Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction and Early Life
- 2 The Call to the Ministry
- 3 Elsie Begins Her Ministry, 1939
- 4 The Return to London, 1941
- 5 Flying into the Storms: Chaplain in the Royal Air Force, 1945
- 6 A Season of Clear Shining: Married Life
- 7 Vineyard Congregational Church, Richmond-upon-Thames
- 8 Later Years at Vineyard
- 9 International Meetings and the CUEW Chair
- 10 Elsie at the BBC
- 11 After the BBC: The City Temple
- 12 The Sky Turns Black: Another Crisis
- 13 Sometimes a Light Surprises: The Congregational Federation
- 14 Hutton Free Church, 1971
- 15 A Local Thunderstorm: The Kentish Town Situation
- 16 Presidential Duties and Travelling, 1973–1980
- 17 Going West, 1980
- 18 Ministry in Nottingham, 1984–1991
- 19 Epilogue
- Bibliography
- Index
6 - A Season of Clear Shining: Married Life
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction and Early Life
- 2 The Call to the Ministry
- 3 Elsie Begins Her Ministry, 1939
- 4 The Return to London, 1941
- 5 Flying into the Storms: Chaplain in the Royal Air Force, 1945
- 6 A Season of Clear Shining: Married Life
- 7 Vineyard Congregational Church, Richmond-upon-Thames
- 8 Later Years at Vineyard
- 9 International Meetings and the CUEW Chair
- 10 Elsie at the BBC
- 11 After the BBC: The City Temple
- 12 The Sky Turns Black: Another Crisis
- 13 Sometimes a Light Surprises: The Congregational Federation
- 14 Hutton Free Church, 1971
- 15 A Local Thunderstorm: The Kentish Town Situation
- 16 Presidential Duties and Travelling, 1973–1980
- 17 Going West, 1980
- 18 Ministry in Nottingham, 1984–1991
- 19 Epilogue
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Just three days before her discharge from the forces, Elsie finally married John Garrington. He had contracted scarlet fever in 1939 when they had first expected to marry, at a time when his marriage to Elsie would have been acceptable to the Church of England hierarchy, that is before she had been ordained. Unfortunately once she had begun formal training for the Congregational ministry, and even more after her ordination in 1941, the situation had changed dramatically and critically for his future preferment. Clearly Garrington's intended marriage to a woman minister of any denomination would not receive the approval of his bishop. Therefore, he not only encountered the opposition of the formidable Annie Chamberlain but also that of his superiors in the Church of England. That his fiancée should have acquired such a high public profile, as a result of a heated and prolonged controversy which had involved the Archbishop of Canterbury, did not make the matter any easier, although, in essence, the principles at issue remained the same. An Anglican incumbent's wife was informally required to be active in the parish and, naturally, it was assumed that she would be a confirmed Anglican herself. Elsie's conscience and vocation would not easily allow her to fulfil these expectations, although she wrestled with the problems and later did her best to be supportive.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Elsie ChamberlainThe Independent Life of a Woman Minister, pp. 65 - 75Publisher: Acumen PublishingPrint publication year: 2012