Cowley Publications
Pages: 200
Trim: 6¾ x 8½
978-1-56101-160-5 • Paperback • January 1999 • $11.95 • (£8.99)
978-1-4616-6061-3 • eBook • January 1999 • $10.99 • (£7.99)
Part 1 Series Preface
Part 2 Acknowledgements
Chapter 3 Living with History
Chapter 4 Ten Touchstones of History
Chapter 5 The Ministry We Share
Chapter 6 Living with Controversy
Chapter 7 Recycling Tradition
Chapter 8 New Occasions Teach New Duties
Part 9 Endnotes
Part 10 Resources
Part 11 Questions for Discussion
Fredrica Harris Thompsett offers a lively, engaging introduction to Anglican history and demonstrates its significance for the contemporary church.
— The Anglican Theological Review
Living with History is well titled. It's about life, and it's conversational—Fredrica Thompsett has some great one-liners. In this fifth volume of the New Church's Teaching Series, she has made history accessible to non-historians. . . . We can thank Professor Thompsett for reconnecting us to our rich and speckled past, a human path infused with the divine.
— Episcopal Life
Each denomination has its own history and related perspectives, and Living With History is written from a particularly Anglican slant. It should prove to be a valuable resource for Anglicans interested in the forces that have shaped the denomination, as well as reminding us that history is relevant.
— Christian Library Journal
Living With History . . . is a fascinating book, not of the details of history but of how we interpret and use it, how we remember past events in order to deal with present questions.
— The Anglican Journal
Fredrica Harris Thompsett . . . 'looks backward in order to move forward.' Using ten touchstones of history ranging from Common Prayer to the civil rights movement, she provides context for contemporary controversies by examining ancient ones. . . . Thompsett has created a valuable primer, written in an accessible anecdotal style for those who seek to renew their knowledge of the historical church even as they shape its future.
— Cathedral Age
Even longtime Episcopalians should find material in Living with History which will make them think and ask questions about their church and their faith. . . . Thompsett's book is written for the inquirer with late twentieth-century sensibilities. It begins with the author's personal views, and in its contents includes as wide a spectrum of the church as possible. It should encourage readers to continue their investigations of a variety of aspects of church history.
— Anglican and Episcopal History