Tracts for the Times explained

The Tracts for the Times were a series of 90 theological publications, varying in length from a few pages to book-length, produced by members of the English Oxford Movement, an Anglo-Catholic revival group, from 1833 to 1841. There were about a dozen authors, including Oxford Movement leaders John Keble, John Henry Newman and Edward Bouverie Pusey, with Newman taking the initiative in the series, and making the largest contribution. With the wide distribution associated with the tract form, and a price in pennies, the Tracts succeeded in drawing attention to the views of the Oxford Movement on points of doctrine, but also to its overall approach, to the extent that Tractarian became a synonym for supporter of the movement.

Background

On 14 July 1833, Keble preached at St Mary's an assize sermon on "National Apostasy", which Newman afterwards regarded as the inauguration of the Oxford Movement. In the words of Richard William Church, it was "Keble who inspired, Froude who gave the impetus, and Newman who took up the work"; but the first organisation of it was due to Hugh James Rose, editor of the British Magazine, who has been styled "the Cambridge originator of the Oxford Movement". Rose met Oxford Movement figures on a visit to Oxford looking for magazine contributors, and it was in his rectory house at Hadleigh, Suffolk, that a meeting of High Church clergy was held over 25–26 July (Newman was not present, but Hurrell Froude, Arthur Philip Perceval, and William Palmer had gone to visit Rose),[1] at which it was resolved to fight for "the apostolical succession and the integrity of the Prayer Book."

Publication

Many of the tracts were labelled, indicating their intended audience: Ad Clerum (to the clergy), Ad Populum (to the people), or Ad Scholas (to scholars). The first 20 tracts appeared in 1833, with 30 more in 1834. After that the pace slowed, but the later contributions were more substantive on doctrinal matters. Initially these publications were anonymous, pseudonymous, or reprints from theologians of previous centuries. The authorship details of the tracts were recovered by later scholars of the Oxford Movement, with some tentative accounts of drafting. Through Francis Rivington, the tracts were published by the Rivington house in London, and were simultaneously published by J H Parker in Oxford.[2]

Opposition

The Tracts also provoked a secondary literature from opponents. Significant replies came from evangelicals, including that of William Goode in Tract XC Historically Refuted (1845) and Isaac Taylor.[3] The term "Tractarian" applied to followers of Keble, Pusey and Newman (the Oxford Movement) was used by 1839, in sermons by Christopher Benson.[4]

The series was brought to an end by the intervention of Richard Bagot, Bishop of Oxford, not unsympathetic to the Tractarians,[5] after the appearance of Newman's Tract 90, which suggested a heterodox reading of the Thirty-Nine Articles of the Church of England, and caused controversy in the University.

Literature

William Palmer in 1843 published A Narrative of Events Connected with the Publication of the Tracts for the Times, dedicated to Bagot.[6] In the Preface he is concerned with arguing against the point of view that the Tracts were an attempt to introduce Roman Catholic beliefs; to place the Tracts in the context set up by the 1833 formation of the Association of Friends of the Church (set up by Hugh James Rose, Hurrell Froude and Palmer himself) that was the initial step in the Oxford Movement; and to distance his views from the editorial line of the British Critic. This work then provoked a major statement of his position by William George Ward.[7]

