The English Religious Establishment

It is commonplace for the English to regard their age and culture as "post-Christian." What exactly is meant by this label is not always clear, but it seems meant to bespeak a hardheaded realism accompanied by a kind of wistfulness for a more certain, vibrant, robust past. So while support...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Torke, James W. (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Cambridge Univ. Press 1995
In: Journal of law and religion
Year: 1995, Volume: 12, Issue: 2, Pages: 399-445
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520 |a It is commonplace for the English to regard their age and culture as "post-Christian." What exactly is meant by this label is not always clear, but it seems meant to bespeak a hardheaded realism accompanied by a kind of wistfulness for a more certain, vibrant, robust past. So while supporting note is often taken of the low rate of church attendance in England, the sense of loss runs deeper, as if all that is left from the past is a kind of "domesticated pantheism" which somewhat ironically operates as a "bulwark against religion." Reminders of this bygone culture are found in a countryside of handsome churches, cities landmarked by grand cathedrals, and a ceremonial clergy whose robes and scepters make for great spectacle and some good TV; but the churches are empty and the clergy are said to be mostly dispirited, effete, irrelevant, "enfeebled and unsure." The term "post-Christian," however, carries an even deeper charge insofar as it suggests something more about the state of English culture in the late twentieth century than simply the decay of the established Church as the institutional bearer of the main nourishment of Western civilization. In some sense, we are to suppose that, in England at least, the Christian world is dead and that the established Church of England remains but a many-branched museum, staffed with actors playing uncertain parts whose demise as a part of the apparatus of state is near at hand. 
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