
Praying for England
Priestly Presence in Contemporary Culture
T.& T.Clark Ltd (Publisher)
Published on 6. October 2008
Book
Paperback/Softback
208 pages
978-0-567-03230-0 (ISBN)
Description
Praying for England reflects on the role of Christian priesthood in contemporary culture, and comes up with some surprising and timely insights about its efficacy and importance. There are ritual and representative functions of the priest, it argues, which remain spiritually and socially vital, even - perhaps especially - in a society which ostensibly ignores the Church, or appears so pluralistic as to lack any religious cohesion. The priestly role as mediator before God of society's deepest pains, losses, joys and irresolvable anxieties is here reimagined, and brought freshly to life though moving narratives of pastoral encounter. Above all, the priest is seen as one who goes on 'praying for England' in decisive but often uncelebrated ways, prayer being the chief measure and test of the priest's representative role.
This is a deceptively simple volume - theologically accessible but often deeply moving and profound. In it a new vision is sketched of how Christian priesthood can go forward today with humility, understated dignity, and spiritual power. It will be of special interest to English churchpeople in an 'established' setting, but is written no less with an ecumenical and international readership in mind.
This is a deceptively simple volume - theologically accessible but often deeply moving and profound. In it a new vision is sketched of how Christian priesthood can go forward today with humility, understated dignity, and spiritual power. It will be of special interest to English churchpeople in an 'established' setting, but is written no less with an ecumenical and international readership in mind.
Reviews / Votes
Title mentioned in edited version of author's essay appearing in The Tablet, April 2008. "[Praying for England's] insights have important implications. Its at times shocking and moving accounts of priestly presence in difficult circumstances speak for themseleves." - The Tablet Title mentioned in Church Times, August 2008 "Seven thought-provoking and varied essays on contemporary theological and pastoral issues, with an afterword by the Archbishop of Canterbury add up to a book worthy of a better binding, and many readers ... go and buy a copy - it says far more about what we are all really here for than anything I have read for some time." - The NEWSpaper "A theological vision." -Christopher Ruddy, CommonwealMore details
Language
English
Place of publication
Edinburgh
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Dimensions
Height: 198 mm
Width: 128 mm
Thickness: 17 mm
Weight
215 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-567-03230-0 (9780567032300)
DOI
CBID131138
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
10/2008
1st Edition
Continuum Publishing Corporation
€21.99
Available for download
Persons
Samuel Wells is a well-known theological ethicist, and Dean of the Chapel at Duke University. He previously spent 14 years in parish ministry in the Church of England. Sarah Coakley is Norris-Hulse Professor of Divinity at the University of Cambridge, UK and was previously Mallinckrodt Professor of Divinity at Harvard Divinity School, USA. She was an assistant curate at Littlemore, Oxford, for 7 years after her ordination in 2000 and is currently an Honorary Canon of Ely Cathedral.
Content
There are three notable characteristics of the chapters:
1. The authors have spent substantial periods of time in parish ministry- in many cases in places of serious social deprivation. 2. The mood of the book is faithfulness and hope. The authors believe that the practice and communities they describe constitute the heart of Anglicanism`s gift and witness to the nation.
3. The style of writing is direct and unapologetic. It is beautiful in prose and simple in argument. Several of the authors have distinguished international reputations who bring profound insight from pastoral and academic experience. But it also arises from a paradoxical situation- while Anglican theology world wide is undergoing a notable revival worldwide,the numerical strength of Anglicanism in England is in serious decline.
Introduction: Prayer, Place and the Poor by Sarah Coakley One: Representation by Stephen Cherry
Two: Glory by Peter Wilcox
Three: Imagination by Samuel Wells
Four: Presence by Edmund Newey
Five: Attention by Jessica Martin
Six: Honesty by Andrew Shanks
Seven: Debate by Grace Davie
Epilogue: Priesthood by Rowan Williams
Two Poems by David Scott
Note on the Littlemore Conference
Contributor List
Index
1. The authors have spent substantial periods of time in parish ministry- in many cases in places of serious social deprivation. 2. The mood of the book is faithfulness and hope. The authors believe that the practice and communities they describe constitute the heart of Anglicanism`s gift and witness to the nation.
3. The style of writing is direct and unapologetic. It is beautiful in prose and simple in argument. Several of the authors have distinguished international reputations who bring profound insight from pastoral and academic experience. But it also arises from a paradoxical situation- while Anglican theology world wide is undergoing a notable revival worldwide,the numerical strength of Anglicanism in England is in serious decline.
Introduction: Prayer, Place and the Poor by Sarah Coakley One: Representation by Stephen Cherry
Two: Glory by Peter Wilcox
Three: Imagination by Samuel Wells
Four: Presence by Edmund Newey
Five: Attention by Jessica Martin
Six: Honesty by Andrew Shanks
Seven: Debate by Grace Davie
Epilogue: Priesthood by Rowan Williams
Two Poems by David Scott
Note on the Littlemore Conference
Contributor List
Index