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Pusey and House
Front of Pusey House ( Pusey Street on right )
Pusey House is a religious institution located in St Giles ', Oxford, immediately to the south of Pusey Street.
Pusey House was opened in 1884 in part as a memorial to Edward Bouverie Pusey, Regius Professor of Hebrew at Oxford University, Canon of Christ Church Cathedral and for 40 years, a leading figure in the Oxford Movement, a movement of the mid 19th century which sought to bring the Church of England to a deeper understanding of its witness as part of the universal Catholic Church.
Since 1981 part of the former Pusey House site has been acquired by St Cross College.
Pusey House is renowned not only for its liturgy with full solemn ceremonial, but also for its active social character, with a strong student community, both undergraduate and graduate, which complements the religious life of the house in typical Oxford fashion.
Pusey's own books, bought after his death, originally formed the heart of Pusey House Library.
Alongside its reputation for dignified and traditional liturgy, Pusey House is also recognised for its musical tradition, most visible at the Solemn Mass on Sundays and solemnities.
Pusey House commissioned a new mass-setting for its 125th anniversary celebrations from the composer Alexander Campkin.
The Friends of Pusey House exists to provide additional support for its work and witness, both in England and abroad, by their prayers and by informing others about Pusey House.
* Pusey House, Chapel & Library, Oxford
* The Archives of Pusey House
* The Friends of Pusey House
* Historical documentation on the founding of Pusey House
Wheeler Robinson House ( on the corner of St Giles and Pusey Street ) built.
The John P. Crozer II Mansion, George K. Crozer Mansion, Caleb Pusey House, Old Main of the Crozer Theological Seminary, and Pusey-Crozier Mill Historic District are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
* Caleb Pusey House
In his memory his friends purchased his library, and bought for it a house in Oxford, known as the Pusey House, which they endowed with sufficient funds to maintain three librarians, who were charged with the duty of endeavouring to perpetuate in the university the memory of the principles which he taught.

Pusey and its
His first work, published in 1828, as an answer to Hugh James Rose's Cambridge lectures on rationalist tendencies in German theology, showed a good deal of sympathy with the German " pietists ", who had striven to deliver Protestantism from its decadence ; this sympathy was misunderstood, and Pusey was himself accused of holding rationalist views.
The immediate effect of his suspension was the sale of 18, 000 copies of the condemned sermon ; its permanent effect was to make Pusey for the next quarter of a century the most influential person in the Anglican Church, for it was one of the causes which led Newman to sever himself from that communion.
Pusey was involved in the controversy around Benjamin Jowett. The movement, in the actual origination of which he had had no share, came to bear his name: it was popularly known as Puseyism and its adherents as Puseyites.
Pusey ’ s First Enquiry into German Theology and its German Background ," Journal of Theological Studies, NS 38 / 2, 1987, 387-408.
The libraries located in Harvard Yard are Widener Library, its connected Pusey Library annex, Houghton Library for rare books and manuscripts, and Lamont Library, the main undergraduate library.
The House currently has its own football team which has competed against other Christian training establishments in Oxford and, also, Pusey House.
The riders in its colours grew season by season until in 1955 it had Robinson, Bernard Pusey, Dennis Talbot, Freddy Krebs, Clive Parker, Ken Joy, Arthur Ilsley, Derek Buttle ( the founder of the team ) and Dave Bedwell.

Pusey and foundation
Construction began in 1849, the foundation stone having been laid by Edward Pusey.

