Author William Law Mathieson analyzes the various legislative efforts and administrative reforms aimed at addressing systemic issues such as pluralism and the uneven distribution of church resources. The work provides deep insight into how the Church responded to the rising tide of liberalism and the broader social movements that culminated in the Reform Act of 1832. By tracing the evolution of religious policy and the intellectual currents of the time-including the early stirrings of the Oxford Movement-the text clarifies the complex relationship between church, state, and society in early 19th-century Britain.
Valuable for students of history and theology alike, "English Church Reform, 1815-1840" serves as a comprehensive record of the institutional changes that helped define the modern Anglican identity and the role of religion in the British public sphere.
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