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Encyclopedia results for Ritualism

Ritualism





Encyclopedia results for Ritualism

  1. Aupamanyava

    , p 35, Sadashiv Ambadas Dange. ref ref Dialectics of Hindu Ritualism, 1956, pp 59, 133, Bhupendran tha ... Ritualism, 1956, pp 59, Bhupendran tha Datta Political History of Ancient India, 1996, p 134, Dr ... Aryas ref Dialectics of Hindu Ritualism, 1956, p 59, 60, 132, Bhupendran tha Datta. ref . Notes ...   more details



  1. Robert William Radclyffe Dolling

    Robert William Radclyffe Dolling 1851&ndash 1902 was an Anglican Anglicanism Anglican divines divine , known as Father Dolling . Life Dolling was born at Magheralin , County Down , and educated at Harrow School Harrow and Cambridge . From 1878 to 1882 he was warden of one of the houses of the Postmen s League , started by Arthur Hugh Stanton Father Stanton of St. Alban s, Holborn . He was ordained in 1883 to a curacy at Corscombe , Dorset , but resided in London as head of St. Martin s Mission, Stepney . In 1885 a difficulty as to the relation of his mission to Holy Trinity parish, Stepney, led to his resignation, and he next accepted the charge of St. Agatha s, Landport , the Winchester College mission. The reforms he accomplished there were described in his Ten Years in a Portsmouth Slum London 1896 . In 1885 he again resigned owing to the refusal of Randall Davidson , Bishop of Winchester , to sanction the extreme Ritualism ritual used in the service at St Agatha s, Landport St. Agatha s . ref Bell, G. K. A. 1935 Randall Davidson, Archbishop of Canterbury . London Oxford University Press ref During his time at the mission he spent a little over 50,000. ref name Bryant58 Despite extensive fundraising when he resigned there was still an outstanding debt of 3,090, for which Dolling was responsible. ref name Bryant58 He paid this off through sales of his book and further fundraising. ref name Bryant58 cite book title Don t touch the holy Joe Father Dolling s battle for Landport and St Agatha s church last Bryant first Roger year 1995 publisher Ragged Right isbn 189826905X pages 58 59 ref In 1897 Dolling visited the United States , where his preaching made an impression. He returned to the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland UK in the following year as vicar of St. Saviour s, Poplar, London Poplar , and retained the living until his death. Bibliography cite book title Ten years in a Portsmouth slum last Dolling first Robert year 1896 publisher Swan Sonnenschei ...   more details



  1. Bintree

    For the data structure binary tree infobox UK place country England latitude 52.7667 longitude 0.9133 os grid reference TF965228 official name Bintree population 300 population ref United Kingdom Census 2001 2001 census ref http www.norfolk.gov.uk consumption groups public documents general resources ncc017867.xls Census population and household counts for unparished urban areas and all parishes . Office for National Statistics & Norfolk County Council 2001 . Retrieved 20 June 2009. ref area total km2 5.99 static image File Bintree Mill by Mark Boyer.jpg 240px static image caption Bintry Watermill Bintry Mill 2005 shire district Breckland district Breckland shire county Norfolk region East of England civil parish Bintree constituency westminster postcode district NR20 postcode area NR post town DEREHAM dial code london distance Bintree is a village and civil parish in the Breckland district Breckland district of Norfolk , England , about nine miles 14 km south east of Fakenham . According to the 2001 census it had a population of 300. Notable landmarks in the village include the village sign, a traditional red phone box and the now disused Bintry Watermill Bintry Mill . ref http www.geograph.org.uk photo 894087 Geograph.org.uk Bintree Mill and bridge ref Revd Richard Enraght, former Rector of St Swithun Church, Bintree Image memorbintree.jpg thumb left 200px Revd Richard Enraght s gravestone at St Swithun Church, Bintree Rev. Richard William Enraght 1837 98 was an Irish born Church of England priest of the late nineteenth century. He was appointed Vicar of St Swithun s Bintree with Themelthorpe in 1895, after being presented to the benefice by Baron Hastings Lord Hastings . Fr. Enraght s belief in the Church of England s Catholic tradition, his promotion of ritualism in worship, and his writings on Catholic Worship and Church State relationships, led him into conflict with the Public Worship Regulation Act of 1874. While serving as Vicar of Holy Trinity, Bordesley, ...   more details



