Available Formats
A Field Guide to the English Clergy: A Compendium of Diverse Eccentrics, Pirates, Prelates and Adventurers; All Anglican, Some Even Practising
By (Author) The Revd Fergus Butler-Gallie
Oneworld Publications
Oneworld Publications
1st December 2018
4th October 2018
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Religion: general
Social groups: religious groups and communities
283.0922
Hardback
192
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
Judge not, lest ye be judged. This timeless wisdom has guided the Anglican Church for hundreds of years, and has fostered a certain tolerance of eccentricity among its members. The Reverend Robert Hawker invented the Harvest Festival, but he also excommunicated a cat for mousing on Sundays. Bishop Lancelot Fleming would commandeer Navy helicopters when he was late for service. The Reverend John Allington - 'Mad Jack', to his friends - wore a leopard skin instead of a surplice, and insisted on being carried around in a coffin. A Field Guide to the English Clergy celebrates the cream of the crop: the drinkers (and publicans), the inventors, the lion tamers, the suicidal missionaries, and even one piratical Archbishop. But despite their sometimes bizarre behaviour, many in the clergy saw the church as their true calling. After all, who cares if you're wearing red high heels when there are souls to be saved
One of the best Christmas books of the past few years... both hilarious and unusually elegant in conception and execution.
* Marcus Berkmann, Spectator *Eye-popping tales of lunacy, debauchery and depravityButler-Gallie has done a splendid job presenting a smorgasbord of most peculiar parsons.
* Sebastian Shakespeare, Daily Mail *We havealways kept a special haven for oddballs in the Church of England, as Fergus Butler-Gallie demonstrates in this entertaining compendiumTheir foibles cover all bases from absentmindedness to epic drunkennessIm glad I read this one. Its a lot of fun.
* The Times *Entertainingly eruditeBut it is also a surprisingly profound workFor all its mischief, Butler-Gallies work of lightly worn erudition is a paean to a great English institution, finely tuned to the temper of its representatives, good, bad and indifferent. We should treasure it more.
* Literary Review *A humorous compendium of some of the oddball clergy who have served the Church over the centuries...These thumbnail portraits reveal a very broad church indeed.
* New Statesman *The Church of England has produced some real oddballs in its time, and this is an entertaining gallop through several centuries worth of themButler-Gallie has done his homework, digging out some rare gemsThis is the story not just of eccentrics, but also of a leisured age that is no more.
* Harry Mount, Spectator *Wonderfully entertainingA hilarious yet thoughtful reminder that the Christian faith wasnt always thought incompatible with a sense of humour or a healthy bolshiness.
* Sunday Times *It may have the makings of a modern classicButler-Gallie chronicles not just Anglican follies, but also human weaknesses which we all share and with which we can perhaps sympathise.
* The Catholic Herald *This is a ridiculously enjoyable book: funny, compassionate, and wonderfully well-written.
-- Tom HollandA delightful, sympathetic, humorous and earthed cocktail of quirky English clergy.
-- The Rt Revd David WilbourneFabulously enjoyable compendium of the Anglican Churchs most eccentric ministers who prove to be very eccentric indeed.
-- Readers DigestSome of the most riotous misbehaviour in Church of England history is chronicled in this sprightly book.
* Daily Mail *The Reverend Fergus Butler-Gallieholds a bachelor's degree in history from the University of Oxford and a bachelor's degree in theology from the University of Cambridge. He also once accidentally appeared on Only Connect. This is his first book.