The Church in Anglican Theology: A Historical, Theological and Ecumenical Exploration.
Williams, Peter W.
The Church in Anglican Theology: A Historical, Theological and
Ecumenical Exploration. By Kenneth A. Locke. Farnham U.K.: Ashgate,
2009. xi + 219 pp. $89.95 cloth.
"Muddling through" is an off-used description of a
distinctively English attitude towards life. The phrase has also carried
over as a characterization of the theological posture of that
nation's established church and its spiritual
offspring--today's beleaguered Worldwide Anglican Communion.
Anglicanism, in short, has been a Christian tradition that historically
has preferred inclusiveness to precision. Kenneth Locke's study of
Anglican ecclesiology both confirms and adds nuance and positive spin to
this characterization. Locke, who teaches at the University of the West
in California, traces in painstaking detail the development of Anglican
approaches to the nature of the church from Tudor origins to present-day
ecumenical conversations.
Not surprisingly, Locke frames the development of Anglican thought
on the nature of the church as an ongoing dialectic between Reformation
notions of the notae ecclesiae--"marks of the church" that
include Word, sacrament, and discipline--and a more Catholic-Orthodox
emphasis on the indispensability of the historic episcopate. Anglicans
have almost unanimously agreed on the rightness of an episcopal form of
polity, but have disagreed considerably over the exact nature,
authority, and even necessity of such a polity. Locke has mined primary
and scholarly sources to trace this debate over the centuries, and the
result is a very useful, if often repetitious, survey of a doctrine--or,
perhaps more accurately in context, a notion--that has emerged as
particularly central in the emergence of a distinctively Anglican ethos.
Locke comes to the eventual conclusion that the lack of a firm Anglican
doctrinal position to undergird its polity is actually a positive
advantage rather than a sign of muddle-headedness. Although Anglicans
have typically looked to both scripture and tradition, including the
early ecumenical councils, as sources of religious authority, they have
generally chosen to see truth as a moving target that emerges in clarity
dialectically over time rather than a matter to be formulated on the
pins of doctrinal pronouncements. Such pronouncements would be highly
problematic in any case, since there is no ultimate earthly authority in
the Anglican Communion.
Locke is by no means a disinterested observer, but rather sees his
efforts as a contribution towards a clarification of Anglican
self-understanding, especially as that understanding has been tested in
ecumenical conversations with a variety of partners as well as in the
"current unpleasantness" of rancorous intra-Anglican
quarreling over issues such as the status of women and gays. (Oddly,
Locke makes virtually no mention of the latter as a test case in
questions of authority and diversity within the communion today.) In
advancing a distinctive normative viewpoint, Locke employs the methods
of a rather traditional approach to historical theology, so that
attempts to locate the positions of particular thinkers and ideas in
cultural context are rare in his pages. His work will thus be of primary
interest to Anglicans, but might profitably also be consulted for those
seeking a plausible account of the debate over the nature of the church
that has characterized Christianity since the days of Luther and Calvin.
Peter W. Williams
Miami University
doi: 10.1017/S0009640711001132