  1. English Missal

    Portal Anglicanism The English Missal is a translation of the Roman Missal used by some liturgically advanced Anglo Catholic parish churches. After its publication by W. Knott & Son Limited in 1912, the English Missal was rapidly endorsed by the growing Ritualism Ritualist movement of Anglo Catholic clergy, who viewed the liturgies of the Book of Common Prayer as insufficient expressions of fully Catholic worship. The translation of the Roman Missal from Latin into the stylized Elizabethan Early Modern English of the Book of Common Prayer allowed clergy to preserve the use of the vernacular language while adopting the Roman Catholic texts and liturgical rubrics. The only difference in content from the Roman Missal is the English Missal s inclusion of certain texts from the Book of Common Prayer, including optional prayers from the ordinary of the Prayer Book s Communion Service and the lessons for Sundays and major feast day s from the Prayer Book s lectionary, which was itself taken from the earlier Sarum Use Mass of pre Reformation England. After the Public Worship Regulation Act 1874 threatened imprisonment for priests using ritualist liturgical practices, a custom arose of the celebrant saying the Roman Canon in Latin to himself silently i.e., sotto voce , in a soft voice in addition to saying the official texts of the Book of Common Prayer aloud. While enforcement of the Public Worship Regulation Act ended in 1906, the custom persisted, due in part to the fact that in the Tridentine Mass pre Concilliar Roman Rite the Canon of the Mass was always said silently. For this reason, the Latin text of the Canon of the Mass was included in the English Missal in addition to the English translation. The English Missal went through five editions. The first three were based on the Roman Missal of Pius V as revised until the time of Pope Pius X . The latter two editions include the revised Roman Catholic Holy Week of 1958. One American edition includes material that conform ...   more details



  1. List of Anglican devotional societies

    Portal Anglicanism Since the time of the Oxford Movement in the Church of England , there have been organizations whose purpose is the propagation of the Catholicism Catholic Faith within the Anglican Communion . Each of these societies champions one aspect of Ritualism and Anglican doctrine which otherwise is not emphasized by the Anglican Churches as a whole. Mostly, these are groups or organisations that are part of the High Church or Anglo Catholic movement, and are considered Conservatism conservative or Orthodoxy orthodox . Many of them are members or associates of the Catholic Societies of the Church of England. List of Anglican devotional societies Additional Curates Society Anglican Priests Eucharistic League &ndash see External links Catholic League Anglican The Catholic League The Church Union Confraternity of the Blessed Sacrament Cost of Conscience The Federation of Catholic Priests The Society for Sacramental Mission Forward in Faith Glastonbury Pilgrimage Association Guild of Servants of the Sanctuary &ndash see External links Guild of All Souls Saint Martin s League Society of Mary Anglican The Society of Mary Society of the Holy Cross Society of King Charles the Martyr Society of Catholic Priests &ndash Liberal Catholic churchmanship Society of Sacramental Socialists &ndash see External links Society of Our Lady of Walsingham and Priests Associate of the Holy House of the Shrine of Our Lady of Walsingham &ndash see External links References http www.catholicsocieties.org.uk The Catholic Societies of The Church of England External links http www.catholicsocieties.org.uk Catholic Societies of the Church of England http societies.anglican.org eucharistic Anglican Priests Eucharistic League http www.gssonline.org.uk Guild of Servants of the Sanctuary http ourworld.compuserve.com homepages francis gardom costofco.htm Cost of Conscience http www.societyofmary.net The Society of Mary http www.glastonburypilgrimage.com Glastonbury Pilgrimage Association htt ...   more details



  1. Armenian?Assyrian relations

    Image Assyrainarmenians.jpg thumb right 250px Assyrian people Assyrians and Armenians protesting in Sweden against the murder of Hrant Dink in January 2007. Armenian Assyrian relations have a long history stretching back 2900 years as the Urartu Kingdom of Ararat was the major rival of the Assyrian empire , and at times was under its rule. Both groups have lived in the same geographic area for centuries and relations between them have been traditionally good. Both groups were one of the first nations to accept Christianity , which has connected the two very close to one another throughout historic times. During World War I , they shared the same fate as victims of Armenian Genocide genocide in the decaying Ottoman Empire . Today, mixed marriages between Assyrian people Assyrians and Armenian people Armenians in the Republic of Armenia , Iraq and more importantly in the diaspora is relatively common as the two share a common religion. ref http www.zindamagazine.com html archives 1999 aug16 1999.htm Assyrians in Armenia Bet Nahrain ref History The Assyrian Armenian interrelations and interactions history numbers many centuries, both in pre Christian and post Christian era. For times Armenians and Assyrian people Assyrians were the most close neighbors and this neighborhood is reflected in the relations they have a lot of common points in the culture, ritualism and life and manners. ref http www.atour.am tezis.htm Assyrians and Armenians The history of interrelations and interactions for centuries. ref Historically, the homelands of two communities overlapped geographically and today, it is very common to have Armenians and Assyrians living in the same villages in Syria , Iraq , Iran . As was the same case in the Van Province Van , Hakkari province Hakkari , Siirt Province Siirt provinces of Turkey before the genocides as well. Genocide Main Armenian Genocide Assyrian Genocide The Armenians and Assyrian people Assyrians both suffered a genocide within the Ottoman empir ...   more details



