EDWARD BOUVERIE PUSEY
\ˈɛdwəd bˈuːvəɹi pjˈuːsɪ], \ˈɛdwəd bˈuːvəɹi pjˈuːsɪ], \ˈɛ_d_w_ə_d b_ˈuː_v_ə_ɹ_i p_j_ˈuː_s_ɪ]\
Definitions of EDWARD BOUVERIE PUSEY
- 2006 - WordNet 3.0
- 2011 - English Dictionary Database
- 1910 - Warner's dictionary of authors ancient and modern
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English theologian who (with John Henry Newman and John Keble) founded the Oxford Movement (1800-1882)
By Princeton University
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English theologian who (with John Henry Newman and John Keble) founded the Oxford Movement (1800-1882)
By DataStellar Co., Ltd
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An English theological writer, a leader of the Anglo-Catholic (Tractarian) party in the Established Church; born near Oxford, 1800; died Sept. 14, 1882. He was associated with Newman and others in the British Critic, "Tracts for the Times", etc.; and his conspicuousness from his social position (nephew of one earl and grandson of another, professor and canon of Christ Church), wealth, and munificent charities, caused the Oxford Movement to be known as "Puseyism", though he was not its initiator and did not at first sympathize with it. He published: "An Historical Enquiry into the Probable Causes of the Rational Character Lately Predominant in the Theology of Germany" (1825); "The Holy Eucharist a Comfort to the Penitent" (1843), a sermon which resulted in his suspension for three years; two sermons on "The Entire Absolution of the Penitent" (1846), equally revolutionary; other sermons on "The Rule of Faith as Maintained by the Fathers", etc. (1861), and on "The Presence of Christ in the Holy Eucharist" (1853). Of his larger works the most important are: "The Doctrine of the Real Presence" (1855); "The Real Presence of the Body and Blood of Christ the Doctrine of the English Church" (1857); "An Eirenicon".
By Charles Dudley Warner
Word of the day
tinctura quininae ammoniata
- A preparation made by dissolving quinin sulphate in alcohol [Br. Ph.].