Breadcrumbs Section. Click here to navigate to respective pages.
Chapter
Chapter
also appears to have possessed the gift of prophecy. The centenary volume of 1897 had predicted: Our witness to the rights of the laity in the government of the Church will not be forgotten. But there is less need of that testimony to-day than at any period in the past, and as other Churches continue to travel on the same lines as ourselves the need will diminish still more and more as time advances. Bearing such testimony is therefore likely to be a matter whose importance will recede until it reaches the vanishing point, and whose principal interest will be for the student and the historian.
DOI link for also appears to have possessed the gift of prophecy. The centenary volume of 1897 had predicted: Our witness to the rights of the laity in the government of the Church will not be forgotten. But there is less need of that testimony to-day than at any period in the past, and as other Churches continue to travel on the same lines as ourselves the need will diminish still more and more as time advances. Bearing such testimony is therefore likely to be a matter whose importance will recede until it reaches the vanishing point, and whose principal interest will be for the student and the historian.
also appears to have possessed the gift of prophecy. The centenary volume of 1897 had predicted: Our witness to the rights of the laity in the government of the Church will not be forgotten. But there is less need of that testimony to-day than at any period in the past, and as other Churches continue to travel on the same lines as ourselves the need will diminish still more and more as time advances. Bearing such testimony is therefore likely to be a matter whose importance will recede until it reaches the vanishing point, and whose principal interest will be for the student and the historian.
ABSTRACT
Notes 1 J.M. Turner, Conflict and Reconciliation: studies in Methodism and ecumenism in
England, 1740-1982, London: Epworth, 1985. Mention is made, however, of the controversies in Wesleyan Methodism that led to the secession that created the New Connexion.