  1. Alexander Mackonochie

    s. Mackonochie s pastoral ministry was typical of the 19th century ritualism ritualist slum ... of the Blessed Sacrament Ritualism T. Pelham Dale Richard William Enraght Sidney Faithorn Green Arthur ... Young, 1890 Michael Reynolds, Martyr of Ritualism Father Mackonochie of St. Alban s, Holborn London ...   more details



  1. George David Cummins

    Image Cummins.jpg thumb right Bishop G. D. Cummins George David Cummins 1822 1876 was an United States American bishop and founder of the Reformed Episcopal Church . Life and career George David Cummins was born in Delaware on 11 December 1822. He graduated from Dickinson College in 1841, ref Dickinson College website, http chronicles.dickinson.edu encyclo c ed cumminsGD.html George David Cummins, Class of 1841 ref and entered the Methodism Methodist ministry. In 1845 Cummins took orders in the Episcopal Church United States Protestant Episcopal Church . After serving as rector of Episcopal parishes in Virginia , Washington, D.C. Washington , and Chicago , he was appointed Episcopal Diocese of Kentucky Assistant Bishop of Kentucky in 1866. ref name nie A staunch Evangelicalism Evangelical of Reformed churches Reformed doctrine, Cummins opposed the influences of Ritualism and the Anglo Catholicism Anglo Catholic Oxford movement . ref http books.google.com books?id BucTAAAAYAAJ Annie Darling Price, A History of the Formation and Growth of the Reformed Episcopal Church Philadelphia, J.M. Armstrong, 1902 , pp. 27ff. ref In 1873, Bishop Cummins was criticized for receiving Eucharist communion with ministers outside the Protestant Episcopal Church, and resigned his position. He then founded the Reformed Episcopal Church , of which he was the first presiding bishop, in New York City . ref name nie George David Cummins , in The New International Encyclopedia , 1917. ref Bishop Cummins died in Lutherville, Maryland 26 June 1876. ref http books.google.com books?id LS0EAAAAYAAJ&pg PA31&lpg PA31&dq george david cummins&source web&ots eR kR2HFZV&sig gC6XWAxnszobT20HbKGtyrdx Mg&hl en&sa X&oi book result&resnum 3&ct result Appleton s Cyclopedia of American Biography , George David Cummins . ref See also Reformed Episcopal Church Cummins Memorial Church References reflist Publications Alexandrine Macomb Cummins Mrs. G.D. Cummins , Memoir of George David Cummins New York, 1878 . Ava ...   more details



  1. Robert King (cricketer)

    Robert Jasper Stuart King , also known as Robert Stuart King May 10, 1909 &mdash May 11, 1992 , was an England English cricket er. Family King was born in Leigh on Sea to a family of Anglican clergymen . His father, Robert King footballer Canon Robert Stuart King was Rector of Saint Clement s Church, Leigh on Sea, from 1892 to 1950, ref http www.stclementschurch.org.uk ?page history Saint Clement s Church, Leigh on Sea ref and his grandfather, Rev. Walker King, had been Rector of the same church from 1859 to 1892. Among his other clerical relatives was his great uncle, Rt. Rev. Edward King English bishop Edward King , who was Bishop of Lincoln from 1885 to 1910 and was famously prosecuted for Ritualism ritualistic practices . Cricketing career and later life King had been captain of cricket at Felsted School . ref http archives.felsted.org of lookupOF index.php Felsted School Archives ref Later, he was a right handed batsman and leg break bowler who played for Essex County Cricket Club Essex . He represented Essex in one match during the 1928 season, scoring just three runs from the lower order, and conceding 20 runs from 7 overs in the ball in his two bowling spells. ref http cricketarchive.com Players 4 4928 4928.html Cricket Archive, Robert King ref King moved to South Africa in his early fifties, and umpired 29 first class cricket matches in total, mostly in the Currie Cup during the 1960s and 1970s. He moved back to England late in his life, after umpiring his final game at the age of 70, and died at Westcliff on Sea , Essex, the day after his 93rd birthday. References reflist Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME King, Robert ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION English cricketer DATE OF BIRTH 1909 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1992 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT King, Robert Category 1909 births Category 1992 deaths Category English cricketers Category English cricket umpires Category Essex cricketers Category People from Leigh on Sea Category People ...   more details



