reformation as a whole are the following nine:

  • rejection of the Papacy,
  • denial of the Church Infallibility;
  • Justification by Faith only;
  • supremacy and sufficiency of Scripture as Rule of Faith;
  • the triple Eucharistic tenet [viz. (a) that the Eucharist is a Communion or Sacrament, and not a Mass or Sacrifice, save in the sense of praise or commemoration; (b) the denial of Transubstantiation and worship of the Host; (c) the denial of the sacrificial office of the priesthood and the propitiatory character of the Mass];
  • the non-necessity of auricular Confession;
  • the rejection of the invocation of the Blessed Virgin and the Saints;
  • the rejection of Purgatory and omission of prayers for the dead;
  • the rejection of the doctrine of Indulgences.

To these may be added three disciplinary characteristics which are founded on doctrine:

  • the giving of Communion in both kinds;
  • the substitution of tables for altars; and
  • the abolition of monastic vows and the celibacy of the clergy.

These twelve doctrines and practices of the continental Reformation have undoubtedly, though not always in the same measure, entered into the fibre of the English Reformation, and have all found expression, more or less emphatic, in the Anglican formularies. Hence, while the name "Protestant" is not found in the Prayer Book, it is used in the Coronation Service when the King promises to maintain "the Protestant religion as by law established". It was from the beginning popularly applied to the Anglican beliefs and services. In the Act of Union the Churches of England and Ireland are styled "the Protestant Episcopal Church", a name still retained by the Anglican Church in America.

A third bond between the Reformation on the continent and that which took place in England is to be found in the actual composition of the formularies. The Anglican Articles owe much, through the Thirteen Articles, to the Confession of Augsburg, and also to the Confession of Wurtemberg. Notable portions of the baptismal, marriage, and confirmation services are derived from the "Simplex et Pia Deliberatio" which was compiled by the Lutheran Hermann von Wied, with the aid of Bucer and Melanchthon. That a considerable part of the Anglican ordinal (without the distinctive form for each Order) is found in Bucer's "Scripta Anglica", has been pointed out by the late Canon Travers Smith. In this triple bond-personal, doctrinal, and liturgical-the continental and Anglican Reformations are, amid many and notable differences, substantially and inseparably interwoven as parts of one and the same great religious movement.


COLLATION OF FORMULARIES

The comparison of the Anglican Prayer Book and Ordinal with the Pre-Reformation formularies which they replaced leads to a second conclusion which in harmony with the above. On making an analysis of what has been removed, and what has been retained, and what has been altered, it becomes unmistakably apparent that the main motive which determined and guided the construction of the new liturgy was the same as that which inspired the whole Reformation movement, namely: the determination to have the Lord's Supper regarded only as a Sacrament or Communion, and not as a Sacrifice, and to remove whatever indicated the sacrificial character of the Eucharist, or the Real, Objective Presence, in the Catholic sense, in which Christ is worshipped in the Host. The Catholic liturgical forms, missal, breviary, pontifical, were in possession and had been in actual use for centuries. In making a liturgical reform, it was by the necessity of the case impossible that the changes made should not have reference to them, standing as they did, in the relation of terminus a quo to a terminus ad quem of reformation. If the Sarum Missal, Breviary, and Pontifical are placed side by side with the Anglican Prayer Book and Ordinal, and a comparison made of the corresponding parts, the motive, drift, and intention of the framers are clearly revealed.

In the Catholic Pontifical, in the Ordination services there are twenty-four passages which express with clearness the Catholic Sacerdotium, or sacrificial character of the office and work of the priesthood. Of these not one was allowed to remain in the Anglican Ordinal. In the Ordinary of the Mass alone there are some twenty-five points in which the sacrificial nature of the Eucharist and the Real Presence of Christ as a Victim are expressed or implied. All these have been suppressed and eliminated in the Anglican Communion Service, and passages of a Reformational or non-committal character substituted. Thus, with regard to no less than forty-nine places, the new formularies bear the mark of deliberate exclusion and of anti-sacrificial and anti-sacerdotal significance. (See The Tablet, London, 12 June, 1897.)


DEVELOPMENT AND PARTIES

Although the Anglican Articles and liturgy have been practically unchanged since 1662, it was inevitable that the life and thought of a religious body like the Church of England should present the note of development, and that such development should eventually out grow, or at least strain, the historic interpretation of the formularies, and the more so because there has been no living authority to adapt or readjust them to the newer needs or aspirations. The development may be said to have been guided by three main influences. here has been the deep-seated attachment to the principles of the Reformation in which the Anglican settlement was founded, and the determination to preserve the standards of belief and worship then established. This loyalty to the Protestant character of the Anglican Church has produced the Low Church, or Evangelical, school of Anglicanism.

