The Mad Bishops

The Mad Bishops
Author: James Day
Publisher: TrineDay
Total Pages: 289
Release: 2023-11-15
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1634244494

How did a peddler of phony degrees who claimed to be a world famous bishop build a network of contacts that led to the assassinations of JFK, MLK, and RFK? Beyond that central question, what does this foray into the bizarre and esoteric say about our current state of religion and democracy? Through the life and world of Earl Anglin James, we explore the deep inner workings of religion and intelligence, revealing connections and relationships that were established long before Dallas, 1963, and have defined our destiny as a nation.

The Month

The Month
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 614
Release: 1889
Genre: Christianity
ISBN:

The Directory of Autocephalous Bishops of the Apostolic Succession, Fifteenth Edition, Revised and Expanded

The Directory of Autocephalous Bishops of the Apostolic Succession, Fifteenth Edition, Revised and Expanded
Author: Bishop Karl Pruter
Publisher: Wildside Press LLC
Total Pages: 102
Release: 2007-09-01
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1434401448

Here's the newest revised and expanded edition of Bishop Karl Pruter's standard guide to the independent Anglican, Catholic, and Orthodox Bishops located in North America. These episcopi vagantes owe allegiance to no major church body, but, in the best tradition of the early apostles, have either established small independent parishes to serve the faithful, or wander from place to place preaching the Christian gospel. The Directory is arranged alphabetically by surname or religious name, with complete addresses. All scholars of the independent Catholic and Orthodox churches will welcome Bishop Karl's newest edition to the growing literature on autocephaly.

Bishops, Wives and Children

Bishops, Wives and Children
Author: Douglas J. Davies
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 228
Release: 2016-04-15
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1317174046

Christianity as a cultural force, whether rising or falling, has seldom been analysed through the actual processes by which tradition is transmitted, modified, embraced or rejected. This book achieves that end through a study of bishops of the Church of England, their wives and their children, to show how values fostered in the vicarage and palace shape family, work and civic life in a supposedly secular age. Davies and Guest integrate, for the first time, sociological concepts of spiritual capital with anthropological ideas of gift-theory and, alongside theological themes, use these to illuminate how the religious professional functions in mediating tradition and fostering change. Motifs of distant prelates, managerially-minded fathers in God and rebellious clergy children are reconsidered in a critical light as new empirical evidence offers unique insights into how the clergy family functions as an axis of social power in an age incredulous to ecclesiastical hierarchy. Bishops, Wives and Children marks an important advance in the analysis of the spirituality of Catholic, Evangelical and Liberal leaders and their social significance within a distinctive Christian tradition and all it represents in wider British society.