Showing 1 - 5 results of 5 for search '"Episcopalianism"', query time: 0.05s Refine Results
  1. 1

    Preaching, print, and politics: the sermons of the Royalist and Episcopalian clergy, 1642-1660 by White, W

    Published 2019
    “…<p>This thesis explores the sermons of royalist and episcopalian clergymen during the English Civil Wars and Interregnum. …”
    Thesis
  2. 2

    The Altar and the Rail: “Catholicity” and African American Inclusion in the 19th Century Episcopal Church by Jennifer Snow

    Published 2021-03-01
    “…The paper investigates the ways in which Black Episcopalians and their white allies used the theological ideal of catholicity creatively and strategically in the nineteenth century, both responding to a particular missional history and contending that missional success depended upon true catholicity.…”
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    Article
  3. 3

    De l’hétérodoxie à l’orthodoxie : les espaces religieux de George Keith by Louisiane Ferlier

    Published 2013-03-01
    “…A Quaker thinker and writer, the Scot converted to Quakerism after the Restoration, at a time when Scotland was divided by the conflict between Presbyterians and Episcopalians. He justified this choice by defining religious revelation as a ‘spiritual travel’. …”
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  4. 4

    Puritan conformity, Church polity, and Anglican identity, 1628-88 by Wang, C

    Published 2022
    “…Instead of searching for one, static Anglican identity, this thesis follows recent scholarly endeavours to highlight the confessional diversity and conflicts that characterised the Protestant English Church, challenging traditional, and yet inaccurate dichotomies, such as puritan/conformist or puritan/episcopalian, to showcase how the very nature of the Church of England was one of struggle and fluidity rather than a definite triumph of specific strains of piety. …”
    Thesis
  5. 5

    Home missions and the religious reconstruction of the United States, 1865-1900 by Jones, GW, Jones, GW

    Published 2024
    “…</p> <p>Thousands of Protestants across the Northern states – Congregationalists, Baptists, Methodists, Presbyterians, and Episcopalians – supported this effort to remake the country into a Protestant commonwealth, and continued to do so long after congressional support for Reconstruction had ended. …”
    Thesis