A second influence is that of rationalism, which, both in England and in Germany, has acted as a solvent of Protestantism, especially in the form of destructive biblical criticism, and which, often in the effort to sublimate religion, has induced an aversion to all that is dogmatic, supernatural, or miraculous. Its exponents, who are numerous, learned, and influential, are generally classed as the Broad Church, or the Latitudinarian, school of Anglican religious thought. A third influence which made itself felt upon Anglicanism, and one more vital and more penetrating and progressive than the other two, has been that of Catholicism, whether as reflected in Catholic antiquity or as beheld in the actual Catholic and Roman Church. The effect of this influence may be traced in what has been called the historic High Church party. A number of Anglican bishops and divines in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, while bitterly opposed to Rome, and loyally Protestant, stood above the prevailing low level of churchmanship, and put forward higher and philocatholic views, in the matters of Church authority, belief, and worship. Although comparatively few in number, and vehemently assailed by their fellow churchmen, they were destined to serve as a point d'appui for a subsequent development. Such writers as Bishop Andrews (d. 1626), Bishop Overall (d. 1644), Bishop Montague (d. 1641), Archbishop Laud (d. 1644), Archbishop Bramhall (d. 1663), Dr. Thorndike (d. 1672), Bishop Ken (d. 1711), Dr Waterland (d. 1740), may be regarded as representative of this section.


OXFORD MOVEMENT

In 1833 a strong current of popular opinion directed against the Anglican Church aroused in its defense the zeal of a small band of Oxford students and writers, who gradually gathered under the informal leadership of John Henry Newman. Among these were John Keble, C. Marriott, Hurrell Froude, Isaac Williams, Dr. Pusey, and W.G. Ward. Their object was to make good for the Anglican Church its claim to the note of Catholicity. Their task led them to look both behind and outside the sphere of the Reformation. By forming a catena of Anglican High Church divines of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries on one side, and a catena of certain Fathers on the other, it was hoped that a quasi-continuous chain of Catholic tradition could be made to connect the Anglican Church of their day with Catholic antiquity. Translations of the Fathers, works on liturgy, the festivals of the "Christian Year", and above all a memorable series of "Tracts for the Times", conveyed with telling force the newer and broader conceptions of churchmanship which entered into the spirit of the defenders.

In "Tract 90" an attempt was made, somewhat on the lines of Sancta Clara, to show that the Anglican Articles might in certain aspects be reconciled to the teaching of the Council of Trent. The result was a doctrinal and devotional crisis such as England had not witnessed since the Reformation, and the Oxford or Tractarian movement, during the twelve years from Keble's sermon on "National Apostasy", in 1833, to Newman's conversion in 1845, formed a historic epoch in the annals of Anglicanism. The fact that the work of the movement was informally a study de Ecclesiâ brought both the writers and their readers more directly face to face with the claims of the Church of Rome. A large number of those who took part in the movement, and notably its great leader, became Catholics, while others, in remaining Anglicans, gave a new and pro-Catholic direction and impulse to Anglican thought and worship. It may be said that in the case of Newman, Oakley, Wilberforce, Ward, and a host of others, the research of the nature of Catholicity and the rule of faith brought them to realize the need of the living voice of a Divine magisterium (the regula proxima fidei), and failing to find it in the Anglican episcopate, they sought it where alone it could be found.

Others, like Pusey, Marriott, Keble, sought what they called the voice of the "Church" in the inanimate formularies (or regula remota) which, after all, was merely adding the Fathers, the liturgies, and conciliar definitions to the Scripture as the area over which they still used, after the manner of true Protestants, their private judgement. The same principle is always more or less at work and goes as far now as then to sift those who come from those who stay. [If we bear in mind that by "Church" was thus meant the silent self-interpreted formularies (or regula remota), and by "Bishops" the living magisterium (or regula proxima) sought in Anglicanism, we shall feel that there is a great truth contained in Pusey's well-known saying, three years after the secession of Newman: "I am not disturbed, because I never attached any weight to bishops. It was perhaps the difference between Newman and me. He threw himself upon the bishops and they failed him. I threw myself on the English Church and the Fathers, as under God, her support" (Letter to C. Marriott, 2 January, 1848)].


