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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 September 2013
In that revolutionary movement by which slowly and unobtrusively the government of England has been made over in the last twenty years, no institution has changed more perceptibly than the Church of England. Church and State: The Report of the Archbishops’ Commission on the Relations between Church and State, dated 1935 but withheld from the public by the Commission until after the general election of that year, sets forth the latest stage in a notable constitutional development.
1 Vol. I, Report and Appendices. Vol. II, Evidence of Witnesses, etc. Issued for the Commission by the Press and Publications Board of the Church Assembly (Church House, Dean's Yard, Westminster, S.W. 1)Google Scholar.
2 The Commission wrote its own interpretation in an “Historical Introduction,” Report, Vol. I, pp. 9–40Google Scholar.
3 Report, Vol. I, p. 1Google Scholar.
4 Report, p. 62.
5 Report, pp. 65–71.
6 Cf. leaders in the Manchester Guardian for January 24, 1936, and the New Statesman and Nation for February 1, 1936. See also a sharply unsympathetic article by Rowse, A. L., “The Dilemma of Church and State,” in Political Quarterly, Vol. 7, pp. 368–384 (1936)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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