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From the NOR Dossiers
Anglican Communion
The Halifax School & the Fallacy at the Heart of Anglicanism
November 2023This is a tale of a well-organized and lofty effort by theologians, parish clergy, and laymen to recover the essence of Anglicanism in Canada.
VIEW ARTICLEPreaching Christ Customized
January-February 2023To the list of things Jesus could have been but wasn’t, there is now one more to add: A new movement would recast Our Lord as a transgender woman.
VIEW ARTICLEThe St. Louis Congress: Forty-Five Years Later
December 2022One strain of Anglicanism, the Anglo-Catholic, was privileged over the others and contained ambiguities that were to cause disagreement and strife.
VIEW ARTICLEWhy a Self-Indulgent Age Needs a Rough Religion
March 2022Penance is man’s pitiful part in cooperation with grace, an extreme method necessary to combat the difficulties posed by the passion and the pride of man.
VIEW ARTICLEWalker Percy, the Episcopal Church & Kierkegaard’s “Apostle”
July-August 2021Kierkegaard’s concept of “the Apostle” influenced Percy’s presentation of character and theological insight in his fiction.
VIEW ARTICLELove on Trial
December 2020The Episcopal Church contorts its theology to conform to the broader culture, but the culture has no real use for a Christianity remade in its image.
VIEW ARTICLEAn Introduction to North American High Toryism
January-February 2018Nothing shows the ultimate bankruptcy of classical liberalism more than the complete utilitarianism that dominates all realms of life, reaching far beyond infanticide.
VIEW ARTICLEA Letter from a Concerned Episcopalian
October 2017About six years ago, the Vicar took to the pulpit on a Sunday morning and dropped a bomb. He told us that the time had come for him to come out of the closet.
VIEW ARTICLEThe Anglican Conundrum
March 2016Same-sex marriage is causing deep and possibly irreparable division in the Anglican Communion, the third-largest Christian communion in the world.
VIEW ARTICLEWhat Does the Anglican Patrimony Have to Offer the Church?
April 2015The Prayer Book tradition might well assist the Church in welcoming home those who wander in exile.
VIEW ARTICLEBlueprint for a Catholic Future?
September 2014Ralph Adams Cram saw that our faith must be placed first in any consideration of what we are to do in a practical manner.
VIEW ARTICLEA Slow-Motion Implosion
May 2014The recent history of the Anglican Communion shows that shedding virtually all of its distinctively Christian moral teachings in order to achieve "relevance" has disastrous results.
VIEW ARTICLEDances With Wolves, Vatican Edition
September 2013The days of trusting what's going on deep behind the scenes in chanceries and in the Roman curia are over. Transparency is what's needed, not blind trust in some broken bureaucracy.
VIEW ARTICLEWhat Is the Anglican Patrimony?
May 2012When one walks into an Anglican church, especially one in which traditional worship is practiced, one gets a distinct feeling of the presence of the Lord.
VIEW ARTICLEIncredible Shrinking Churches
December 2011Some mainline Protestant denominations are in rapid decline because they have no message that is discernibly different from the secular culture.
VIEW ARTICLESheldon Vanauken Remembered
October 2011The full depth of his literary case for faith cannot be gathered from 'A Severe Mercy' alone, which deliberately narrates only the first half of his life.
VIEW ARTICLEMary Tudor & the Dawn of the Counter-Reformation
December 2010The convictions of many "ardent young intellectuals" who fled to Louvain or Douai would merge seamlessly into wider movements for reforms.
VIEW ARTICLECity of Confusion - Part II
July-August 2010Just when we were beginning to think that things couldn't get any more schizoid in the Anglican Communion, things are getting, well, more schizoid.
VIEW ARTICLETwo Dubious Anniversaries
July-August 2010Neither Lewis nor Eliot was willing to condemn all uses of artificial contraception, yet both had obvious concerns about the moral implications of its use.
VIEW ARTICLEIf Only the Anglicans Had Listened
June 2010It behooves all of us, both clergy and laity, to recognize Modernism's subtle and not so subtle influence and counter it with prayer and adherence to sound doctrine.
VIEW ARTICLEWhich Side Are You On?
January-February 2010The practical effect of the Pope's Anglicanorum Coetibus has been to crystallize the significant differences between modern Anglicanism and Holy Mother Church.
VIEW ARTICLELifeboats on the Tiber
December 2009Anglican prelates are already dropping hints that they are seriously considering taking up Pope Benedict's offer to help them across the Tiber.
VIEW ARTICLETwo Tracks to 'Communion'
October 2009What might the Archbishop of Canterbury's "two-track" model for the Anglican Communion look like at the local level?
