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United Dioceses of Dublin & Glendalough

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22.04.2013

Book on Bishop John Jebb and the Nineteenth–Century Anglican Renaissance Launched Next Week

A new book by Alan R Acheson entitled Bishop John Jebb and the Nineteenth–Century Anglican Renaissance is to be launched by The Most Revd Dr Michael Jackson, Archbishop of Dublin, at St Anne’s Cathedral, Belfast on Tuesday 30 April at 12.00 for 12.30pm. Published by Clements Academic Publishing, it is a critical and timely study of John Jebb which highlights the scholarly influence, sensitive spirituality, and personal charisma of a long–neglected, pivotal leader of the Anglican Renaissance. It shows, too, his relevance to contemporary Anglican ecclesiology and integrity through his perception of the need to hold Catholic and Reformed traditions in a creative and prophetic tension. As such it will be of interest to all those who desire to see the restoration and revival of Anglicanism today.

Bishop John Jebb (1775–1833), Fellow of the Royal Society, was a leader in the pre–Tractarian Anglican Church: as preacher, author, orator, and prolific correspondent. His works on liturgy, scripture, and biography were published in both London and America and influenced the fledgling Episcopal Church of the USA. As a Bishop of the United Church of England and Ireland — he was Bishop of Limerick — Jebb was close to William Howley, Archbishop of Canterbury from 1828. His correspondents included government ministers, theologians, English and American bishops, and above all his kindred Irish spirit Alexander Knox. Other close friends were William Wilberforce, Robert Southey, and Madame D’Arblay (Fanny Burney). Jebb engaged with both High Churchmen and Evangelicals: he preached at Clapham and Hackney, and in his last years influenced early leaders of the Catholic revival, notably Hugh James Rose and William Palmer (of Worcester College, Oxford)

The Most Revd Dr Richard Clarke, Archbishop of Armagh says, ‘Bishop Jebb’s churchmanship combined the very best of the high church and the evangelical, in a catholic view of the sacramental life of the Church, a warmth and directness in preaching, an intellectual rigour, and a concern for the pastoral care of all. He is richly deserving of a modern biography. In this series of essays, Alan Acheson brings to life both the complexity and vitality of a great bishop.’

The author, Dr Alan R. Acheson is a former Headmaster of Portora Royal School and The King’s School, Sydney. He is the author of A History of the Church of Ireland, 1691–2001, and has also taught church history in Trinity College, Dublin. He has served on the General Synod of the Church of Ireland and is a former member of the Anglican Consultative Council.

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