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The Society for the Maintenance of the Faith is an Anglo-Catholic organization in the Church of England founded in 1873. As of 2022, it holds 94 advowsons or rights of patronage for church appointments. The group in 1995 supported the idea of life-long appointments as a means of promoting diversity among the clergy.[1][2]
Presidents
edit- Lord Eliot (1873–1878)
- Octavius Leefe (1878–1881, 1889–1901)
- Lord Edward Spencer-Churchill (1881–1889, 1901–1911)
- The Duke of Newcastle (1911–1928)
- Lord Mamhead (1928–1945)
- Sir Henry Slesser (1946–1948)
- Sir John Best-Shaw (1949–1967)
- Dr. Arthur Peck (1967–1974)
- Dr. Paul Kent (1974–1999)
- Dr. Brian Hanson CBE (1999–2018)
- Dr. Colin Podmore MBE (2019–present)
References
edit- ^ Walter Schwartz (17 January 1995). Anglican group to fight for 'vicars for life'. The Guardian, p. 8
- ^ Kathryn Knight (17 January 1995). Parish patrons unite to halt liberalism. The Times 65166, p. 8
- Constitutions of the Society for the Maintenance of the Faith and List of Council and Officers (1876)
- William Oddie, "Anglo-Catholic parishes are often very close-knit: the Ordinariate will preserve that" (Catholic Herald, November 12, 2010)
- Sutton, Teresa (2019) "Advowsons and private patronage". Ecclesiastical Law Journal, 21 (3). pp. 267-288. ISSN 0956-618X
External links
edit- Official website
- Charity overview Charity Commission for England and Wales