Table of the Tracts

NumberDateTitleAuthorComment
1data-sort-value="9 September 1833"9 September 1833[8] Thoughts on the Ministerial Commission, respectfully addressed to the clergy[9] data-sort-value="Newman, John Henry"John Henry Newman
29 September 1833data-sort-value="Catholic Church"The Catholic Churchdata-sort-value="Newman, John Henry"Newman
39 September 1833Thoughts respectfully addressed to the Clergy on alterations in the Liturgy. The Burial Service. The Principle of Unity.[10] data-sort-value="Newman, John Henry"Newman
421 September 1833Adherence to the Apostolical Succession the safest course. On Alterations in the Prayer-book.[11] data-sort-value="Keble, John"John Keble
518 October 1833data-sort-value="short address to his Brethren on the Nature and Constitution of the Church of Christ, and of the Branch of it established in England"A short address to his Brethren on the Nature and Constitution of the Church of Christ, and of the Branch of it established in England. By a Layman.data-sort-value="Bowden, John William"John William Bowden
629 October 1833data-sort-value="Present Obligation of Primitive Practice. A Sin of the Church"The Present Obligation of Primitive Practice. A Sin of the Church.[12] data-sort-value="Newman, John Henry"NewmanAd Populum
729 October 1833data-sort-value="Episcopal Church Apostolical"The Episcopal Church Apostolical[13] data-sort-value="Newman, John Henry"Newman
831 October 1833data-sort-value="Gospel a Law of Liberty"The Gospel a Law of Liberty[14] data-sort-value="Newman, John Henry; Froude, Hurrel"Attributed to Newman. Possibly Hurrell Froude (ODNB)
931 October 1833data-sort-value="Shortening the Church Service"On Shortening the Church Servicedata-sort-value="Froude, Hurrell"Hurrell Froude
104 November 1833Heads of a Week-day lecture, delivered to a country congregation in -------shire.data-sort-value="Newman, John Henry"Newman
1111 November 1833data-sort-value="Visible Church"The Visible Churchdata-sort-value="Newman, John Henry"Newman
124 December 1833Bishops, Priests, and Deacons. Richard Nelson. No. 1data-sort-value="Keble, Thomas"Thomas Keble (as Richard Nelson)"Richard Nelson" was a pseudonym.
135 December 1833Sunday Lessons. The Principle of Selection.data-sort-value="Keble, John"John Keble
1412 December 1833data-sort-value="Ember Days"The Ember Days.data-sort-value="Menzies, Alfred"Alfred MenziesAd Populum. Menzies was a Fellow of Trinity College, Oxford.[15] Graduating B.A. in 1832, he was ordained deacon and appointed Curate of Godalming in 1834, and ordained as priest in 1835.[16] He died in Torquay, aged 26, on 24 February 1836.[17]
1513 December 1833data-sort-value="Apostolical Succession in the English Church"On the Apostolical Succession in the English Church.data-sort-value="Palmer, William; Newman, John Henry"William Palmer, completed by Newman
1617 December 1833Advent.data-sort-value="Harrison, Benjamin"Benjamin Harrison
1720 December 1833data-sort-value="Ministerial Commission, a Trust from Christ for the Benefit of His People"The Ministerial Commission, a Trust from Christ for the Benefit of His People.data-sort-value="Harrison, Benjamin"Benjamin Harrison
1821 December 1833Thoughts on the Benefits of the System of Fasting Enjoined by Our Church.data-sort-value="Pusey, Edward"Edward PuseyPusey published this tract under his initials.[18]
1923 December 1833data-sort-value="arguing concerning the Apostolical Succession. On Reluctance to confess the Apostolical Succession"On arguing concerning the Apostolical Succession. On Reluctance to confess the Apostolical Succession.data-sort-value="Newman, John Henry"Newman
2024 December 1833data-sort-value="Visible Church, Letter 2"The Visible Church. Letter III.data-sort-value="Newman, John Henry"NewmanAd Scholas.
211 January 1834Mortification of the Flesh a Scripture duty.data-sort-value="Newman, John Henry"NewmanAd Populum. Newman gave initials on this tract, which supported Pusey's Tract 18.
226 January 1834data-sort-value="Athanasian Creed"The Athanasian Creed. Richard Nelson. No. II.data-sort-value="Keble, Thomas"Thomas Keble (as Richard Nelson)
