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  1. e. Central churchmanship describes those who adhere to a middle way in the Anglican Communion of the Christian religion and other Anglican church bodies, being neither markedly high church / Anglo-Catholic nor low church / evangelical Anglican in their doctrinal views and liturgical preferences. The term is used much less frequently than some ...

  2. Central churchmanship describes those who adhere to a middle way in the Anglican Communion of the Christian religion and other Anglican church bodies, being neither markedly high church/Anglo-Catholic nor low church/evangelical Anglican in their doctrinal views and liturgical preferences. The term is used much less frequently than some others.

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  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Broad_churchBroad church - Wikipedia

    In The Episcopal Church in the United States, the term "broad church" has a slightly different connotation, referring to those whose liturgical practice is neither high nor low church. [citation needed] Theologically, they may be either conservative—equating to central churchmanship in the Church of England—or liberal, which would identify ...

  5. Feb 5, 2010 · Central Churchmanship seems to have been more or less a self-renaming on the part of the younger generation of Old High Churchmen c. 1875 as the term "High Church" was increasingly applied to the Anglo-Catholics. When casting around for a representative name for the Central Churchmanship position in the late nineteenth century I am inclined to ...

  6. Churchmanship (or churchpersonship; or tradition in most official contexts) is a way of talking about and labelling different tendencies, parties, or schools of thought within the Church of England and the sister churches of the Anglican Communion. The term has been used in Lutheranism in a similar fashion. Part of a series on.

  7. A churchman is the opposite of a dissenter. In imitation of English usage, Episcopalians in the United States and members of other Anglican churches sometimes refer to themselves as churchmen. With the development of parties in the Church of England, the manner of thought and especially the style of worship of a churchman was called churchmanship.

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