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There are two sections to this site, recently merged: Anglican.Center and NewHighChurch.com.

Anglican.Center

The vision for the Anglican Center is to bring the theological and pastoral spirit of historic, catholic Anglicanism into a modern, pan-jurisdictional context. The Anglican Center seeks to do so through cultural engagement, theological study, liturgical materials, prayer, spiritual direction, and retreats.


NewHighChurch.com

New High Church is the ‘essays and writing’ section of Anglican.Center.

Why the name?

New

  • Adapted for contemporary concerns of pastoral theology, liturgy, missiology, etc.

  • Not Old {High Church}.

High Church

In the 17th century, high church was used to describe those clergy and laity who placed a high emphasis on complete adherence to the Established Church position, including some emphasis on ritual or liturgical practices inherited from the Early Church or the Undivided Church. (Wikipedia)
The High Churchmen exalt ecclesiastical tradition as the voice of church authority, regard the Holy Eucharist as in some sense a sacrifice and the sacraments as efficacious channels of grace, and they insist on rites and ceremonies as the appropriate expression of external worship. (Catholic Encyclopedia)

Anglo-Catholic, like Anglican, has as many definitions as there are adherents, so working with a sensibility that isn’t strictly tribal seems worth emphasising: “Tractarian,” "just Anglican," "Catholic Anglican," "Anglo-Catholic," “Western Rite,” and occasionally “Lutheran” all work amicably alongside the term High Church—with respect to the liturgies of the church and her sacraments. This is suitably adaptable, as well as not expressly representing the single Anglican camp of “Old High Church.

Sending electronic New High Church letters

Most people outside of the churched do not know what “tracts” are, and the evangelicals who do have very negative associations with the term. Letters is a suitable synonym and is more casual, less propaganda-ish, less polemic. I’m thinking of works such as Letters to Malcolm, Letters to a Young Calvinist, and such as public-facing correspondence: in other words, bringing back the blog.

High Church Letters, then, roughly translates to Tractarian, but without hardline affiliating with them versus the Anglo-Catholic, Old High Church, Broad Church, etc. or other parties, as much as leaning into Catholic qualities, Caroline Divines, and other “High” estimations of the services and sacraments of the church as we have received them since the Reformation.

Of the Oxford Movement’s Tracts for the Times:

"The new Tracts," says Dean Church, "were received with surprise, dismay, ridicule, and indignation. But they also at once called forth a response of eager sympathy from numbers."

May these New High Church letters have at least a few in sympathetic numbers.


There are three sub-categories of this site. A paid subscription supports this newsletter, and the work related to it. There are no “paywall” teaser posts. Support via subscription is support, not access.

1. New High Church letters

As above, this is the main source of written content consisting of longer-form writing. Authors may vary.

Here is a sample essay:

Anglican Center for Christian Spirituality
The Cull of the Spirit
Read more

2. Anglican.Center Resources

Anglican.Center projects fitting with the vision “to bring the theological and pastoral spirit of historic, catholic Anglicanism into a modern, pan-jurisdictional context.

Here is a sample resource:

Anglican Center for Christian Spirituality
The Eucharist Altar Book: a 1662 service order, with additional devotions
Read more

3. Sunday Letters

Sunday Letters consists of George MacDonald quotes, where possible with commentary by Fr Jonah. These are somewhat on hiatus, but are hoped to return.

Here is the first one:

Anglican Center for Christian Spirituality
Sunday Letter: We live in the endless story
Read more

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New High Church essays and articles and Anglican.Center Resources. The Anglican Center seeks to bring the theological and pastoral spirit of historic, catholic Anglicanism into a modern, pan-jurisdictional context.

People

J. M. Kelman ☩ | Anglican cleric, spiritual director, country parson. Interests: Anglican Liturgics, Romanticism, Mythopoeic Literature, Fin de siècle aesthetics, Victorian spirituality, Orthodox theology. ιμκ / jmk.me | angloromantic.com
Retired diocesan bishop, Book: "The Earth is the Lord's" Background: RR CEO, healthcare administrator, asst to cabinet minister, HR, campus pastor. newspaper columnist, city councilman Academics: M.Div, M.A. (history), grad study U of Lund, Sweden