236 January 1834data-sort-value="Faith and Obedience of Churchmen, the Strength of the Church"The Faith and Obedience of Churchmen, the Strength of the Church.data-sort-value="Perceval, Arthur Philip"Arthur Philip Perceval
2425 January 1834data-sort-value="Scripture View of the Apostolical Commission"The Scripture View of the Apostolical Commission.data-sort-value="Harrison, Benjamin"Benjamin Harrison
2525 January 1834data-sort-value="great Necessity and Advantage of Public Prayer"The great Necessity and Advantage of Public Prayer.data-sort-value="Beveridge, William"Reprint, extracted from William Beveridge's sermon.Ad Populum.
262 February 1834data-sort-value="Necessity and Advantage of Frequent Communion"The Necessity and Advantage of Frequent Communion.data-sort-value="Beveridge, William"Reprint, extracted from William Beveridge's sermon.
2724 February 1834data-sort-value="History of Popish Transubstantiation"The History of Popish Transubstantiation.data-sort-value="Cosin, John"Reprint, by John Cosin.
2825 March 1834data-sort-value="History of Popish Transubstantiation, concluded", concluded.
2925 March 1834Christian Liberty; Or, Why Should We Belong to the Church of England? By a Layman.data-sort-value="Bowden, John William"John William Bowden
3025 March 1834data-sort-value="Christian Liberty; Or, Why Should We Belong to the Church of England? By a Layman, continued" continued.data-sort-value="Bowden, John William"John William Bowden
3125 April 1834data-sort-value="Reformed Church"The Reformed Church.data-sort-value="Newman, John Henry"NewmanAd Clerum.
3225 April 1834data-sort-value="Standing Ordinances of Religion"On the Standing Ordinances of Religion.data-sort-value="Eden, Charles Page"Charles Page Eden (ODNB)
331 May 1834Primitive Episcopacy.data-sort-value="Newman, John Henry"NewmanAd Scholas.
348 May 1834Rites and Customs of the Church.data-sort-value="Newman, John Henry"NewmanAd Scholas.
358 May 1834data-sort-value="People's Interest in Their Minister's Commission"The People's Interest in Their Minister's Commission.data-sort-value="Perceval, Arthur Philip"Arthur Philip Perceval
3611 June 1834Account of Religious Sects at Present Existing in England.data-sort-value="Perceval, Arthur Philip"Arthur Philip Perceval
3724 June 1834Bishop Wilson's Form of Excommunication.data-sort-value="Wilson, Thomas"Reprint, by Thomas WilsonAd Populum.
3825 June 1834Via Media. No. I.data-sort-value="Newman, John Henry"NewmanAd Scholas. Later as a Catholic, in his 1845 Essay on the Development of Christian Doctrine (the Retractation of Anti-Catholic Statements), Newman recalled his language in this tract: In 1834 I also used, of certain doctrines of the Church of Rome, the epithets 'unscriptural,' 'profane,' 'impious,' 'bold,' 'unwarranted,' 'blasphemous,' 'gross,' 'monstrous,' 'cruel,' 'administering deceitful comfort,' and 'unauthorised,' in Tract 38. I do not mean to say that I had not a definite meaning in every one of those epithets, or that I did not weigh them before I used them.[19]
3925 June 1834Bishop Wilson's Form of Receiving Penitents.data-sort-value="Wilson, Thomas"Reprint, by Thomas WilsonAd Populum.
4025 June 1834data-sort-value="Baptism"Baptism. Richard Nelson III.data-sort-value="Keble, John"John Keble (as Richard Nelson)
4124 August 1834Via Media. No. II.data-sort-value="Newman, John Henry"NewmanAd Scholas.
4224 August 1834Bishop Wilson's Meditations on his Sacred Office. No. I, Sunday.data-sort-value="Wilson, Thomas"Reprint, by Thomas WilsonAd Populum.
4321 September 1834Length of the Public Service. Richard Nelson. No. IV.data-sort-value="Keble, Thomas"Thomas Keble (as Richard Nelson)Ad Populum.
4428 September 1834Bishop Wilson's Meditations on his Sacred Office. No. II, Monday.data-sort-value="Wilson, Thomas"Reprint, by Thomas WilsonAd Populum.
4518 October 1834data-sort-value="Grounds of our Faith"The Grounds of our Faith.data-sort-value="Newman, John Henry"NewmanAd Clerum.