VIEW ARTICLECity of Confusion
October 2009Some say the demise of Anglicanism truly began in the 1530s when King Henry VIII "nationalized" the Catholic Church in England.
VIEW ARTICLEClandestine 'Communion'
December 2007Why does the Anglican Archbishop of Canterbury feel it necessary to hold a "secret" Communion service with gay clergy?
VIEW ARTICLEIntegrity or a Lie?
October 2007The Anglican Church of England would no doubt be close to shutting down if it weren't for "gay" and lesbian clergy.
VIEW ARTICLEThe Anglican Use in the Latin Rite of the Roman Catholic Church
July-August 2007Many Anglo-Catholics who convert to the Roman Catholic Church are disappointed with what they find in the average Roman Catholic parish.
VIEW ARTICLEAbsolutely Null & Utterly Void
May 2007According to Pope Leo XIII, Anglican Orders are "absolutely null and utterly void." That makes the Anglo-Catholic "Eucharist" invalid, too.
VIEW ARTICLEBishop Vicky & Bishop Gumby
April 2005It's luv, luv, luv that makes the world go round, and who cares what comes after.
VIEW ARTICLEMust We Now Be Leery of Anglican Converts?
September 2004Might the Golden Age of Anglican converts be coming to an end?
VIEW ARTICLE"Do You Have to Say 'And God Bless You'?"
April 2004A revealing vignette about the priorities of the Episcopal Church...
VIEW ARTICLEBible-Burners
February 2004The Protestant Reformers' revolution was extremist, not unlike that of the Taliban, as exemplified by their zeal for destruction.
VIEW ARTICLESpecial Breeds & Lesser Breeds
January 2004It would appear that homosexuals are a special breed entitled to special privileges in the Episcopal Church.
VIEW ARTICLEGod the Father, the Elephantine God — Whatever
January 2004There are still Catholic bishops who believe that a Third Vatican Council could authorize priestesses and bishopettes.
VIEW ARTICLEThe Non Serviam of the Episcopal Church: Unsex Me!
December 2003The Catholic Church will never capitulate to the times, and those among her members who do generally do not remain within her for long.
VIEW ARTICLEA Letter From a Concerned Episcopalian
October 2003The Vicar reminded us that the Anglican Communion embraces a wide variety of lifestyles and said the time had come for him to come out of the closet.
VIEW ARTICLESimony in the Church of England
September 2003The Anglicans has fallen on hard times, both in terms of membership and finances.
VIEW ARTICLENewman, an “Apostate”?
May 2003Arthur Schlesinger said the most "tenacious tradition of paranoic agitation in American history has been anti-Catholicism." This book is a product of it.
VIEW ARTICLEAn Anglo-Catholic Tale
February 2003For many a Protestant who would never have been able to make the jump to Rome immediately, Anglo-Catholicism has served as a halfway house.
VIEW ARTICLEAnglicanism, Catholicism & The Significance of the "Anglican Use" in The Catholic Church
January 2003To Anglicans, healthy Anglican Use parishes offer an appropriation of all that is best in the Catholic patrimony of Anglicanism.
VIEW ARTICLEThe Malines Conversations & What Was Malign There
July/August 2002Keep in mind St. Paul’s dire warning that heresies would of necessity come so that the genuine faith of the elect may come to light all the more strongly.
VIEW ARTICLEThe Death of Catholic England
May 2002The Reformation was received by the great mass of Englishmen with reluctance, resentment, and resistance. Catholic England did not “pass away”; it was murdered.
VIEW ARTICLEThe Astronomical Cost of Priestesses In the Church of England
May 2002Any full-time Church of England clergyman who worked for at least five years prior to 1992 was entitled to compensation if he resigned over women's ordination.
VIEW ARTICLEOn the Road to Oblivion.
February 2002When fewer and fewer men enter a profession, does it become marginalized?
VIEW ARTICLE'Mere Christianity' as Merely Protestant
January 2002The idea attempts to describe the signs of the Church in its wounded state, a state with difficulties that could be far better dealt with if no schisms had occurred.
VIEW ARTICLENewman: Myths & Facts
November 2001The view that one can find encouragement in the writings of the Catholic Newman for the reunion of Churches is a mighty myth.
VIEW ARTICLE'Anglican Use' Catholic Parishes
November 2001We may see increasing numbers of Anglicans coming to recognize that what they are seeking can be found only in full communion with the Successor of Peter.
VIEW ARTICLEIs There Such a Thing as "Mere Christianity"?
