Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- Contributors
- Abbreviations
- Public welfare and social legislation in the early medieval councils (Presidential Address)
- National synods, kingship as office, and royal anointing: an early medieval syndrome
- The case of Berengar of Tours
- Ecclesiastica and Regalia: Papal investiture policy from the Council of Guastalla to the First Lateran Council, 1106–23
- Viri religiosi and the York election dispute
- Councils and synods in thirteenth-century Castile and Aragon
- The Byzantine reaction to the Second Council of Lyons, 1274
- The Council of London of 1342
- Education in English ecclesiastical legislation of the later Middle Ages
- The representation of the universitas fidelium in the councils of the conciliar period
- Nicholas Ryssheton and the Council of Pisa, 1409
- The condemnation of John Wyclif at the Council of Constance
- Some aspects of English representation at the Council of Basle
- The Council of Basle and the Second Vatican Council
- The Colloquies between Catholics and Protestants, 1539–41
- King James I's call for an ecumenical council
- John Hales and the Synod of Dort
- Assembly and Association in Dissent, 1689–1831
- The Convocation of 1710: an Anglican attempt at counter-revolution
- Laymen in synod: an aspect of the beginnings of synodical government in South Africa
- The First Vatican Council
- Kikuyu and Edinburgh: the interaction of attitudes to two conferences
Laymen in synod: an aspect of the beginnings of synodical government in South Africa
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 March 2010
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- Contributors
- Abbreviations
- Public welfare and social legislation in the early medieval councils (Presidential Address)
- National synods, kingship as office, and royal anointing: an early medieval syndrome
- The case of Berengar of Tours
- Ecclesiastica and Regalia: Papal investiture policy from the Council of Guastalla to the First Lateran Council, 1106–23
- Viri religiosi and the York election dispute
- Councils and synods in thirteenth-century Castile and Aragon
- The Byzantine reaction to the Second Council of Lyons, 1274
- The Council of London of 1342
- Education in English ecclesiastical legislation of the later Middle Ages
- The representation of the universitas fidelium in the councils of the conciliar period
- Nicholas Ryssheton and the Council of Pisa, 1409
- The condemnation of John Wyclif at the Council of Constance
- Some aspects of English representation at the Council of Basle
- The Council of Basle and the Second Vatican Council
- The Colloquies between Catholics and Protestants, 1539–41
- King James I's call for an ecumenical council
- John Hales and the Synod of Dort
- Assembly and Association in Dissent, 1689–1831
- The Convocation of 1710: an Anglican attempt at counter-revolution
- Laymen in synod: an aspect of the beginnings of synodical government in South Africa
- The First Vatican Council
- Kikuyu and Edinburgh: the interaction of attitudes to two conferences
Summary
Even quite eminent Tractarians tended to think that, how- ever impossible things might be in the Church of England, the colonies provided the sort of field where they could create the kind of Church in which they really believed. That Church would follow patristic patterns, of course, would be free from the nexus of establishment, and would be governed by synods. As regards South Africa they nourished particularly high hopes. Robert Gray, the first Bishop of Cape Town, was campaigning for synodical government, the creation of ecclesiastical courts to replace the Erastian Privy Council, and to check and outlaw the heresy of Bishop Colenso. It looked so very much as though this were a situation—heresiarchs and councils locked in battle—straight out of the pages of early church history. So when Gray lost his case against Colenso in the Privy Council in 1855, Dr Pusey wrote in a letter to the Churchman, ‘It is no loss to us that it is discovered that the Queen had no power to give the temporal powers which the former legal advisers of the Crown thought she could…The Church in South Africa, then, is free.’
Tractarians continued to support South Africa, to go and work there and to lionize those who were there already. Some of them called Gray ‘the Athanasius of the South’. James Green, Dean of Colenso's cathedral and his bishop's arch-enemy, was presented with a famous suit of vestments, supposedly the first to have been worn in nineteenth-century England.
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- Councils and Assemblies , pp. 321 - 328Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1970