4628 October 1834Bishop Wilson's Meditations on his Sacred Office. No. III, Tuesday.data-sort-value="Wilson, Thomas"Reprint, by Thomas WilsonAd Populum.
471 November 1834data-sort-value="Visible Church, Letter 4"The Visible Church. Letter IV.data-sort-value="Newman, John Henry"NewmanAd Clerum.
4830 November 1834Bishop Wilson's Meditations on his Sacred Office. No. IV, Wednesday.data-sort-value="Wilson, Thomas"Reprint, by Thomas WilsonAd Populum.
4925 December 1834data-sort-value="Kingdom of Heaven"The Kingdom of Heaven.data-sort-value="Harrison, Benjamin"Benjamin Harrison
5026 December 1834Bishop Wilson's Meditations on his Sacred Office. No. IV, Wednesday (continued).data-sort-value="Wilson, Thomas"Reprint, by Thomas WilsonAd Populum.
516 January 1835data-sort-value="Dissent without Reason in Conscience"On Dissent without Reason in Conscience.data-sort-value="Wilson, Robert F."Robert F. Wilson
52[Undated]Sermons for Saints' Days and Holidays. No. 1, St. Matthias.data-sort-value="Keble, John"John Keble
5324 February 1835Bishop Wilson's Meditations on his Sacred Office. No. V, Thursday.data-sort-value="Wilson, Thomas"Reprint, by Thomas WilsonAd Populum
542 February 1835Sermons for Saints' Days and Holidays. No. 2, The Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary.data-sort-value="Keble, John"John Keble
5525 March 1835Bishop Wilson's Meditations on his Sacred Office. No. V, Thursday (continued)data-sort-value="Wilson, Thomas"Reprint, by Thomas WilsonAd Populum
5625 March 1835Holy Days observed in the English Church.data-sort-value="Bowden, John William"John William BowdenAd Populum
5725 March 1835Sermons on Saints' Days. No. 3, St Mark's Day.data-sort-value="Keble, John"John KebleAd Populum
5819 April 1835data-sort-value="Church as viewed by Faith and by the World"On the Church as viewed by Faith and by the World.data-sort-value="Bowden, John William"John William BowdenAd Populum
5925 April 1835data-sort-value="position of the Church of Christ in England, relatively to the State and the Nation"The position of the Church of Christ in England, relatively to the State and the Nation.data-sort-value="Froude, Hurrell"Hurrell FroudeAd Clerum
6025 March 1835Sermons for Saints' Days and Holidays. No. 4. St. Philip and St. James.data-sort-value="Keble, John"John KebleAd Populum
611 May 1835data-sort-value="Catholic Church a Witness against Illiberality"The Catholic Church a Witness against Illiberality.data-sort-value="Buller, Antony"Antony Buller
621 May 1835Bishop Wilson's Meditations on his Sacred Office. No. V, Thursday (continued)data-sort-value="Wilson, Thomas"Reprint, by Thomas WilsonAd Populum
631 May 1835data-sort-value="Antiquity of the existing Liturgies"The Antiquity of the existing Liturgies.data-sort-value="Froude, Hurrell"Hurrell FroudeAd Clerum
6411 June 1835Bishop Bull on the Ancient Liturgies.data-sort-value="Bull, George"Reprint, by George BullAd Populum
6528 June 1835Bishop Wilson's Meditations on his Sacred Office. No. VI, Friday (abridged).data-sort-value="Wilson, Thomas"Reprint, by Thomas WilsonAd Populum. Later editions printed the work in full.
6613 April 1835data-sort-value="Benefits of the System of Fasting Prescribed by Our Church"On the Benefits of the System of Fasting Prescribed by Our Church. Supplement to Tract XVIIIdata-sort-value="Pusey, Edward"Edward Pusey
6724 August 1835Scriptural Views of Holy Baptism.data-sort-value="Pusey, Edward"Edward PuseyAd Clerum. "In these [67, 68, 69] Pusey maintained that regeneration is connected with baptism both in scripture and in the writings of the early church. A second edition of the first of the three tracts appeared in 1839; in it the argument was entirely confined to scripture, but was expanded from forty-nine to four hundred pages."[20]
6829 September 1835Scriptural views of Holy Baptism (continued).data-sort-value="Pusey, Edward"Edward PuseyAd Clerum
6918 October 1835Scriptural Views of Holy Baptism (concluded).data-sort-value="Pusey, Edward"Edward PuseyAd Clerum
7028 October 1835Bishop Wilson's Meditations on his Sacred Office. No. VII, Saturday (abridged).data-sort-value="Wilson, Thomas"Reprint, by Thomas WilsonAd Populum
