Christopher John Lane

Writer, Professor, Student of Christian Cultures

Newman, Anglo-Catholicism, and the Anglican Patrimony


Public Lecture


Christopher J. Lane
St. John Henry Newman Lecture Series, Christendom College, Front Royal, Va., 2019 Oct 31

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APA   Click to copy
Lane, C. J. (2019). Newman, Anglo-Catholicism, and the Anglican Patrimony. Front Royal, Va.: Christendom College.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Lane, Christopher J. “Newman, Anglo-Catholicism, and the Anglican Patrimony.” St. John Henry Newman Lecture Series. Front Royal, Va.: Christendom College, 2019.


MLA   Click to copy
Lane, Christopher J. Newman, Anglo-Catholicism, and the Anglican Patrimony. Christendom College, 2019.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@conference{christopher2019a,
  title = {Newman, Anglo-Catholicism, and the Anglican Patrimony},
  year = {2019},
  month = oct,
  day = {31},
  address = {Front Royal, Va.},
  institution = {Christendom College},
  series = {St. John Henry Newman Lecture Series},
  author = {Lane, Christopher J.},
  month_numeric = {10}
}

A small factual correction:
Early in the talk, I mentioned Samuel Seabury's role in the founding of Trinity Episcopal Church, Fishkill, N.Y. and then erroneously stated that he became the first American bishop of the Episcopal Church in the United States. In reality, the Samuel Seabury who became America's first Episcopalian bishop was the son of Samuel Seabury, rector of St. George's in Hempstead, Long Island who contributed to the founding of Trinity.


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