ANGLICAN REVIVAL

Although the Oxford movement is regarded as having come to a close at the conversion of Dr. Newman in 1845, a large section of the Anglican public had been much too profoundly stirred by its ideals ever to return to the narrowness of the religious horizons which were bounded by the Reformation. Its influence has survived in the unceasing flow of converts to the Catholic Faith, and is shown in the Anglican Church itself by the notable change of belief, temperament, and practice which is known as the Anglican Revival. The last fifty years (1860-1910) have witnessed the development of an influential and growing school of religious thought which, amid the inconsistencies of its position, has steadily laboured to Catholicize the Church of England. It has set up the claim, hopelessly untenable in the face of historical evidence, that the Anglican Church is one and continuous with the Ancient Catholic Church of the country, and is an integral portion of the Catholic Church of today. It professes to be able to give to Anglicans all that the Catholic Church gives to her members, save communion with the Holy See. Through possessing neither the learning nor the logic of the Tractarians, it exercises a wider and more practical influence, and has won the favour of a large body of the Anglican public by importing into the Anglican services something of the beauty and power which it has borrowed from Catholic teaching and ritual. At the same time it has in many centers earned the respect and attachment of the masses by the example of zeal and self-sacrifice given by its clergy.

It was natural that this advance section of the Anglican Church should seek to ratify its position, and to escape from its fatal isolation, by desiring some scheme of corporate reunion and especially by endeavouring to obtain some recognition of the validity of its orders. With the truest charity, which consists in the candour of truth, Pope Leo XIII in his Encyclical on Unity, pointed out that there can be no reunion expect on the solid basis of dogmatic unity and submission to the divinely instituted authority of the Apostolic See. In September, 1896, after a full and exhaustive inquiry, he issued a Bull declaring Anglican Orders to be "utterly null and void", and in a subsequent Brief addressed to the Archbishop of Paris, he required all Catholics to accept this judgment as "fixed, settled, and irrevocable" (firmum, ratum et irrevocabile).

The Anglican Revival continues to reiterate its claim and to appropriate to itself, where practical, whatever in Catholic doctrine, liturgy, and practice, church vestments or church furniture, it finds helpful to its purpose. By the Lambeth judgment of 1891 it acquired a public sanction for many of its innovations. Since then it has gone further, and holds that no authority in the Church of England can override things which are authorized by "Catholic consent". It stands thus in the illogical and unhistorical position of a system which is philocatholic in its views and aspirations, but hopelessly committed to heresy and to heretical communication, and built upon an essentially Protestant foundation. Although to Catholics its very claim is an impious usurpation of what belongs of right to the Catholic Church alone, it fulfils an informal mission of influencing English public opinion, and of familiarizing the English people with Catholic doctrines and ideals.

Like the Oxford movement, it educates more pupils than it can retain, and works upon premises which cannot but carry it in the long run farther than it is willing to go. A branch theory which is repudiated by the principal branches, or a province theory which is unknown to the rest of the provinces, and a continuity theory of which more than twelve thousand documents in the Record Office and the Vatican Library are the overwhelming refutation, cannot form a standing ground which is other than temporary and transitional. In the meantime, its work amongst the masses is often a species of catechumenate for Catholicism, and in all cases it is an active solvent and a steady undoing of the English Reformation.


WILKENS, Concilia (London, 1737); Calendar of State Papers: Henry VII (London, 1862 sqq.); Edward VI (1856 sqq.); Elizabeth (ibid., 1863 sqq.); PROTHERO, Select Statutes; CARDWELL, Documentary Annals (Oxford, 1844); CRANMER, Works; GAIRDNER, History of the Church of England in the XVIth Century; DIXON, Hist. of Church of England (London, 1878-1902); WAKEMAN, Introduct. to Hist. of Church of England (London 1897); CARDWELL, History of Conferences (London, 1849); GIBSON, The Thirty-nine Articles; BROWNE, Hist. of the Thirty-nine Articles; KEELING, Liturgiae Britannicae; GASQUET AND BISHOP, Edward VI and the Book of Common Prayer (London, 1891); DOWDEN, The Workmanship of the Prayer Book; BULLEY, Variations of the Communion and Baptismal Offices; BROOKE, Privy Council Judgements; SECKENDORFF, History of Lutheranism; JANSSEN, History of the German People, V, VI; Original Letters of the Reformation (Parker Series); Zurich Letters (Cambridge, 1842-43); BENSON, Archbishop Laud (London, 1887); CHURCH, The Oxford Movement (London and New York, 1891); NEWMAN, Apologia; LIDDON, Life of Pusey (London and New York, 1893-94), II; BENSON, Life of Archbishop Benson.

J. MOYES