711 January 1836data-sort-value="Controversy with the Romanists"On the Controversy with the Romanists (No. I, Against Romanism).data-sort-value="Newman, John Henry"NewmanAd Clerum
726 January 1836Archbishop Ussher on Prayers for the Dead (No. II, Against Romanism).data-sort-value="Ussher, James"Reprint, by James Ussher
732 February 1836data-sort-value="Introduction of Rationalistic Principles into Religion"On the Introduction of Rationalistic Principles into Religion.data-sort-value="Newman, John Henry"NewmanAd Scholas. Against Thomas Erskine of Linlathen and Jacob Abbott.[21]
7425 April 1836Catena Patrum No. I. Testimony of Writers in the later English Church to the Doctrine of the Apostolical Succession[22] data-sort-value="Newman, John Henry"NewmanAd Populum. "It contains extracts from the writings of forty-three English theologians, the first being Bilson who died in 1616, and the last Mant who died in 1848. In the entire list there are but four Archbishops of Canterbury (Bancroft, Laud, Wake and Potter). There are very many non-jurors, some very distinguished typical Anglicans and others of no great note or weight."[23] They were: Thomas Bilson; Richard Hooker; Richard Bancroft; Lancelot Andrewes; Joseph Hall; William Laud; John Bramhall; Joseph Mede; Francis Mason; Robert Sanderson; Henry Hammond; Jeremy Taylor; Peter Heylin; Richard Allestree; John Pearson; John Fell; George Bull; Edward Stillingfleet; Thomas Ken; William Beveridge; John Sharp; John Scott; William Wake; John Potter; Robert Nelson; John Kettlewell; George Hickes; William Law; John Johnson; Henry Dodwell; Jeremy Collier; Charles Leslie; Thomas Wilson; Joseph Bingham; Philip Skelton; Samuel Johnson; George Horne; William Jones; Samuel Horsley; Reginald Heber; John Jebb; William Van Mildert; Richard Mant.
7524 June 1836data-sort-value="Roman Breviary as embodying the substance of the Devotional Services of the Church Catholic"On the Roman Breviary as embodying the substance of the Devotional Services of the Church Catholic.data-sort-value="Newman, John Henry"NewmanAd Clerum. Draft by Hurrell Froude. This Tract influenced Robert Williams and Samuel Francis Wood, both laymen, to attempt a translation of the Roman Breviary. Newman put an end to this project.
76data-sort-value="29 September 1836"29 September 1836;[24] 1840Catena Patrum No. II. Testimony of Writers in the later English Church to the Doctrine of Baptismal Regeneration[25] data-sort-value="Newman, John Henry"NewmanAd Populum. John Jewell; Hooker; Andrewes; John Donne; Richard Field; Thomas Jackson; Laud; John Bramhall; Hammond; Taylor; Heylin; Allestrie; Isaac Barrow; Herbert Thorndike; Pearson; Bull; Thomas Comber; Ken; Simon Patrick; Beveridge; Sharp; Scott; Robert Jenkin; Thomas Sherlock; William Wall; Potter; Nelson; Daniel Waterland; Kettlewell; Hickes; Johnson; Leslie; Wilson; Bingham; Skelton; Horne; Jones; Reginald Heber; Jebb; Van Mildert; Mant.
771 November 1836data-sort-value="Earnest Remonstrance to the Author of 'The Pope's Letter'"An Earnest Remonstrance to the Author of 'The Pope's Letter'.data-sort-value="Pusey, Edward"Edward Pusey, reprinted.Directed to Charles Dickinson after an anonymous attack on the Tractarian view of prayers for the dead.[26] [27]
782 February 1837Catena Patrum. No. III. Testimony of Writers in the later English Church to the duty of maintaining, Quod semper, quod ubique, quod ab omnibus traditum est.data-sort-value="Manning, Henry Edward; Marriott, Charles"Henry Edward Manning and Charles MarriottAd Populum. The authors cited are: Jewell; Convocation of 1571; The Queen's Council of 1582; Bilson; Hooker; Convocation of 1603; John Overall; Morton; Field; White; Hall; Laud; Richard Montagu; Jackson; Mede; James Ussher; Bramhall; Sanderson; John Cosin; Hammond; Thorndike; Taylor; Heylin; Commissioners of 1662; Pearson; Barrow; Bull; Edward Stillingfleet; Ken; Beveridge; Patrick; Sharp; Potter; John Ernest Grabe; Thomas Brett; Hickes; Jeremy Collier; Leslie; Waterland; Bingham; Jebb; Van Mildert.
