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PRO ECCLESIA DEI.

Church and State

Review.

EDITED BY THE

VENERABLE ARCHDEACON DENISON.

VOLUME V.

LONDON:

Published at the Office, No. 66, Brook Street, Hanover Square, W.

1864.

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Index to Volume V.

FRICA, Autumn Rambles in,
85.

A

ade, 140.

Alabama and Sumter, Narra-
tive of the Cruise of, 119.
America: Capture and Block-

Cruise of the Alabama and
Sumter, 119. Forty Years' Life in, 17.
Life of Stonewall Jackson, 119.
An Irish Philosopher, 91.
Anno Domini 1864, 163.
Annual Register, the, 89.
Antiquarian Records, 90.
Apologia pro Vitâ Suâ, 54.

Appeal Court, Mr. Keble's Proposal for
Amending Constitution of, 100.
Army and Navy Review, Notice of the
Church in the Navy in, 148.
Atheism, Political, 168.

Attorney-General's Opinion as to Legal
Force of Judgment in case of Wilson v.
Fendall, 112.

Autographic Mirror, the, 120.

BABBAGE, Mr., 182.

Balliol College and Roman Catholics, 143.
Bampton Lectures, by Dr. Hannah, 176.
Berkeley's (Hon. Grantley) My Life and
Recollections, 183.

Biden's (Mr.) Religious Reformation Impe-
ratively Demanded, 173.
Biography of Sir John Eliot, 121.
Bishop of London's Fund, 81.

Bishop of Oxford on the Inspiration of the
Scriptures, 74.

Blackfriars, or the Monks of Old, 88.
Blackwood's Magazine, 123.

Brady's (Dr.) Parochial Records of Cork,
Cloyne, and Ross, 90.

Re-

Bristol Congress and the Archdeacon of
Taunton's Letter respecting, 74.
marks on the Congress, 133. Brother
Ignatius at the Congress, 136.
Brodie (Sir Benjamin), Biographical Sketch
of, 180.

Browning's (Robert) Dramatis Personæ, 181.
Burial Service, Use of, as required by Law,

22.

CAIRNS, Sir Hugh, on the Irish Church, 76.
Opinions as to Legal Force of Judgment
in case Wilson v. Fendall, 112.

Cameron (Jane), Memoirs of, 153.
Capture and Blockade, 140.

Synodical Condemnation of, 46. Free
and Open Churches, 134. Gladstone
(Mr.) and the Church, 2. Irish Church,
the, 76. Judgment on the Appeal of Dr.
Williams, 10.
Liberation Society and

the Church, 36. Lord Chancellor and
Convocation, the, 74. Pusey (Dr.)_and
the Times, 100. Registration and Bap-
tism, 156. Separation of the Sexes in
Churches, 156. Tamworth Church-
Rate Case, 112.

Clergy: Bishop of Oxford and the Inspira-
tion of Scriptures, 74. Brady's (Dr.)
Parochial Records of Cork, Cloyne, and
Ross, 90. Bristol, Dean of, 74. Brother
Ignatius at Bristol, 136. Chaplains in
the Navy, 41. Clergy of the Natal Dio-
cese and Bishop Colenso, 111. Colenso
(Bishop) and Dr. M'Caul, 49. Dean of
Westminster, the, 33. Education and
the Clergy, 98. Keble (Mr.) on Eccle-
siastical Appeals before the Privy Council,
100. Pusey (Dr.) and the Times, 100.
Report of Committee on Gravamina, 43.
Stanley's (Dr.) Lectures on the Jewish
Church, 116. Taunton, Archdeacon of,
on the Bristol Congress, 74. Taunton,
Archdeacon of, and the Greek Professor-
ship at Oxford, 143. Trevor's (Canon)
Types and the Antitype, 16. Williams
(Dr.), Judgment on the Appeal of Wilson
v. Fendall, 43. Vogan (Rev. L.) on the
Use of the Burial Service as required by
Law, 22.

Cloyne, Parochial Records of, 91.
Colenso (Bishop) and the Clergy of the Natal
Diocese, III.

Colenso (Bishop) and Dr. M'Caul, 49.
Colonial Colonial Church, the, 5. Clergy
of Natal Diocese and Bishop Colenso, III
Committee on Gravamina et Reformanda,
report of, 43.

Comprehension, 34.

Congress at Bristol, the, 74, 133. Brother
Ignatius at the Congress, 136.
Consalvi, Mémoires du Cardinal, 178.
Conservatives and the Church, 1.
Convert to Rome, Experience of a, 101.
Convocation, Condemnation of Essays and
Reviews, by, 46. Lord Chancellor and
Convocation, the, 74.

