Good and Proper Men: Lord Palmerston and the Episcopal Bench

Good and Proper Men: Lord Palmerston and the Episcopal Bench

by NigelScotland (Author)

Synopsis

In the late-18th and early-19th centuries, dioceses were large and bishops were few and far between. Much of their time was spent, necessarily, in London, attending to Parliamentary business. The result of all this was that bishops were rarley seen in the dioceses and had little time to deal with the problems of industrial society. Prompted by reforming figures such as John Bird Sumner and Samuel Wilberforce, in the early Victorian years, some attempts were made to reform the role and image of the episcopate. No general widespread change was observable, however, until Lord Palmerstone became prime minister in 1855. During his ten years in office he appointed bishops to 19 English sees, and when he died more that half of the bishops in England were his appointees. Significantly, Palmerstone's prelates came to office with a wealth of parochial experience. They were predominantly pastors of the people, rather than distant and lordly, concerning themselves with reforming their dioceses by revivng the role of Archdeacon and extending the number of Rural Deaneries. These aspects and others, along with their battles over ritualism, their theology and their work in Parliament are examined in detail in this wide-ranging study. Nigel Scotland concludes by arguing that Plamerstone's prelates brought about a significant change in the English episcopate.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 192
Publisher: James Clarke & Co Ltd
Published: 18 Nov 1999

ISBN 10: 0227679466
ISBN 13: 9780227679463

Author Bio
Nigel Scotland is Field Chair of The School of Theology and Religious Studies at Cheltenham and Gloucester College of Higher Education. He is the author of a number of books including: Methodism and the Revolt of the Field, Eucharistic Consecration in the First Four Centuries and John Bird Sumner, Evangelical Archbishop.