7925 March 1837data-sort-value="Purgatory"On Purgatory (Against Romanism, No. III).data-sort-value="Newman, John Henry"NewmanAd Clerum.
80[Undated]data-sort-value="Reserve in communicating Religious Knowledge"On Reserve in communicating Religious Knowledge, Parts I-III.data-sort-value="Williams, Isaac"Isaac WilliamsThis tract was criticised by James Henry Monk.[28] Williams replied, taking the criticism to be hasty.
811 November 1837Catena Patrum. No. IV. Testimony of Writers in the later English Church to the doctrine of the Eucharistic Sacrifice. with an historical account of the changes in the Liturgy as to the expression of that doctrine.data-sort-value="Pusey, Edward"Edward PuseyThe catena was mostly the work of Benjamin Harrison. Authors cited: Jewell; Bilson; Hooker; Overall; Field; John Buckeridge; Thomas Morton; Andrewes; Mason; Francis White; Laud; Hall; Montagu; William Forbes; Mede; Brian Duppa; Compilers of the Scotch Prayer Book; William Nicholson; Bramhall; Cosin; Heylyn; Anthony Sparrow; Henry Ferne; Hammond; Thomas Barlow; Thorndike; Taylor; Daniel Brevint; William Sancroft; Matthew Scrivener; John Fell; Patrick; Gabriel Towerson; Bull; Stillingfleet; Smith; Beveridge; George Hooper; Henry Dodwell; Hickes; Comber; Collier; Nelson; Wake; Johnson; Wilson; Sherlock; Grabe; Leslie; Brett; Thomas Bennet; John Potter; John Hughes;[29] Roger Laurence; William Law; Charles Wheatly; Glocester Ridley; Compilers of the American Prayer Book; William Jones of Nayland; Horsley; Charles Daubeny; Alexander Jolly; Henry Phillpotts. "[Pusey's] ‘Tracts’ on the holy eucharist appeared in 1836. Their primary object was to recall the attention of churchmen to the almost forgotten sacrificial aspect of the eucharist, as it was held by the early church and constantly asserted in the writings of the best Anglican divines. At the same time he was careful to guard his statements against any popular confusion with the distinctive doctrine of the Roman church."
821 November 1837data-sort-value="Letter to a Magazine on the subject of Dr. Pusey's Tract on Baptism"Preface, Title-Page, and Contents to Volume IV. The Preface includes Letter to a Magazine on the subject of Dr. Pusey's Tract on Baptism.data-sort-value="Newman, John Henry"Newman
8329 June 1838Advent Sermons on Antichrist.data-sort-value="Newman, John Henry"Newman
8424 August 1838Whether a Clergyman of the Church of England be now bound to have Morning and Evening Prayers daily in his Parish Church.data-sort-value="Keble, Thomas; Prevost, George"Thomas Keble, conclusion by George Prevost.
8521 September 1838Letters on the Scripture proof of the Doctrines of the Church. Part I.data-sort-value="Newman, John Henry"Newman
8625 March 1839Indications of a superintending Providence in the preservation of the Prayer-book and in the changes which it has undergone.data-sort-value="Williams, Isaac"Isaac Williams
872 February 1840data-sort-value="Reserve in communicating Religious Knowledge (conclusion)"On Reserve in communicating Religious Knowledge (conclusion).data-sort-value="Williams, Isaac"Isaac WilliamsAd Clerum.
8825 March 1840data-sort-value="Greek Devotions of Bishop Andrews, translated and arranged"The Greek Devotions of Bishop Andrews, translated and arranged.data-sort-value="Newman, John Henry"Newman
89[Undated]data-sort-value="Mysticism Attributed to the Fathers of the Church"On the Mysticism Attributed to the Fathers of the Church.data-sort-value="Keble, John"John Keble"...an attempted exposition of the “principles” governing patristic figurative exegesis of the Scriptures"[30] It was attacked by Samuel Roffey Maitland in A letter to a friend, on the Tract for the times, no. 89 (1841).[31]
90data-sort-value="25 January 1841"25 January 1841Remarks on Certain Passages in the Thirty-Nine Articlesdata-sort-value="Newman, John Henry"John Henry NewmanA protest within the University of Oxford was brought against Tract 90 by John Griffiths, Thomas Churton, Henry Bristow Wilson, and Archibald Tait;[32] the resulting furore eventually led the Bishop of Oxford to bring the series to a close.