Cork, Parochial Records of, 91.
Cornbill Magazine, 124.

Carrington's Observations of the Spots of Correspondence: Family Worship, 156.

the Sun, 52.

Cathedral Cities, our, 103.
Cathedral, Worcester, 136.

Causes and Conditions of Human Progress,
38, 137.

Chancellor, the Lord, and Convocation, 74.
Chaplains, Navy, 41.

Christianity, Mahometan View of, 165.
Church: Attorney-General and Sir Hugh
Cairns' Opinion as to Legal Force of
Judgment in case of Wilson v. Fendall,
112. Bishop of London's Fund, the, 81.
Bristol Congress, the, 133. Bristol Con-
gress and the Archdeacon of Taunton,
74. Burial Service, Use of the, as re-
quired by Law, 22. Church Afloat,
the, 170. Church in Ireland and the
Regium Donum, 42. Church in the
Navy, 41, 148. Church Logic, 98.
Church and the Conservatives, 1. Colonial
Church, the, 5. Committee of Council
of Education and the Church, 65. Com-
mittee on Gravamina et Reformanda,
Report of, 43. Comprehensiveness of the
Church, 34. Deanery of Westminster,
33. Education and the Church, 98.
Ecclesiastical Appeals before the Privy
Council, 100. Essays and Reviews,

Leonardo da Vinci's Last Supper, 155.
Offence of the Cross, the, 156. Registra-
tion and Baptism, 156. Separation of the
Sexes, 156. Valeat Quantum, 26. Work-
ing Men's Franchise, 57:

Council of Education, Committee of the,
65. Council of Education versus School
Discipline, 98.
Criticism, the Higher, 9.

DANES in Camp, the, 24.

Da Vinci's (Leonardo) Last Supper, 155.
Dramatis Personæ, by Robert Browning, 181.
Death, the Punishment of, 108.
Democracy in Great Britain, 6.
Denise, 88.

Denmark, Invasion of, 150.
Diary, 14, 47, 82, 112, 144, 172.
Dillwyn (Mr.) and the Irish Church, 76.
Dissent and Democracy, 83.
Du Guesclin, Life and Times of, 89.

EASTWICK'S Diplomate's Residence in Per-

sia, 23.
Ecclesiological Society, 26.

Education: Committee of Council of Edu-
cation, 65. Committee of Council versus
School Discipline, 98. Irish Education

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Forty Years' Life in America, 17.
Four Years in the Ionian Islands, 84-
Free and Open Churches, 136.

GALLENGA'S Invasion of Denmark, 150.
Garibaldi a True Christian, 26.
Gladstone, Career of Mr., 2.
Gravamina et Reformanda, Committee on,
43.

Great Britain, Democracy in,, 6.
Greek Professorship at Oxford, the, 143.
Grievance of 1864, the, 65.

Grievance, the Irish Education, 107.

HANNAH'S (Dr.) Bampton Lectures, 176.
Herbert's (Hon. A.) Danes in Camp, 24.
Higher Criticism, the, 9.

Human Progress, Causes and Conditions of,
38, 137.

IGNATIUS, Brother, at the Bristol Congress,
136.

Ireland: Irish Church, the, 76. Irish Edu-
cation Grievance, the, 107. Irish Philoso-
pher, an, 91. Presbyterianism in Ireland,

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KEBBEL'S (Mr.) Essays upon History and
Politics, 118.

Keble's (Mr.) Proposal for a League or
Union for Amending the Constitution of
the Appeal Court, 100.

Kirchhoff's Researches on the Solar Spec-
trum, 52.

Kirkwall's (Viscount) Four Years in the
Ionian Islands, 84.

LEAGUE or Union for Amending Appeal
Court, 100.

Liberation Society, the, 36.
Liberal Logic, 97.

Life of General Stonewall Jackson, 119.
Life, Meditations on, 53.

Life of a Thief, 153.

Logic, Church, 98.

London, Fund of the Bishop of, 81.

M'CAUL'S (Dr.) Examination of Bishop
Colenso's Difficulties with Regard to the
Pentateuch, 49.

Macmillan's Magazine, 124.

Mahometan View of Christianity, 165.
Masheder's (Mr.) Dissent and Democracy,
83.

Maudit, Le, 151.

Meredith's (George) Emilia in England, 20.
Miss Alfred, 115.

Month, the, 12, 46, 80, 111, 142, 171.
Mount St. Bernard Reformatory, 77.
My Life and Recollections, 183.

NATIONAL Society for Promoting Educa-
tion, the, 65.

106.

