Index of Anglican Resource Sites
A curated directory of websites for Anglican theology, history, liturgy, and primary source texts — with emphasis on classical, Reformed, and orthodox Anglican resources.
Primary Source Archives & Digital Libraries
Section titled “Primary Source Archives & Digital Libraries”Anglican.net — https://www.anglican.net/ Orthodox Anglican doctrine, theology, and discussion. Hosts digitized historic works of Anglican theology from the 16th–18th centuries, including Jewel, Andrewes, Sparrow, Beveridge, and many others. Strong emphasis on classical Anglican divines.
Project Canterbury — https://anglicanhistory.org/ Major digital archive of out-of-print Anglican documents. Hosts the full Parker Society Publications, the Library of Anglo-Catholic Theology, Tracts for the Times, and individual author collections (Hooker, Jewel, Herbert, Ken, Andrewes, etc.). Indispensable for historical research.
Society of Archbishop Justus — http://justus.anglican.org/resources/ Server infrastructure hosting Anglican resources, including the definitive online Book of Common Prayer collection (dozens of complete BCPs), biographical sketches of notable Christians, and healing prayer resources.
Christian Classics Ethereal Library (CCEL) — https://www.ccel.org/ Massive free digital library of Christian theological and spiritual works from the early church through the 19th century. Not Anglican-specific, but contains extensive Reformation-era texts, Schaff’s church histories, patristic writings, and works by Anglican divines. Searchable, with multiple download formats.
Oremus Liturgical Library — http://oremus.org/liturgy/ Collection of authorized and other liturgical texts used in the Church of England and the wider Anglican Communion. Described by the Church Times as “the best and biggest Anglican library of texts” on the web.
Books of Common Prayer Online
Section titled “Books of Common Prayer Online”BCP Collection (Society of Archbishop Justus) — http://justus.anglican.org/resources/bcp/ The most comprehensive online collection of Books of Common Prayer, including the 1662 (Church of England), 1549, 1559, 1789, 1892, 1928, and 1979 (US), plus prayer books from across the Communion. Fully searchable.
ACNA 2019 Book of Common Prayer — https://bcp2019.anglicanchurch.net/ Full text of the Anglican Church in North America’s 2019 BCP, available in PDF and Word formats.
REC Prayer Book — The Reformed Episcopal Church’s approved Prayer Book (2005), in both traditional and modern language editions. Available for download on this site.
Denominational & Institutional Sites
Section titled “Denominational & Institutional Sites”Anglican Church in North America (ACNA) — https://anglicanchurch.net/ Official site of the ACNA, with resources including the 2019 BCP, the catechism (To Be a Christian), prayer cycle, and theological statements.
Reformed Episcopal Church (REC) — https://rechurch.org/ Official site of the REC, a founding jurisdiction of the ACNA. Links to the Declaration of Principles, ACNA Theological Statement, Jerusalem Declaration, Constitution and Canons, prayer book, and various ministry resources.
GAFCON (Global Anglican Future Conference) — https://www.gafcon.org/ The global orthodox Anglican movement. Source for the Jerusalem Declaration (2008), conference documents, and news from the global Anglican realignment.
Theology, Commentary & Teaching
Section titled “Theology, Commentary & Teaching”Center for Reformation Anglicanism — https://www.anglicanism.info/ Not-for-profit ministry focused on the Elizabethan Settlement as biblical, confessionally Reformed, pastorally generous, and liturgically beautiful. Articles on Cranmer, Cromwell, Katherine Parr, the English Reformation, and the formularies.
Anglican Compass — https://anglicancompass.com/ Broad ACNA-oriented resource site with introductory guides (“Rookie Anglican” series), a comprehensive recommended reading list, lectionary commentary, and articles on Anglican identity, theology, and practice. Their recommended resources page is an especially thorough bibliography.
The Anglican Way (Magazine) — https://anglicanway.org/ Print and online magazine focused on classical reformational Anglicanism. Notable for serious liturgical and theological analysis, including critical engagement with the ACNA 2019 BCP from a 1662-tradition perspective.
