Excellent points and worth taking to heart as people participate in denominational, diocesan or congregational discussions about the future. I only quibble with this: "The ultimately tolerated status of Anglo-Catholicism within global Anglicanism produced a degree of diversity - indeed, theological fracture - within Anglicanism that had never existed before" – which seems to ignore the state of Anglicanism less than 200 years earlier, when debates within and without the Church of England led to regicide and Civil War. I would say that was one such period of greater "theological fracture."
Excellent points and worth taking to heart as people participate in denominational, diocesan or congregational discussions about the future. I only quibble with this: "The ultimately tolerated status of Anglo-Catholicism within global Anglicanism produced a degree of diversity - indeed, theological fracture - within Anglicanism that had never existed before" – which seems to ignore the state of Anglicanism less than 200 years earlier, when debates within and without the Church of England led to regicide and Civil War. I would say that was one such period of greater "theological fracture."