Page:EB1911 - Volume 09.djvu/450

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RELIGION]
ENGLAND
421


misconduct, he is only checked—so far as ecclesiastical order is concerned—by his oath of canonical obedience to the “godly” monitions of his bishop; and, since these monitions are difficult and costly to enforce, while their “godliness” may be a matter of opinion, an incumbent is practically himself the interpreter of the law as applied to the doctrine and ritual of his particular church. The result has been the development within the Established Church of a most startling diversity of doctrine and ritual practice, varying from what closely resembles that of the Church of Rome to the broadest Liberalism and the extremest evangelical Protestantism. This broad comprehensiveness, which to outsiders looks like ecclesiastical anarchy, is the characteristic note of the Church of England; it may be, and has been, defended as consonant with Christian charity and suited to the genius of a people not remarkable for logical consistency; but it makes it all the more difficult to say what the religion of Englishmen actually is, even within the English Church.

The following is a list of the archiepiscopal and episcopal sees of England and Wales—the latter arranged in alphabetical order,—with date of their establishment and amount of emoluments:—

  Year of
Foundation.
Annual
Emoluments.
Province of Canterbury—    
  Canterbury (archbishopric) 597 £15,000
  Bangor c. 550 4,200
  Bath and Wells 1139 5,000
  Birmingham 1904 3,500
  Bristol 1897* 3,000
  Chichester 1075 4,200
  Ely 1109 5,500
  Exeter 1050 4,200
  Gloucester 1541 4,300
  Hereford 676 4,200
  Lichfield 669 4,200
  Lincoln 1067 4,500
  Llandaff c. 550 4,200
  London 605 10,000
  Norwich 1094 4,500
  Oxford 1542 5,000
  Peterborough 1541 4,500
  Rochester 604 3,800
  St Albans 1877 3,200
  St Asaph c. 550 4,200
  St David’s c. 550 4,500
  Salisbury 1075 5,000
  Southwark 1904 3,000
  Southwell 1884 3,500
  Truro 1876 3,000
  Winchester c. 650 6,500
  Worcester c. 680 4,200
Province of York—    
  York (archbishopric) 625 10,000
  Carlisle 1133 4,500
  Chester 1541 4,200
  Durham 995 7,000
  Liverpool 1880 4,200
  Manchester 1847 4,200
  Newcastle 1882 3,500
  Ripon 1836 4,200
  Sodor and Man 1154 1,500
  Wakefield 1888 3,000
* Modern refoundation.

The following are suffragan or assistant bishoprics (the names of the dioceses to which each belongs being given in brackets): Dover, Croydon (Canterbury), Beverley, Hull, Sheffield (York), Stepney, Islington, Kensington (London), Jarrow (Durham), Guildford, Southampton, Dorking (Winchester), Barrow-in-Furness (Carlisle), Crediton (Exeter), Grantham (Lincoln), Burnley (Manchester), Thetford, Ipswich (Norwich), Reading (Oxford), Leicester (Peterborough), Richmond, Knaresborough (Ripon), Colchester, Barking (St Albans), Swansea (St. David’s), Woolwich, Kingston-on-Thames (Southwark), Derby (Southwell), St Germans (Truro). See also England, Church of; Anglican Communion; Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction; Vestments; Mass.

  Sittings. Com-
municants.
Ministers
 (Pastoral). 
Local
 Preachers. 
Sunday
Scholars.
Baptists[1] 1,421,742 424,741 2134 5,748 590,321
Congregationalists (1907) 1,801,447 498,953 3197 5,603 729,347
Presbyterian Church of England[2] 173,047 85,755 323 · · 98,258
Society of Friends · · 17,442 · · · · 62,347
Moravians 10,100 2,999 34 · · 4,542
Wesleyan Methodists[3] 2,500,000 620,350 2658 20,119 1,039,437
Primitive Methodists[1] 1,017,690 205,407 1101 15,963 477,114
United Methodist Church[4] 738,840 158,095 833 5,577 315,993
Wesleyan Reform Union 47,435 8,717 19 508 23,008
Independent Methodists 33,000 9,732 · · 375 28,387
Welsh Calvinistic Methodist 472,089 185,935 900 361 187,484
Countess of Huntingdon’s Connexion 12,347 2,469 26 · · 3,040
Reformed Episcopal Church 6,000 1,090 28 · · 2,600
Free Church of England 8,140 1,352 24 · · 4,196

The number of “denominations” by whom buildings were certified for worship up to 1895 was 293 (see list in Whitaker’s Almanack, 1886, p. 252), but in many instances such “denominations” consisted of two or three congregations only, in some cases of a single congregation. The Other Protestant com-munions. more important nonconformist churches are fully dealt with under their several headings. The above table, however, based on that in the Statesman’s Year-Book for 1908, and giving the comparative statistics of the chief nonconformist churches, may be useful for purposes of comparison. It may be prefaced by stating that, according to returns made in 1905, the Church of England provided sitting accommodation in parish and other churches for 7,177,144 people; had an estimated number of 2,053,455 communicants, 206,873 Sunday-school teachers, and 2,538,240 Sunday scholars. There were 14,029 incumbents (rectors, vicars, and perpetual curates), 7500 curates, i.e. assistant clergy, and some 4000 clergy on the non-active list.

Besides the bodies enumerated in the table there are other churches concerning which similar statistics are lacking, but which, in several cases, have large numbers of adherents. The Unitarians are an important body with (1908) 350 ministers and 345 places of worship. Most numerous, probably, are the adherents of the Salvation Army, which with a semi-military organization has in Great Britain alone over 60,000 officers, and “barracks,” i.e. preaching stations, in almost every town. The Brethren, generally known, from their place of origin, as the Plymouth Brethren, have “rooms” and adherents throughout England; the Catholic Apostolic Church (“Irvingites”) have some 80 churches; the New Jerusalem Church (Swedenborgians) had (1908) 75 “societies”; the Christian Scientists, the Christadelphians, the British Israelites and similar societies, such as the New and Latter House of Israel, the Seventh Day Baptists, deserve mention. The Latter Day Saints (Mormons) had (1908) 82 churches in Great Britain.

Roman Catholicism in England has shown a tendency to advance, especially among the upper and upper-middle classes. The published lists of “converts” are, however, no safe index to actual progress; for no equivalent statistics are available for “leakage” in the opposite Roman Catholics.direction. The membership of the Roman Catholic Church in England is estimated at about 2,200,000. But though the

  1. 1.0 1.1 In 1906.
  2. There are in addition some thousands of Presbyterians unconnected with the church, including members of the Church of Scotland.
  3. Great Britain and Ireland, 1906.
  4. On September 17, 1907, the United Methodist Free Churches, the Methodist New Connexion, and the Bible Christians were united under the name of the United Methodist Church.