Navy Church in the Navy, the, 41, 148.
Church Afloat, the, 170. Registration
and Baptismal Certificates for Admission
of Boys into Navy, 156.
Royal Naval
Scripture Readers' Society,
Newman's (Dr.) Apologia pro
New Zealand, War in, 71.
Whiggery in, 78.
Nichols' (Dr.) Forty Years of American
Life, 17.

Vitâ Suâ, 54.
Working of

North Africa, Autumn Rambles in, 86.
Not Dead Yet, 88.

Novels, Representative, 88.

O'Dowd (Cornelius) on Men, Women, and
other Things, 91.

Offence of the Cross, the, 156.
Opposability of the Great Toe, the, 105.
Ormsby's (Mr.) Autumn Rambles in North
Africa, 86.

Our Cathedral Cities, 103.

Oxford: Archdeacon of Taunton and the
Greek Professorship, 143. Balliol College
and Roman Catholics, 143. Experience
of a Convert to Rome from Oxford, 101.
Oxford Conference: the Bishop of Ox-
ford on the Inspiration of Scriptures, 74.
Oxford Declaration and the Colonial
Church, 5. Oxford Undergraduates, 7.
Religious Education at Oxford, 156.
Rising Generation at Oxford, the, 166.

PAROCHIAL Records of Cork, Cloyne, and
Ross, 90.

Passages from the Life of a Philosopher, 182.
Periodical Literature, 123.

Persia, Three Years' Residence in, 23.
Personal Narrative of Recent Military Events
in Denmark, 150.

Political Capture and Blockade, 140.
Church and the Conservatives, the, 1.
Dissent and Democracy, 83, Gladstone,
Career of Mr., 2. Grievance of 1864, the,
65. Kebbel's Essays on Politics, 118.
Liberal Logic, 98. Origin of Whiggery,
and its Working in New Zealand, 78.
Political Atheism, 168. Political Condition
of the Ionian Islands, 84. War in New
Zealand, the, 71. Working Men's Fran-
chise, 57.

Presbyterianism in Ireland, 42.
Prison Matron's Memoirs of Jane Cameron,
a, 153.

Punishment of Death, the, 108.
Pusey (Dr.) and the Times, 100.

RAWLINSON'S (Mr.) Five Great Monarchies

of the Ancient Eastern World, 154.
Real Judgment, the, 10.

Recent Charges and Pamphlets, 185.
Reformatory, the Mount St. Bernard, 77.
Register, the Annual, 89.
Registration and Baptism, 156.
Regium Donum, the, 42.
Religious Duties, Meditations on, 53.
Religious Education, 65.
Religious Reformation Imperatively De-
manded, 173.

Representative Novels, 88.

Reviews: An Irish Philosopher, 91. An-
nual Register, the, 89. Antiquarian Re-
cords, 60. Apología pro Vitâ Suâ, 54.
Autographs, 120. Autumn Rambles in
North Africa, 86. Church in the Navy,
the, 148. Danes in Camp, the, 24. Den-
mark, 150. Dissent and Democracy, 83.
Dr. McCaul and Bishop Colenso, 49.
Emilia in England, 20. Essays upon His-
tory and Politics, 118. Four Years in the
Ionian Islands, 84. Hannah's Bampton
Lectures, 176. Le Maudit, 151. Life and
Times of Bertrand du Guesclin, the, 89.
Life in America, 17. Life of General
Wolfe, 18. Life of a Thief, the, 153.
Meditations on Life and its Religious
Duties, 53. Mémoires du Cardinal Con-
salvi, 178. Miss Alfred, 115. Mr. Bab-
bage, 182. My Life and Recollections,
183. Periodical Literature, 123. Persia,
23. Rawlinson's Assyria, 154. Religious
Reformation Imperatively Demanded, 173.
Representative Novels, 88. Sir John
Eliot, 121. Sir Benjamin Brodie, 180.
Stanley's Jewish Church, 116. Sterne,
the Parson and the Buffoon, 174. Taylor's
(Henry) Poems, 146. Two Antique
Heroes, 119. Two Poets on the "Higher
Criticism," 181. Types and the Antitype,
16. Use of the Burial Service as re-
quired by Law, 22.
What is a Sun? 52.
Rington Priory, 88.
Rome, Experience of a Convert to, IoI.
Roman Catholics and Balliol College, 143.
Ross, Parochial Records of, 90.
Royal Naval Scripture Readers' Society, 106.

SCHOOL Discipline and the Committee of
the Council of Education, 90.
Scriptures, Bishop of Oxford on the Inspira-
tion of the, 74.

Scripture Readers' Society, Royal Naval, 106.
Semmes' (Captain) Narrative of the Cruise
of the Alabama and Sumter, 119.

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Sun, what is a? 52.