July/August 2001Implicit in the 'mere Christianity' notion is a denial of the supreme importance of the Catholic faith as the complete revelation of God.
VIEW ARTICLEThe Church of England, The Defiled “Panther”
May 2001Anne Barbeau Gardiner shows "that Dryden’s poem has a grand and unified design that has hitherto gone unnoticed.”
VIEW ARTICLEThe Great Realignment of 2004-2012: The Catholic Church Splits, The Episcopal Church Triumphs
December 2000 VIEW ARTICLEIt's Not the Episcopal Church Anymore
October 2000The Catechism — like the Ten Commandments and Jesus’ injunctions against lust — reduces ECUSA’s sexuality resolution to cinders.
VIEW ARTICLESome Are More Diverse Than Others
June 2000Too many seminarians these days are too outspokenly traditional.
VIEW ARTICLEYou Can't Have It Both Ways
April 2000Let Rome be Rome, and let the ecumenical chips fall where they may.
VIEW ARTICLENewman, the Real Presence & The Tabernacle
April 2000When Newman speaks of his happy surprise at how objective and real he found the Catholic religion to be, he often refers to the Real Presence.
VIEW ARTICLEExcuses, Excuses
January 2000Why are Anglicans more tired on Sunday mornings nowadays than they were 30 years ago?
VIEW ARTICLEBishop Fred?
January 2000If Episcopalians want to call their bishop by his (or her) first name, that's their business.
VIEW ARTICLEThe Lady & the Fox
September 1999"Remember that Episcopal lady priest you met at the ecumenical conference?"
VIEW ARTICLEWhen Invoking "the Holy Spirit" Will Justify Just About Anything
May 1999The wealthy Anglican Churches promote a radical transformation of Christianity to make it over in a way agreeable to elite society.
VIEW ARTICLEFrom Evangelical Anglican to Catholic
January 1999Since all that was valid about the “Reformation protest” has been accepted by the Church, it is time for Protestants to “come home.”
VIEW ARTICLEGod’s Good Servant, but the King’s First?
December 1998Thomas Cranmer was one of the overseers of what Diarmaid MacCulloch calls “a religious revolution of ruthless thoroughness.”
VIEW ARTICLEThe Invention of Anglicanism
November 1998Review of Catholic and Reformed: The Roman and Protestant Churches in English Protestant Thought, 1600-1640
VIEW ARTICLEWhere Catholics Fear Converts
June 1998Hopes for the full evangelization of Anglicans were dashed by a statement issued by, of all people, the Catholic bishops of England.
VIEW ARTICLEThe Museum Piece Called "Anglo-Papalism”
December 1997Review of A Tactful God. Gregory Dix: Priest, Monk and Scholar
VIEW ARTICLEAnglican "Fundamentalist"?
January/February 1997Among “the enlightened” Dr. Johnson was seen as rather a fundamentalist (ever confused with orthodox) and showing a bit of “enthusiasm,” that is, fanaticism.
VIEW ARTICLEThe Phenomenon of Robert Hugh Benson
July/August 1995While he lived, from first novel to last, he enjoyed an immense audience, an international audience drawn from all classes, including the royal family.
VIEW ARTICLEHow Not to Be Ecumenical
October 1993Within Anglicanism there grew up the notion that disparate elements of Christianity, no matter how contradictory, could be brought together.
VIEW ARTICLEDiscovering Catholicism
March 1990Being an Anglican was like living with a woman out of wedlock: It had the advantages of marriage with none of the commitment and discipline.
VIEW ARTICLEOn Ecumenism & the Amazing Unity of Catholics
November 1988The Church uses theological disputes to teach her doctrine, as controversy raises fundamental issues.
VIEW ARTICLEIn the Footsteps of John Henry Newman
May 1987Authentic authority, universality, and a firm theological grounding for social action -- these are the overarching factors that lead to Rome.
VIEW ARTICLEA Bold Venture in Liturgy
July-August 1985Now in our time an edition of the BCP has appeared under the auspices of the Roman Catholic Church, which does what none of its predecessors did or could do.
VIEW ARTICLEThe Shaping of Anglican Spiritual Expression
September 1984Moorman covers development of the Book of Common Prayer, the place of the English Bible in the Church, hymnody and its influence on worship, and more.
VIEW ARTICLEDorothy L. Sayers’s The Whimsical Christian
October 1983From first to last, The Whimsical Christian provides the unadulterated pleasure of watching the workings of a powerful Christian mind.
VIEW ARTICLEDetection & Orthodoxy
October 1983The work of Dorothy Sayers is very much all of a piece; she was a thinking and believing Anglican throughout her literary career.
VIEW ARTICLE