
A Flight of Parsons
The Divinity Diaspora of Trinity College Dublin
Thomas P. Power(Editor)
Wipf and Stock Publishers
Published on 26. July 2018
340 pages
978-1-5326-0910-7 (ISBN)
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Irish Anglican clergymen played an important role in the creation of a nineteenth-century "Greater Ireland," a term denoting a diasporic movement in which the Irish transformed into a global people, actively participating in British imperial expansion and colonial nation building. These essays address the formative influences and circumstances that informed the mental world and disposition of Irish Anglicans, particularly clergy who were graduates of Trinity College Dublin (TCD), an institution pivotal in the formation of attitudes among the Irish Anglican elite. TCD was the gathering point for Anglicans of different backgrounds, and as such acted as a great leveler and formative center where laity and aspirant clergy were educated together under a common curriculum. In common with the Irish as a whole, TCD graduate clergy exerted an influence on colonial life in the religious, cultural, intellectual, and political spheres out of all proportion to their numbers. Faced with its dismantling in the old world, adherents of the Church of Ireland availed of opportunities for its reconstruction in the new and in the process bequeathed an important legacy in the colonial church.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Eugene
United States
ISBN-13
978-1-5326-0910-7 (9781532609107)
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Book
07/2018
Wipf & Stock Publishers
€57.70
Shipment within 3-4 weeks

Person
Thomas P. Power is adjunct professor of church history and graduate studies coordinator, Wycliffe College, University of Toronto. He is the author of Minister and Mines: Religious Conflict in an Irish Mining Community, 1847-1858 (2014).
Content
- Intro
- Title Page
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Chapter 1: Introduction
- Chapter 2: Trinity College, Dublin, and the Making of Irish Evangelicalism, 1790-1850
- Chapter 3: The Formation of a Seceder
- Chapter 4: "An Awful Mystery"
- Chapter 5: A Question of Possession-Who Owned the Church of Ireland's History?
- Chapter 6: James Henthorn Todd, an Irish High Churchman and Early Tractarian at Trinity College, Dublin
- Chapter 7: The Role of Bible Societies in Identity Formation, 1800-1850
- Chapter 8: "That Ultra-Protestant Nursery"
- Chapter 9: "A Zealous, Well-educated, and Well-informed Body of Clergy"
- Chapter 10: Samuel Blake's Projects and Ministries
- Chapter 11: Anglican Deaconesses in Canada 1889-1969
- Chapter 12: From Trinity College, Dublin, to Terra Australis
- Chapter 13: The Word of God Is Seed
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