  1. Samuel Rickards

    Orphan date February 2009 Samuel Rickards 1796 1865 was a Church of England clergyman, opponent of the Oxford Movement , and writer of devotional literature . Biography Rickards, son of Thomas Rickards of Leicester , was born in 1796. He matriculated from Oriel College, Oxford , on 28 January 1813, graduating Bachelor of Arts B.A. in 1817 and Master of Arts Oxbridge and Dublin M.A. in 1820. He was a fellow there from 16 April 1819 to 6 October 1822, being contemporary with John Keble and other leaders of the Ritualism ritualistic movement. He was Newdigate prizeman, 1815, writing on the Temple of Theseus , and English essayist, 1819, writing on Characteristic Differences of Greek and Latin Poetry . His marriage in 1821 obliged him to surrender his fellowship and seek a living . From 1822 to 1832 he was the curate in charge of Ulcombe , Kent . John Henry Newman , while on a visit to him in September 1826, wrote his well known verses, Nature and Art , and, during a second visit in October 1827, Snapdragon, a Riddle . In 1832 Rickards was presented by a college friend, Henry Wilson, to the rectory of Stowlangtoft , Suffolk , where he passed the remainder of his life. At an early period he parted company with the Oxford movement , and wrote expostulatory and warning letters to Keble and Newman. He was nevertheless instrumental in the publication of Keble s The Christian Year , a duplicate manuscript copy of which was lent to him by Keble, and, when Keble s own copy was lost in Wales, it was Rickards copy that was printed. Rickards had a reputation as a sound theologian of high character, and many of his clerical brethren looked up to him for counsel and guidance in the controversies by which his times were marked. He died at Stowlangtoft rectory on 24 August 1865, leaving an only daughter, Lucy. Works Hymns for Private Devotion for the Sundays and Saints Days , 1825 The Christian Householder, or Guide to Family Prayer , 1830 Poems , 1870 posthumous numerous other small ...   more details



  1. William Henry Anderdon

    William Henry Anderdon 26 December 1816 28 July 1890 was an England English Jesuit and writer , born in London . ref CathEncy wstitle William Henry Anderdon ref After three years at King s College London , he matriculated at Oxford University Oxford , when about nineteen, and entered Balliol College . Soon after, he won a scholarship at University College, Oxford , and took a degree in 1840. He received Anglican ordination , became vicar of Withyam , and in 1846 of St. Margaret s Leicester . In 1850 he was received into the Catholic Church in Paris by Father Gustave Delacroix de Ravignan . Ordained at Oscott by Bishop Ullathorne in 1853, he was appointed a lecturer at Ushaw College and afterwards a preacher and confessor at University Church in Dublin . During his stay in Ireland the Franciscan convent of Drumshambo was founded, mainly through his efforts. In 1856, he was called to London by his uncle, Cardinal Henry Edward Manning , whose secretary he remained until he joined the Jesuits in 1872. From 1875 to 1889 he lived in Manchester , working as preacher, spiritual guide, and writer. Father Anderdon began his literary apostolate by writing Catholic tales Bonneval, the Story of the Fronde 1857 Owen Evans, the Catholic Crusoe 1862 Afternoons with the Saints 1863 , In the Snow, Tales of Mt. St. Bernard 1866 . All these stories, save the first, went through nine or ten editions, and were translated into German language German and French language French . Other valuable works from his pen are Fasti Apostolici 1882 , Evening with the Saints 1883 and Britain s Early Faith 1887 . His method in his writings was to understand rather than to exaggerate. Among his works, the best known are Is Ritualism Honest? , Controversial Papers 1878 , Luther s Words and the Word of God 8th thousand, 1883 , Luther at Table , What sort of man was Luther? 13th thousand, 1883 . What do Catholics Really Believe? , Confession to a Priest 1881 . His newspaper work displayed a fine sense of i ...   more details



  1. Religious clothing

    Religious clothing is dress which has a special significance to a faith group . Christianity main Vestments Clerical clothing File Giacomo di Chirico Ministrant.jpg thumb right 180px Altar server Il ministrante , by Giacomo di Chirico 1844 1883 . File Red String.jpg thumb right 180px Red string Kabbalah Vestments are liturgy liturgical garments and articles associated primarily with the Christianity Christian religions, especially the Latin Rite and other Roman Catholic s, Eastern Orthodox , Anglicans , Methodists , and Lutheran Churches. Other groups also make use of vestments, but this was a point of vestments controversy controversy in the Protestant Reformation and sometimes since notably during the Ritualism Ritualist controversies in England in the 19th century. Clerical clothing is non Liturgy liturgical clothing worn exclusively by clergy . It is distinct from vestment s in that it is not reserved specifically for services. Ecumenicism Deleted image removed Image Peacemalas.JPG thumb right Peace Mala Bracelets main Peace Mala A Peace Mala is a symbolic bracelet used to promote the message of the Ethic of reciprocity Golden Rule of mutual respect recognised by many spiritual paths. It consists of 16 beads, forming a double rainbow, which represent Christianity , Buddhism , Sikhism , Islam , Judaism , Bah Faith Bah , International Society for Krishna Consciousness ISKCON , Zoroastrianism , Folk religion Tribal and Native Religions , Jainism , Earth religion Earth Religions , Taoism , Hinduism and B n Yungdrung B n Yungdrung B n , with the central white bead representing the wearer and whatever path they may follow. ref name bbcbracelets Judaism Jewish mysticism main Red string Kabbalah Wearing a thin red string Kabbalah red string as a type of Amulet talisman is a custom, popularly thought to be associated with Judaism s Kabbalah , in order to ward off misfortune brought about by an evil eye in Hebrew . In Yiddish the red string is called a roite ...   more details



