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The Church of England and the First World War

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The classic account exploring the complex and multifacted role played by the Church of England in British society during World War One.The Church of England and the First World War (first published...
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  • 30 January 2014
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The classic account exploring the complex and multifacted role played by the Church of England in British society during World War One.

The Church of England and the First World War (first published in 1978) explores in depth the role of the church during the tragic circumstances of the First World War using biographies, newspapers, magazines, letters, poetry and other sources in a balanced evaluation. The myth that the war was fought by 'lions led by donkeys' powerfully endures turning heroes into victims. Alan Wilkinson demonstrates the sheer horror, moral ambiguity, and the interaction between religion, the church and war with a scholarly, and yet poetic, hand. The author creates a vivid image of the church and society, includes views of the Free Churches and Roman Catholics, portrays the pastoral problems and challenges to faith presented by war, and the pressures for reform of church and society. The Church of England and the First World War is written with compelling compassion and great historical understanding, making the book hard to put down. This expert and classic study will grip the religious and secular alike, the general reader or the student.
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Price: $39.95
Pages: 392
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: Lutterworth Press
Publication Date: 30 January 2014
Trim Size: 8.46 X 5.47 in
ISBN: 9780718893217
Format: Paperback
REVIEWS Icon
Gathering together an impressive range of printed sources, it remains the leading published work on the subject.
— Stephen Parker and Tom Lawson, editors, God and War, 2012

It is the most vivid account yet available of English religion in this or any other period of the twentieth century. ... But Canon Wilkinson is no apologist for the official church.
— David Edwards

Few non-fiction books enjoy such durability and it is a tribute to the quality of the original research that The Church of England and the First World War remains the definitive and comprehensive work on the established church in that conflict. [...] Wilkinson gives a vivid impression of the role of the Church in providing practical and emotional support for anxious and bereaved relatives of those fighting as well as service to the fighting men themselves. It is a mark of the quality of the original analysis that thirty-six years after initial publication Wilkinson's book is still relevant, not only to the historical Church as it entered the war in 1914 or indeed as it emerged from it in 1918, but as it exists today with all the moral and theological complexities, contradictions and ambiguities that that entail from any meeting of conflict and the spiritual. [...] For church historians this volume presents the war as a watershed for the life of the Church and its place in society.
— Julia Lee Dean, Writer and WW1 Daily's Religious Affairs Editor

In each of the chapters of his book, Canon Wilkinson examines a different aspect of the Church's role during the war, from the surprise at the start of hostilities at all, to the service provided to woeful widows at home and weary warriors at the front, to the question of the morality of the war, and how Christians of various stripes responded. [...] In providing a history of how the Church attempted to deal with these and other issues, Canon Wilkinson offers something of a blueprint for how the Church might choose to face a society in the throes of deep change - a lesson from the past, providing a possible pattern for the future.
— Michael Trimmer
List of Illustrations
Preface
Preface to Second Edition
Preface to 2014 Reprint
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. The Coming of War
2. The Church and the War Effort
3. The Church's Ministry at Home
4. Moral Issues in Wartime
5. The Church at the Front
6. Some Chaplains
7. The Army and Religion
8. Death, Bereavement, and the Supernatural
9. Patriotism is not enough
10. Faith and War
11. Preparing for Peace
12. Remembrance
Notes
Biographical Notes on Principal Figures
Bibliography
Index