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Angels in the Trenches: British Soldiers and Miracles in the First World War
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 March 2016
Extract
In their interactions with the soldiers during the First World War the British military chaplains were afforded the opportunity to see the Christian body in microcosm. The chaplains’ frontline experiences shaped their positions on popular religion and the sincerity of Christian belief and practice amongst Britain’s youth. A comparative assessment of clerical responses to soldiers’ claims of the miraculous not only demonstrates a critical divide in clerical understanding of the supernatural – a divide which is more appropriately separated along theological rather than denominational lines. It also indicates that many of the differences between Catholic and Protestant evaluations of popular religion were, fundamentally, differences of clerical perception rather than popular practice and belief.
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- Copyright © Ecclesiastical History Society 2005
References
1 See especially D. S. Cairns, The Army and Religion (London, 1919); Charles Plater, ed., Catholic Soldiers (London, 1919); Anon., Catholics of the British Empire and the War (London, 1916); Arthur Herbert Gray, As Tommy Sees Us: a Book for Church Folk (London, 1917) and Stephen H. Louden, Chaplains in Conflict: the Role of Army Chaplains since 1914 (London, 1996).
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