Word: malverne
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...Christian dogma, Father Smyth concludes that Christianity is in essence a collectivist faith, that it must concern itself with the evils of this world, and that the only Christian solution of those ills is therefore a collectivist one. This article is more Leftist in tone than even the famed Malvern Conference, and demonstrates that the Church both at home and abroad can be more than a defender of the status quo. "Clark Hamilton's" composition, "We Will Have Dictatorship," points down the same collectivist path but winds up at a wholly different destination, for society here is described as hurtling...
...like it or not," the delegates were told by no less a churchman than England's Dr. William Paton, co-secretary of the World Council of Churches, but the conference did not veer as far to the left as its definitely pinko British counterpart, the now famous Malvern Conference (TIME, Jan. 20, 1941). It did, however, back up Labor's demand for an increasing share in industrial management. It echoed Labor's shibboleth that the denial of collective bargaining "reduces labor to a commodity." It urged taxation designed "to the end that our wealth may be more...
...Council of Churches (equivalent to America's Federal Council) and has frankly said: "If it ever appears that Establishment is the bar to the union of the church in this land, I shall start an agitation for Disestablishment." Known to churchmen everywhere are the far-to-the-left Malvern Conference he summoned last year and the interdenominational program for "Social Justice & Economic Reconstruction" (TIME, Jan. 5) which he prefaced last December...
When the two groups begin speaking with one voice, most Englishmen expect to recognize the voice of York and his commission, which is best known for the way it outMalverned Malvern in its far-to-the-left program for the post-war reconstruction of England (TIME, Jan. 5). The united voice will first be heard at the end of April in a document on The Church and International Order...
When Lang was promoted from York to Canterbury in 1928, Temple succeeded him at York. Temple may well succeed him again. Outstanding as a church administrator and theologian as well as a reformer, Dr. Temple a year ago called the famed Malvern Conference to seize for the Church leadership in "ordering the new society." In December he led an official interdenominational commission (TIME, Jan. 5) in a far-to-the-left program for Social Justice & Economic Reconstruction which he called "a conscious and deliberate attempt to cancel the divorce between theology and economics." But York may decline the Primacy...