Richard Enraght
(1837–1898)

Irish-born Church of England priest.

Works edit

  • To The Poor The Gospel is Preached. London: Bell and Daldy. 1865 – via Project Canterbury.  - a sermon (with a preface) advocating the right of the people to freedom of public worship in "The Church of the People", - written while a Curate at St Luke Church, Sheffield.
  • Bible-Ritualism Indispensably Necessary for Purposes of Instruction & of Worship. London: Masters. 1866 – via Project Canterbury.  - a sermon, - written while a Curate at St Luke Church Sheffield.
  • Who Are True Churchmen, and Who Are Conspirators?. London: J. T. Hayes. 1870 – via Project Canterbury.  - an appeal to the Last Settlement of the English Reformation in 1662 - written while a Curate at St Paul's Church Brighton.
  • "Free and Open Churches and the Weekly Offertory" (1871) - a lecture for the National Association for Promoting Freedom of Worship - written while a Curate at St Paul's Church Brighton.
  • The Real Presence and Holy Scripture. London: J. T. Hayes. 1872 – via Project Canterbury.  - written while Priest in Charge of St Andrew Church Portslade.
  • Catholic Worship not Pharisaic-Judaism. London: J. T. Hayes. 1873 – via Project Canterbury.  - written while Priest in Charge of St Andrew Church Portslade.
  • Not Law, But Unconstitutional Tyranny. London: T. Hayes. 1877 – via Project Canterbury.  - a lecture on the "Present Unconstitutional Exercise of the Royal Supremacy in Matters Spiritual", - Holy Trinity Bordesley.
  • "A Pastoral to the Faithful Worshipping at Holy Trinity, Bordesley" - Birmingham, (20 July 1879).
  • The Ridsdale judgement on vestments: Was it an intentional miscarriage of justice? : Holy Trinity Schools, Bordesley, (17 November 1880).
  • "My Ordination Oaths and other Declarations: am I Keeping Them?" (1880) - Holy Trinity, Bordesley.
  • "An Aggrieved Parish, or The Minutes of the Easter vestries in the Parish of Holy Trinity, Birmingham", from 1878 to 1881, with an address delivered in 1881.
  • My Prosecution under the Public Worship Regulation Act. London: Marshall, & Co. 1883 – via Project Canterbury.  - a statement laid before the most Rev. the Lord Archbishop of Canterbury, - Holy Trinity, Bordesley.

 

Some or all works by this author were published before January 1, 1929, and are in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago. Translations or editions published later may be copyrighted. Posthumous works may be copyrighted based on how long they have been published in certain countries and areas.

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