The North American Anglican — https://northamanglican.com/ Online publication featuring articles on Reformed Anglican theology, catechesis, church history, and the 39 Articles. Hosts the “Miserable Offenders” podcast. Contributors include Will Prydain, James Clark, and others.
Prydain — https://prydain.wordpress.com/ Blog on Anglicanism, Scripture, and the Gospel from a Reformed Anglican perspective. Particularly valued for its collection of resources and free PDFs related to the 39 Articles of Religion.
The Davenant Institute — https://davenantinstitute.org/ Protestant scholarly institute recovering and renewing classical Protestant wisdom. Publishes Ad Fontes journal, runs Davenant Hall (online courses), and Davenant Press (new editions of historic Reformed texts, including Hooker’s Laws in modern English). Not exclusively Anglican but deeply relevant to the tradition.
The Anglican Connection — https://anglicanconnection.com/ Partnership of gospel-centered ministers and churches rooted in Sydney-style reformational Anglicanism. Resources on classical Reformed Anglican identity and ministry, with connections to the legacy of Stott and Packer.
Evangelical Anglican Organizations (UK)
Section titled “Evangelical Anglican Organizations (UK)”Church Society — https://www.churchsociety.org/ Historic evangelical Anglican organization (est. 1950, with roots to 1865). Publishes The Global Anglican journal (formerly Churchman, est. 1879), Crossway magazine, weekly podcast, and the Reformed Evangelical Anglican Library (REAL). Associated historically with Ryle, Griffith-Thomas, Packer, and Bray.
The Latimer Trust — https://www.latimertrust.org/ Evangelical Anglican think-tank providing biblical input on significant issues within the Christian community. Named after the Reformation martyr Hugh Latimer.
Reformed Anglican Fellowship & Daily Office
Section titled “Reformed Anglican Fellowship & Daily Office”Reformed Anglican Fellowship — https://www.reformedanglican.us/ Online fellowship committed to the 39 Articles as originally intended (1553), the 1662 BCP, and the Reformed character of classical Anglicanism. Maintains an online Daily Office and an extensive links page to Reformed Anglican resources, seminaries, and congregations.
General Anglican Reference
Section titled “General Anglican Reference”Anglicans Online — https://anglicansonline.org/ Long-running comprehensive directory of online Anglican resources. Recommended by the Society of Archbishop Justus as the best starting point for finding links to online Anglican content. Includes directories of BCP texts, dioceses, parishes, and organizations worldwide.
The Gospel Coalition: Anglican Theology — https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/essay/anglican-theology/ Overview essay on Anglican theology by Gerald Bray, situating the tradition within its Reformation roots and contemporary challenges.
Academic & Broader Christian Resources
Section titled “Academic & Broader Christian Resources”Early English Books Online (EEBO) — via institutional subscription Digital facsimiles of nearly every book published in England 1473–1700. Essential for accessing original Reformation-era Anglican texts in their first editions.
Eighteenth Century Collections Online (ECCO) — via institutional subscription Nearly 200,000 digitized works printed in the UK 1701–1800, including extensive theological and ecclesiastical publications.
Internet Archive: Anglican & Episcopal History — https://archive.org/details/pub_anglican-and-episcopal-history Digitized runs of Anglican and Episcopal History journal and related materials.
Seminaries with Notable Online Resources
Section titled “Seminaries with Notable Online Resources”Moore Theological College (Sydney) — https://moore.edu.au/ The theological training seminary of the Diocese of Sydney, known worldwide for conservative evangelical Anglican scholarship.
Wycliffe Hall, Oxford — https://www.wycliffehall.org.uk/ Evangelical theological college within the University of Oxford. Named after John Wycliffe; founded in part by J.C. Ryle. Trust deed upholds the 39 Articles.
Ridley College, Melbourne — https://www.ridley.edu.au/ Named after the Reformation martyr Nicholas Ridley. Evangelical Anglican training since 1910.
Compiled February 2026. Sites verified at time of compilation; availability may change.