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William John Butler and the revival of the Ascetic Tradition

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2016

Ann Frances*
Affiliation:
King’s College, London

Extract

William John Butler, sometime vicar of Wantage in Berkshire and founder of the Community of St Mary the Virgin, gave a concrete and contemporary expression to an aspect of the ascetic idea current among followers of the Oxford Movement, which was revealed in their desire to restore monastic life in the Church in England. The Community founded by Butler was one of the earliest of the indigenous Anglican communities for women. In no way could the desert ideal or the later pre-Reformation models of religious life be reconstructed, nor would they have been appropriate in the climate of the time. However Butler believed, as had Newman, Pusey and others, that the basic principles of monastic life remained valid and they could and should find their place in the contemporary Church of England. It was believed that the Church had the grace and the resources of devotion within itself to give birth to the religious life anew, to continue its nurture and promote its development. Certainly the enhanced spirituality resulting from the example of deep devotion of the Tractarians themselves and that of their followers engendered a religious atmosphere in which new spiritual adventures were made possible.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical History Society 1985

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References

1 C.S.M.V. Archives, Wantage, Address at reception of Novices, Feast of the Visitation 1875.

2 C.S.M.V. Archives, Wantage, Preached on the Feast of the Purification, 1877, to Sisters and Associates.

3 Towle, Eleanor A., John Mason Neale, D.D.: A Memoir p. 237.Google Scholar

4 [C.T.] Cruttwell, Six Lectures on the Oxford Movement and its results on the Church of England (London 1899) p. 139.

5 C.S.M.V. Archives, Wantage, Address to the Sisters 1875.

6 Ibid, Notes on vocation nd.

7 Ibid, Mediation on vocation nd.

8 Cruttwell.

9 See my M.A. thesis ‘History of the Community of St. Mary the Virgin, Wantage: Foundation and Early Development’ (University of Durham 1974).