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Churchmanship

 
Dictionary: Church·man·ship

n.

The state or quality of being a churchman; attachment to the church.


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Within Anglicanism the term churchmanship is sometimes used to refer to distinct understandings of church doctrine and liturgical practice by members of the Church of England and other churches of the Anglican communion.[1] The three principal forms of churchmanship are low church, broad church and high church.

Low church is now generally also used to refer to the puritan or evangelical tradition within Anglicanism and high church is now generally also used to refer to the Anglo-Catholic tradition. Broad church is generally used for Anglicans whose churchmanship is somewhere between the low and high traditions and is much the same as the tradition historically called latitudinarian.

Within the low church tradition of churchmanship there are some distinct variations such as charismatic evangelical, traditional evangelical, open evangelical and conservative evangelical. Within the high church tradition there are variations such as traditional Anglo-Catholic, moderate Catholic, modern Catholic, liberal Catholic, prayer book Catholic and Anglo-Papalist. The terminology used for churchmanship variations can differ from country to country and the same terms can have some differences in meaning in different places.

In Lutheran churches churchmanship can be liberal Protestant, pietist, confessional Lutheran, or evangelical Catholic.

References

  1. ^ Spiritus Temporis, Anglicanism: Churchmanship. Accessed 2009.09.30.

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Dictionary. Webster 1913 Dictionary edited by Patrick J. Cassidy  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Churchmanship" Read more