An Episcopal Dictionary of the Church

Protestant Episcopal Review

A journal which claimed to be conservative and yet progressive, liberal and yet reverent, critical and yet constructive, scholarly and popular, catholic and protestant. It was an outgrowth of two previous publications of the Virginia Theological Seminary. The earlier ancestor was The Seminarian, which was published monthly from Nov. 1878, until July 1887. The second ancestor was The Virginia Seminary Magazine, which began publication in Dec. 1887. It continued as a nine-issue-per-annum journal until July 1892. In 1892 the Protestant Episcopal Review began publication. It was published ten times a year until it went out of existence in 1900.

Glossary definitions provided courtesy of Church Publishing Incorporated, New York, NY,(All Rights reserved) from “An Episcopal Dictionary of the Church, A User Friendly Reference for Episcopalians,” Don S. Armentrout and Robert Boak Slocum, editors.