Surtees Society, Publications of, 90.
Synodical Condemnation of Essays and Re-
views, 46.

TAUNTON (Archdeacon of) and the Greek
Professorship at Oxford, 143. Taunton
(Archdeacon of) and the Bristol Con-
gress, 74.

Taylor (Henry), the Poems of, 146.
Tennyson's Enoch Arden, 115.
Thief, Life of a, 153.

Times, the, and Dr. Pusey, 100.
Toe, Opposability of the Great, 103.
Trevor's (Canon) Types and the Antitype, 16.
Turner (Rev. C.) Sonnets by, 181.
Two Antique Heroes, 119.
Two Poets on the "Higher Criticism," 181.

UNDERGRADUATES, Oxford, 7.
Union or League for Amending Appeal
Court, 100.

Universities, Religious Education at, 34-

VELVET Lawn, 88.

Vogan's (Rev. L.) Use of the Burial Ser-
vice as required by Law, 22.

WAR in New Zealand, the, 71.
Westminster: Dean of Westminster, the,
33. Dean of Westminster's Lectures
on the Jewish Church, 116.
Whiggery, Origin of, and its Workings in
New Zealand, 78.

Williams (Dr.), Judgment on the Appeal of,
10. Report of Committee on Grava-
mina, 43

Wilson v. Fendall, 112.
Wright's Life of Major-General Wolfe, 18.
Worcester Cathedral, 136.
Working Men's Franchise, 57.

YEOVIL Parish Church, 156.

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Notice.

THE unusual expense of postage for the CHURCH AND STATE REVIEW has long been a subject of considerable complaint among Subscribers to that Journal. The Proprietors have at length, therefore, determined to reduce the REVIEW within the weight covered by an ordinary Penny Stamp. As this has entailed a slight diminution in the amount of reading matter in each Number, they have further determined upon a more than corresponding reduction in the price, which will henceforward be Sixpence for 32 pages, instead of One Shilling for 48 pages, as heretofore, the Volume being annual instead of half-yearly. The Proprietors trust that this new arrangement will be found satisfactory. The Church and the Conservatives. HE Dean of Chichester has written a letter to the Times, more suo, without stopping to understand the question on which he And the Guardian, more suo, applauds the Dean, whom in its sincerer moments (if there be any such moments) it regards with fear and dislike. The matter which puzzles the one and irritates the other is easily explained. The Church of England has two aspects: one simply as a religious body-a branch of the Church Catholic; and another as the Church by law established in this realm. There is nothing inconsistent in these two aspects—they are, in fact, united in the view of a true Church-and-State man. Still it is quite possible to regard either by itself. A man may sincerely adhere to the doctrine and discipline of the Church without valuing her political status, or establishment," in this country. A little while ago there was a pretty active party of so-called "High Churchmen," who openly condemned the "Establishment," and were perpetually asking how much longer the Church was to bear the tyranny of the State. Of this party we will only say that

writes.

it supplied most of the Anglican perverts to Popery -and is now but little heard of. On the other hand, it is no less certain that a man may be a stout "Establishmentarian," who, in spiritual matters, is but loosely attached to the distinctive features of the Church. Such, for example, are those professed Episcopalians who, when in Scotland, attend the Presbyterian kirk as the "Established religion" of the country.

Such being the two aspects, the word "Church" naturally varies its meaning according to the bearing of the subject under discussion. At a religious meeting we should talk of strengthening the Church by enlarging and deepening her purely spiritual influences. At a political meeting the same language would be as properly applied to the defence of her constitutional rights. And at either a man would be reckoned a good or a bad Churchman, according as he responded to the question in hand.

Now this very obvious distinction disposes at once Lord Robert Cecil of Dr. Hook's illogical letter. declared that a good Churchman must be a good Conservative: but where was the declaration made? at a political dinner and in the House of Commons, places where there is no question of Sacraments or Orders, but only of the Church in her connexion with the State and Constitution of England. What, then, does Dr. Hook reply?-that he has known many "good Churchmen" who are "Liberals" in politics. But here he shifts to the other aspect of the Church. His friends are such as have contributed to the building of churches and the extension of Episcopacy. Very excellent things, doubtless; things in themselves, possibly, of superior value to political rights; but still not the things referred to in the proposition which Dr. Hook is anxious to deny. To meet Lord Robert Cecil fairly, Dr. Hook should have been able to state that he found the "Liberals" at Leeds forward in maintaining the Church, not simply as a religious denomination, but as part of the British Constitution. He should have produced his "Liberal" champions of the rights and property, as well as the doctrine and discipline, of the Church. This, we know, he could not do. The "Liberal" Churchmen of Leeds are

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