  1. Central Churchmanship

    Portal Anglicanism refimprove date April 2012 Central Churchmanship describes those who adhere to the middle way in the Church of England , being neither markedly High Church Anglo catholic nor Low Church in their liturgical preferences. The term is used much less frequently than some others. Cyril Garbett uses it along with Anglo catholic, Liberal and Evangelical as a label for schools within the Church of England, but thirteen pages later states blockquote Within the Anglican Church are Anglo Catholics, Evangelicals, Liberals and the great mass of English Churchmen who are are content to describe themselves as Churchmen without any further label. small harvcol Garbett p 13 & 26 small blockquote It came into use in the late nineteenth century when traditional High Churchmen decided to distance themselves from Anglo Catholicism and Ritualism small harvcol Chadwick p 357 small . Central Churchmen value both the official liturgies of the Church of England , which they clothe in a moderate amount of ceremonial and a characteristically Anglican way of doing theology that is rooted in the Bible, and the Councils and Creeds of the Early Church, whilst acknowledging the contribution made by the English Reformation. In their theological thinking they steer a middle course between the Anglo Catholic and Evangelical parties, both of which are perceived as being extreme by Central Churchmen. Perhaps the best known exponent of the Central Churchman position in the twentieth century was Geoffrey Francis Fisher Archishop of Canterbury 1945 61. Many other well known English bishops, including Robert Stopford , Henry Campbell , and Mervyn Haigh also favoured a Central Churchmanship approach, as a way of defusing tensions within their dioceses, and as a way of promoting a brand image for the Church of England. Since the 1970s Central Churchmanship as a distinct school of thought and practice within the Church of England has been in decline. This is mainly due dubious date March 2012 ...   more details



  1. Ashurst Gilbert

    Ashurst Turner Gilbert 1786 1870 was an England English churchman and academic, Principal academia Principal of Brasenose College, Oxford from 1822 and bishop of Chichester . Life The son of Thomas Gilbert of Ratcliffe , Buckinghamshire , a captain in the Royal Marines , by Elizabeth, daughter of William Long Nathaniel Hutton, rector of Maids Moreton , Buckinghamshire, was born near Burnham Beeches , Buckinghamshire, 14 May 1786, and educated at Manchester Grammar School from 1800. He was nominated to a school exhibition, and matriculated at Brasenose College, Oxford , on 30 May 1805. At the Michaelmas examination of 1808 he was placed in the first class in literis humanioribus , one of his four companions being Robert Peel . He graduated B.A. 16 January 1809, and succeeded to one of Hulme s exhibitions on 8 March following. Having been elected to a fellowship, he proceeded M. A. 1811, and Bachelor of Divinity B.D. 1819. He was actively engaged for many years as a college tutor, and in 1816 18 was a public examiner. On the death of Frodsham Hodson in 1822, he was elected Principal of Brasenose on 2 February, and took his D.D. degree on 30 May. From 1836 to 1840 he was Chancellor education Vice Chancellor of Oxford University. On the death of Philip Shuttleworth he was nominated to the Diocese bishopric of Chichester , 24 January 1842, and consecrated at Lambeth Palace on 27 February. Gilbert took much interest in Lancing College and other educational institutions. Of high church opinions himself, he was averse to Catholic ceremonials. He took proceedings in the 1850s against John Mason Neale , Warden of Sackville College and on 14 October 1868 he interdicted John Purchas from ritualism in services at St. James s Chapel, Brighton. This latter case led to much litigation, and eighteen works were printed in connection with the matter. Gilbert died of paralysis at the palace, Chichester, on 21 February 1870, and was buried in Westhampnett Church, Sussex , on 25 February ...   more details