Pusey and on
Main Block was constructed, consisting of 16 study bedrooms, along with Helwys Hall, the College Library, the Senior Common Room and part of the building on Pusey Street.
Thomas Coebourn established the second gristmill in the new Pennsylvania colony, successfully challenging William Penn's monopoly vested in the Caleb Pusey Mill ( the Caleb Pusey house is still standing ) downstream on Chester Creek.
His father was Philip Bouverie ( d. 1828 ), a younger son of the 1st Viscount Folkestone, and took the name of Pusey on succeeding to the manorial estates at that place.
Pusey is honored with a feast day on the liturgical calendar of the Episcopal Church ( USA ) on September 18.
Edward Bouverie Pusey also valued Hope's advice and canvassed him in 1842 before publishing the Letter to the Archbishop of Canterbury on some Circumstances connected with the Present Crisis in the Church.
His scorn for enthusiasts and dread of religious emotion were vented in his bitter attacks on Methodism as well as in ridiculing the followers of Edward Pusey.
Unlike present-day matchbooks, Pusey positioned the striking surface on the inside of the paper fold.
When Brodie Innes sent on a sermon by E. B. Pusey, Darwin responded that he could " hardly see how religion & science can be kept as distinct as he desires, as geology has to treat of the history of the Earth & Biology that of man .— But I most wholly agree with you that there is no reason why the disciples of either school should attack each other with bitterness, though each upholding strictly their beliefs.
" In April 1969, student activists occupied Harvard's University Hall ( the building that housed most of the administrative offices ) in protest over the presence of ROTC on campus at the height of the Vietnam War, and in response Pusey summoned the police to arrest the demonstrators.
When he catches up with Mactaggart, he puts Pusey on board to ensure the cargo is transferred to another boat.
In 1989, Freeman returned to Radio 1 on Sunday lunchtimes, where the show featured three past charts each week, and was produced by Phil Swern from 1989 – 91 and Roger Pusey ( who had been Jimmy Savile's final producer on Radio One from 1986 – 87 ) in 1992.
Another concern is that the 1905 United Bible Societies Aramaic New Testament, based on the editions of Philip E. Pusey, George Gwilliam and John Gwyn, with which Lamsa's sources are largely common, are a late form of the Aramaic text which reveals nothing of the early stages of the Peshitta's development.
In 1840, he published a volume of Lectures on the Church of England, and in 1846 ( the year after Newman's secession to Rome ), the Church and the Churches, in which he maintained with much dialectical skill the evangelical doctrine of the " invisible Church " in opposition to the teaching of Newman and Pusey.
It stands on the near Chester Creek which Penn granted Pusey, a plantation which the latter named " Landing Ford ".

Pusey and with
** Marian Hughes becomes the first woman to take religious vows in communion with the Anglican Province of Canterbury since the Reformation, making them privately to E. B. Pusey in Oxford.
On March 17, 2011, Duke University spokesman Karl Bates announced that the archives will move to Duke, with Anne E. Pusey, Duke's chairman of evolutionary anthropology, overseeing the collection.
Pusey, who managed the archives in Minnesota and worked with Goodall in Tanzania, had worked at Duke for a year.
Coming just at the transition period when the " old Christ Church ," which Pusey strove so hard to preserve, was inevitably becoming broader and more liberal, it was chiefly due to Liddell that necessary changes were effected with the minimum of friction.
Along with his colleagues, including John Henry Newman and Edward Pusey, he became a leading light in the movement, but did not follow Newman into the Roman Catholic church.
Pusey is chiefly remembered as the eponymous representative of the earlier phase of a movement which carried with it no small part of the religious life of England in the latter half of the 19th century.
* B. W. Savile, Dr Pusey, an Historic Sketch, with Some Account of the Oxford Movement ( 1883 )
The publication in 1889 of Lux Mundi edited by Charles Gore, a series of essays attempting to harmonize Anglican Catholic doctrine with modern thought, showed that even at Pusey House, established as the citadel of Puseyism at Oxford, the principles of Pusey were being departed from.
In 1842 he entered into correspondence with the leaders of the Tractarian movement in England, and some interesting letters have been preserved which were exchanged between him and Edward Pusey, William Ewart Gladstone and James Hope-Scott.
President Nathan M. Pusey is credited with initiating the program in 1945, although Professor Waples chaired the Freshman Studies Committee and was responsible for implementing the program.
" In response to an enquiry about the same sermon from the botanist Henry Nicholas Ridley, Darwin stated that " Dr Pusey was mistaken in imagining that I wrote the Origin with any relation whatever to Theology ", and added that " many years ago when I was collecting facts for the Origin, my belief in what is called a personal God was as firm as that of Dr Pusey himself, & as to the eternity of matter I have never troubled myself about such insoluble questions .— Dr Pusey's attack will be as powerless to retard by a day the belief in evolution as were the virulent attacks made by divines fifty years ago against Geology, & the still older ones of the Catholic church against Galileo ".
( Rome, 1547 ), was edited with preface and notes by EB Pusey ( London, 1869 seq.

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