Edward Bouverie Pusey photo

Edward Bouverie Pusey

After conversion of John Henry Newman to Roman Catholicism in 1845, British theologian Edward Bouverie Pusey led the Oxford Movement that, originating at Oxford University in 1833, within the Church of England sought to link the Anglican Church more closely to the Roman Catholic Church.

This English churchman of the figures for more than fifty years served as Regius professor of Hebrew. His descendant, Paul George Pusey, seeks to perpetuate his memory.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_...


“God does not take away trials or carry us over them, but strengthens us through them.”
Edward Bouverie Pusey
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“If we wished to gain contentment, we might try such rules as these: 1. Allow thyself to complain of nothing, not even of the weather. 2. Never picture thyself to thyself under any circumstances in which thou art not. 3. Never compare thine own lot with that of another. 4. Never allow thyself to dwell on the wish that this or that had been, or were, otherwise than it was, or is. God Almighty loves thee better and more wisely than thou dost thyself. 5. Never dwell on the morrow. Remember that it is God's, not thine. The heaviest part of sorrow often is to look forward to it. "The Lord will provide.”
Edward Bouverie Pusey
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