  1. Robert Reid Kalley

    File Kalley.jpg thumb upright Robert Reid Kalley. Robert Reid Kalley 8 September 1809 17 January 1888 was a Scotland Scottish physician and Presbyterian missionary notable for his efforts to spread Presbyterian views in Portuguese language Portuguese speaking territories and as the introducer of Protestantism in Portugal at a time when the only religion allowed to the Portuguese citizens was Roman Catholicism . Biography Kalley first went to Madeira Island in 1838 with his wife, who was ill with tuberculosis. Impressed with the poverty, iliteracy and ignorance of the Madeirans, Kalley exercised Medicine gratituously and decided to teach people to read and to write. He also started to preach, importing translated versions of the Bible in Portuguese from England. He founded a small hospital and several elementary schools. The Catholic Church started to look with worry on these iniciatives, since proselytism was forbidden by the Portuguese Constitutional Chart of 1826 and the Bishop of Funchal forbade Kalley s religious lectures in 1841. In 1843, the Bibles he had distributed in Madeira were forbidden, like the meetings at his home. On 8 May 1845 he founded the first Presbyterian Church of Portugal, in Funchal, ordaining presbyters and diacons, and celebrating the Supper of the Lord for 61 Madeiran converts. Since Protestantism wasn t allowed for Portuguese citizens, he faced charges of blasphemy and heresy and all the schools he had founded were closed in 1846. Some converts had to face charges of heresy, then still punished by the death penalty. Kalley sought refuge at the house of the British Counsul and had to leave the island in 1846 in disguise, heading for the United States. ref name Yates 1999, p. 144. Yates, Nigel 1999 . Anglican Ritualism in Victorian Britain, 1830 1910 . Oxford Oxford University Press. p. 144. ISBN 0198269897, ISBN 9780198269892. ref Kalley later travelled to Brazil , in 1854, where he worked as a teacher and pastor in Rio de Janeiro and Per ...   more details



  1. List of people from Lambeth

    Among those who were born in the London Borough of Lambeth , or have dwelt within the borders of the modern borough are alphabetical order Rob Lord musician composer of music for films, TV and computer games Scott Parker footballer Scott Parker professional football soccer footballer for West Ham United FC , born in Lambeth Jamal Campbell Ryce professional football soccer footballer for Barnsley FC , born in Lambeth William Blake religious visionary, poet and artist Carl McCoy frontman for gothic rock band Fields of the Nephilim , born here in 1963 Arthur Tooth Ritualism ritualist clergyman in the Church of England , curate of St. Mary s Lambeth in 1863 Keep the Aspidistra Flying Gordon Comstock fictional Poet from George Orwell George Orwell s book Keep the Aspidistra Flying Akai Osei Street Dancer winner of Got To Dance was born in Lambeth Edward Thomas poet Edward Thomas was born in Lambeth. F. B. Meyer pastored Christ Church, Lambeth Christ Church in Lambeth and Christopher Newman Hall founded the Christ Church, Lambeth Christ Church complex in Lambeth of which only the Lincoln Memorial Tower survives today William Chester Minor was a major contributor to the Oxford English Dictionary . It was while living at Lambeth that Minor murdered George Merrett, for which crime he was found criminally insane and confined for the rest of his life at Broadmoor Hospital Broadmoor . ref The Professor and the Madman A Tale of Murder, Insanity, and the Making of the Oxford English Dictionary , Simon Winchester, HarperPerennial, New York, 1998, trade paperback, ISBN. The original British edition has the title The Surgeon of Crowthorne , ISBN. ref Ken Livingstone , Former London Mayor, was born in Lambeth in 1945. John Doulton and Sir Henry Doulton founded their famous pottery company Royal Doulton in Lambeth. Arthur Sullivan Sir Arthur Sullivan composer of the Gilbert and Sullivan operas was born in Lambeth in 1842. Charlie Chaplin , the famous film actor and comedian, spent his ...   more details



  1. Swami Ashokananda

    s Edge Ritualism ITs place in Spiritual Life When the heart cries for God God and God men in Vedanta ...   more details



