Hensley Henson - A Study in the Friction Between Church and State
Author(s): Owen Chadwick
This is a study of Church and Society between the two World Wars as seen through the eyes of an able, caustic, individualist churchman. Herbert Hensley Henson held strong opinions on all subjects. He was the critic, on moral grounds, of the behaviour of the trade unions. He came into fierce controversy with the miners' national leaders. He strenuously defended the establishment of the Church of England, and then, because the House of Commons behaved badly over the Prayer Book, became its most vocal assailant. He stood for the right of Christians to profess their faith while remaining agnostic about miracles. He helped the Church to accept more modern attitudes to divorce. At times he was the most unpopular person among the Churches. But by courage he won a rueful respect, and by compassion he won from some a smiling admiration.
1984. Reprint. A fine copy with a previous owners bookplate to the front pastedown. The d/w is unclipped and near fine with light edge rubbing only.
Product Information
General Fields
- :
- : Oxford University Press
- : Oxford University Press
- : 0.566
- : 01 October 1984
- : 2.45 Centimeters X 14.7 Centimeters X 21.9 Centimeters
- : books
Special Fields
- : 352
- : 283/.092/4
- : English
- : Hardback
- : Owen Chadwick