Further publications

Two other ambitious projects of the Oxford Movement as a whole were conceived and launched in the same period: the Library of Anglo-Catholic Theology that gave extensive republication to the works of the Caroline Divines and others who were cited in the Tracts; and the Library of the Fathers. Isaac Williams with William John Copeland edited Plain Sermons by Contributors to the Tracts for the Times, in ten volumes, appearing from 1839 to 1848.[33]

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Rose, Hugh James.
  2. Rivington, Francis.
  3. [Peter Toon]
  4. Benson, Christopher. 4.
  5. Bagot, Richard.
  6. https://archive.org/details/anarrativeevent00unkngoog Internet Archive
  7. The ideal of a Christian Church considered in comparison with existing practice, containing A defence of certain articles in the British critic, in reply to remarks on them in Mr. Palmer's Narrative (1844); online at archive.org.
  8. Donald S. Armentrout, Robert Boak Slocum, An Episcopal Dictionary of the Church: a user-friendly reference for Episcopalians (2005), p. 523.
  9. Web site: Modern History Sourcebook : Tracts for the Times 1 : Thoughts on the Ministerial Commission, 1833 . John Henry Newman . Fordham.edu . 2017-01-28.
  10. Web site: Tract 3: Thoughts respectfully addressed to the Clergy on alterations in the Liturgy (Newman) . people.bath.ac.uk . 17 January 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070827161351/http://people.bath.ac.uk/lismd/tractarians/tracts/tract-03.html . 27 August 2007 . dead.
  11. Web site: Modern History Sourcebook : Tracts for the Times 4 : Adherence to the Apostolical Succession the safest course. On Alterations in the Prayer-book, 1833 . Keble . John . Fordham.edu . 2017-01-28.
  12. Web site: Tracts for the Times - Tract 6 . Newman Reader . 2017-01-28.
  13. Web site: Tracts for the Times - Tract 7 . Newman Reader . 2017-01-28.
  14. Web site: Tracts for the Times - Tract 8 . Newman Reader . 2017-01-28.
  15. Web site: Title . Anglicanhistory.org . 2017-01-28.
  16. Web site: A history of the family of Holland of Mobberley and Knutsford in the country of Chester . Archive.org . 2010-07-21 . 2017-01-28.
  17. The Gentleman's Magazine, Vol. 160, p. 561
  18. Book: Benjamin J. King. Newman and the Alexandrian Fathers: Shaping Doctrine in Nineteenth-Century England. 13 January 2013. 7 May 2009. Oxford University Press. 978-0-19-954813-2. 30.
  19. Web site: Via Media 2 - Retractation . Newman Reader . 2017-01-28.
  20. Pusey, Edward Bouverie.
  21. Sheridan Gilley, Newman and His Age (2003), p. 148.
  22. Web site: Tracts for the Times - Tract 74 . Newman Reader . 2017-01-28.
  23. Web site: The Historic Episcopate and Apostolic Succession, by Edwin Harwood (1887) . Anglicanhistory.org . 2017-01-28.
  24. Web site: Modern History Sourcebook : The Tracts for the Times, 1833-1841. Fordham.edu. 2017-01-28.
  25. Web site: Tracts for the Times - Tract 76 . Newman Reader . 2017-01-28.
  26. 22910. Pusey, Edward Bouverie. Peter G.. Cobb.
  27. W. J. Mander, Alan P. F. Sell, The Dictionary of Nineteenth-century British Philosophers (2002) vol. 2 p. 932.
  28. Monk, James Henry.
  29. Web site: WORDS: BIOG: Hughes, John [1682–1710] |website=Words.fromoldbooks.org |date= |access-date=2017-01-28].
  30. Web site: The Discrepancies of Two Ages : Thoughts on Keble's "Mysticism of the Fathers". The Reverend Doctor Ephraim Radner. Anglicanhistory.org . 2017-01-28.
  31. Web site: A letter to a friend, on the Tract for the times, no. 89 : Maitland, Samuel Roffey, 1792-1866 . Archive.org . 2017-01-28.
  32. Griffiths, John (1806-1885).
  33. Williams, Isaac.