  1. Kariyan

    Kariyan or Karian is village and a Gram panchayat panchayat in Samastipur district Samastipur district in the India n state of Bihar . Location About 16 km northeast of the Rosera ghat railway station of Northeastern Railways the modern village of Karian is situated on a mound, 20 ft high from the surrounding ground level and about 96 acres in area. Local traditions associate this village to be the birthplace of Udayanacharya, a Maithil Brahmin and great philosopher of ancient times who is also supposed to be an incarnation of Lord Vishnu. Extensive excavations have revealed at this village antiques of as back as of 2nd century B.C. and afterwards from 6th century AD to post 1200 A.D.This village is the birthplace of philosopher and scholar Udayana alias Udyanacharya This village is called the karmbhoomi of famous udyana who was a great philosopher and shastarthi in the time of kumarilbhatta . It is said that both of udayanacharya and kumarilbhatta stop the expansion of Buddhism s in eastern India. Udayanaachaarya Udayanacharya or Udayakara, a Brahmana logician of Mithila wrote a sub gloss on Vachaspati s work called the Nyaya vaartika taatparya tiikaa parishuddhi. He wrote several other works such as the Kusumanjali , Atma tattva viveka, Kiranaavali and Nyaya parishishhta also called Bodha siddhi or Bodha shuddhi . UdayanAchArya a tArkika n andKumarilabhatta a mImAmsaka n . To the mImAmsakA s the Buddhist s summary rejection of Vedic ritualismwas the proverbial red rag waved under the nose of a raging bull Kumarilabhatta, it can be seen, has written copiously criticising the Buddhist s distaste for Vedic ritualism. He and UdayanAchArya were chiefly responsible for the failure of Buddhism to acquire a large following in the country. Scholars mention here the texts of tarkapAdam ofKumarilabhatta and the bauddhadhikAram by UdayanAchAryA . Demographics According to cencus 2001,The total population of the village is 18,086. The literacy rate is 41 . The female literacy ...   more details



  1. Low church

    by many of the high church clergy led to the designation ritualism ritualist being applied to them ... Ritualism References reflist Further reading Cross, F. L. ed. 1957 The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian ...   more details



  1. James Fraser (bishop)

    much. References Reflist Bibliography Bentley, J. 1987 Ritualism and Politics in Victorian Britain ... Bishop of Manchester A Memoir, 1818 1885 cite book title Anglican Ritualism in Victorian Britain, 1830 ...   more details



  1. W. J. E. Bennett

    Other people2 William Bennett disambiguation William James Early Bennett 1804 1886 was an Anglican priest . Bennett is celebrated for having provoked the decision that the doctrine of the Real Presence is a dogma not inconsistent with the creed of the Church of England . This followed the publication of his pamphlet A Plea for Toleration in the Church of England 1867 in the form of a letter to Edward Pusey . Bennett was born at City of Halifax Halifax, Nova Scotia , on 15 November 1804, the eldest son of Major William Bennett, Royal Engineers R E and of Mary, daughter of James Early. He was educated at Westminster School and Christ Church, Oxford Bachelor of Arts BA , 1827, Master of Arts Oxbridge and Dublin MA , 1829 . He was married in 1828 to Mary Concetta Franklin, before being ordained a priest on 6 June 1830 by the Bishop of London . ref name fb http anglicanhistory.org england bennett bio F. Bennett, The Story of W. J. E. Bennett, Founder of S. Barnabas , Pimlico and Vicar of Froome Selwood. 1909 , retrieved 24 November 2011 ref Bennett initially served in 1830 as curate of Oxford Chapel later called St. Peter s, Vere Street , London , but he soon moved to curacies at Holy Trinity Church Marylebone 1830 1833 , followed by All Souls Church, Langham Place 1833 1838 . For a while he held this latter post alongside the Perpetual curacy of Portman Chapel, Portman Square 1836 1841 . His post was subsequently redesignated as Perpetual curate of St Paul s Church, Knightsbridge and St Barnabas, Pimlico . He supervised the completion of the former church and was effectively the founder of the latter. At the same time he conceived the idea of establishing a college there to accommodate the priests and its choristers. In 1851 he felt obliged to resign these posts following doctrinal complaints and a theological dispute with his bishop , Charles Blomfield after being accused of ritualism . Finally in 1852 he was appointed as Vicar of Frome or Frome Selwood ref Crockford s ...   more details



  1. James DeKoven

    Image James DeKoven.gif thumb 200px James DeKoven James DeKoven September 19, 1831 March 22, 1879 was a priest, an educator and a leader of the Oxford Movement in the Episcopal Church United States Episcopal Church . DeKoven was born in Middletown, Connecticut and educated at Columbia College, Columbia University Columbia College . In 1851 he was admitted to General Theological Seminary and was ordained as a deacon in 1854 in Middletown. He accepted a teaching position at Nashotah House in Wisconsin and became rector of the nearby St. John Chrysostom Church Delafield, Wisconsin St. John Chrysostom parish in Delafield . It was there that he was ordained as a priest by Bishop Jackson Kemper . ref William Pope, The Life of Reverend James De Koven , pp. 9 13 ref In 1859 he became the warden of Racine College and continued to be at the center of that school for the rest of his life. He led the cause for ritualism at the National Conventions in 1871 and 1874. DeKoven was several times nominated and even elected as a bishop, but was never ordained to the episcopate. He was nominated or elected as bishop of Massachusetts 1873 , Wisconsin 1874 , Fond Du Lac 1875 , and Illinois 1875 . In the Illinois election he was elected by the clergy and the laity, but the standing committee refused to accept his election. The reason given by the standing committee was his doctrine on the Holy Eucharist. An open letter written in the Milwaukee paper on January 14, 1874 was at least partly responsible for his Eucharistic doctrine being questioned. The signers of this letter included three teachers from Nashotah House . ref The Life of Reverend James De Koven by William Cox Pope, pp. 44 63 ref ref The Catholic Movement in the American Episcopal Church by George DeMille pp 92 94 ref He also addressed the Church Congress a series of national meetings to cast a vision for the Episcopal Church in 1876. ref Robert Prichard, A History of the Episcopal Church , p. 184 ref After suffering a fall on ...   more details



  1. Eielsen Synod

    lutheranism The Eielsen Synod originally named the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America was a Lutheran church body . It was founded in 1846 at Jefferson Prairie Settlement , Wisconsin by a group of Haugean Haugean Lutherans led by Elling Eielsen . Background There were church splits in 1848, 1856 and a large split in 1876. In 1876 the synod founded by Eielsen numbered 24 pastors, 59 congregations, and 7,500 members. That year a split occurred and many of the clergymen and congregations left the Eielsen Synod and organized the Hauge Synod . Elling Eielsen and his supporters continued the synod under the 1846 church constitution in Jackson, Minnesota Jackson , Minnesota . The Eielsen Synod emphasized the importance of repentance, conversion and lay preaching. It opposed ritualism, formal worship, clerical vestments, and clerical authority.The Eielsen Synod had 1,500 members in ten churches by 1953. In 1971, it had 75 members scattered among churches in French Lake Township, Minnesota French Lake and Jackson, Minnesota , Centerville, South Dakota , Taylor, Wisconsin Taylor and Lodi, Wisconsin . ref http www.adherents.com Na Na 281.html Major Branches of Religions Ranked by Number of Adherents Adherents.com ref In 1985, there were approximately 50 members at just three churches Stall Norwegian Church in Jackson, Minnesota Bethania Lutheran Lodi Eau Claire WI and Immanuel in French Lake Township, Wright County, Minnesota French Lake, Minnesota . The synod is still actively seeking ordained men following the Original Lutheran Constitution to assist w spreading the Gospel of Jesus. As of 2007, Immanuel Lutheran Church is one of two churches still active that are affiliated with the Eielsen Synod. Immanuel is now an independent Lutheran church. Please note the Eielson Synod is still in existence with a minister ordained on May 10, 2008 by the presiding president of Bethania ELCA Eielson Church. Martin Leroy Bystol was the active President of such ministry of the Eielsen S ...   more details



  1. Frederick George Lee

    Frederick George Lee b. 6 January 1832 in Thame , Oxfordshire d. 22 January 1902 at Lambeth, London was a priest of the Church of England , author, and founder of the Order of Corporate Reunion . Life Lee was trained in Ripon College Cuddesdon Cuddesdon Theological College and ordained to priesthood in 1856 by the Bishop of Oxford, Samuel Wilberforce . Lee became, together with Ambrose de Lisle and others, a co founder of the Association for Promoting the Union of Christendom APUC . In Aberdeen he had difficulties with the bishop concerning his Ritualism ritualistic practices and later became vicar of All Saints Lambeth, London. ref Oxford Dictionary of National Biography ref Lee founded a clandestine Anglo Papalism Anglo Papalist society, the Order of Corporate Reunion , to continue the work of the APUC and to restore an apostolic succession recognised by the Roman Catholic Church , through reordinations, as a means for reunion. Lee is believed to have been secretly consecrated as a bishop by some Roman Catholic prelates whose names were kept secret. Later, however, Lee became disillusioned and recognized that he had made a mistake. ref Henry R.T. Brandreth Dr Lee of Lambeth A Chapter in Parenthesis in the History of the Oxford Movement , London, 1951. ref Lee was received into the Roman Catholic Church on 11 December 1901, shortly before his death. Works Poems, 1850, 1854 2nd ed. Clinton Maynard, 1862 The Communion Office of the Church of Scotland Episcopal Church of Scotland edit. , 1862 Prayers for the Reunion of Christendom edit. , 1863 Sermons on the Reunion of Christendom edit. , 1864 Directorium Anglicanum , 1865 2nd ed. , 1878 4th ed. Franciscus a Sancta Clara Christopher Davenport , http www.archive.org details paraphrasticaex00clargoog Paraphrastica expositio articulorum Confessionis Anglicanae edit. , 1865 Manual of Devotions for the Blessed Sacrament, 1866, 1869 2nd ed. Notitia Liturgica, 1866 http www.archive.org details kingshighwayand00leegoog The Ki ...   more details



  1. Vladimir Sergeyevich Muravyov

    . He is also a prominent propagator of Old Ritualism , a Russian Orthodox schismatic community. See ...   more details




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