AnglicanWiki:Style Guide
# AnglicanWiki: Style Guide
This Style Guide establishes consistent standards for articles, citations, tone, formatting, and editorial practice across **AnglicanWiki**, ensuring clarity, accuracy, and confessional integrity rooted in the classical Anglican tradition.
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- 1. **Purpose of AnglicanWiki**
AnglicanWiki exists to:
- Preserve and present the history, doctrine, and practice of classical, orthodox Anglicanism.
- Provide reliable, well-sourced articles for clergy, scholars, and lay readers.
- Uphold the theological identity of the English Reformation, the Prayer Book tradition, and the historic episcopate.
- Avoid revisionist or progressive reinterpretations of Anglican doctrine.
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- 2. **Article Standards**
- 2.1 Tone
- Encyclopedic, clear, and formal.
- Avoid conversational, rhetorical, or polemical language.
- Present disagreements factually without inflammatory wording.
- Use past-tense for historical narration; present-tense for doctrine and official teaching.
- 2.2 Point of View
Articles should reflect:
- The classic Anglican consensus (Hooker, Cranmer, Jewel, 1662 BCP, 39 Articles).
- The perspective of orthodox Anglican bodies (e.g., REC, ACNA, Continuing Churches).
- Respect for non-Anglican traditions while maintaining Anglican distinctiveness.
- 2.3 Inclusion Criteria
Pages may cover:
- Major figures in Anglican history.
- Theological topics, doctrines, and liturgical practices.
- Parishes, dioceses, bishops, and notable institutions.
- Historical controversies when relevant.
Pages **should not** cover:
- Modern revisionist innovations (unless described historically and critically).
- Activist topics with no direct Anglican theological or historical relevance.
- Living public figures whose contributions are not widely recognized.
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- 3. **Biographical Entries**
- 3.1 Required Sections
- **Lead paragraph**: Who they are and why they matter.
- **Early Life**
- **Education & Formation**
- **Ministry or Career**
- **Theological Contribution**
- **Legacy**
- **Sources / Further Reading**
- 3.2 Neutrality
- Describe debates without attacking individuals.
- For controversial figures, provide succinct summaries anchored in sources.
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- 4. **Doctrinal Articles**
Doctrinal pages must:
- Quote or reference the 39 Articles, 1662 BCP, Homilies, and classical Anglican writers.
- Explain doctrine as historically held, not as reinterpreted by modern progressive bodies.
- Use Scripture and classical sources as primary anchors.
Avoid:
- Systematic theology drawn from outside the Anglican tradition without context.
- Claiming a doctrine is "Anglican" if held only by modern revisionists.
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- 5. **Citation Rules**
- 5.1 Types of Sources
Preferred sources:
- Primary Anglican texts (Prayer Books, ordinal, Articles, Homilies)
- Works by classical Anglican theologians
- Peer‑reviewed historical or theological scholarship
- Official church documents
Avoid:
- Personal blogs
- Uncited claims
- Sources promoting revisionist theology
- 5.2 Format
- Use simple inline citations.
- Provide bibliographies at page bottom.
- Hyperlink primary sources when available.
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- 6. **Formatting Standards**
- 6.1 Headings
Use standard MediaWiki headers:
- `== Heading 1 ==`
- `=== Heading 2 ===`
- `==== Heading 3 ====`
- 6.2 Images
- Use images sparingly.
- Only use copyright-free or properly licensed images.
- Include concise captions.
- 6.3 Infoboxes
- Use infoboxes for bishops, dioceses, parishes, and major historical figures.
- Keep content concise and factual.
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- 7. **Categories**
Every article must include at least one category. Examples:
- ``
- ``
- ``
- ``
Avoid overly narrow or redundant categories.
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- 8. **Editorial Policies**
- 8.1 Respectful Anglican Orthodoxy
While AnglicanWiki welcomes topics across the Anglican world, its editorial posture is:
- Orthodox
- Classical
- Prayer Book–centered
- Confessionally consistent with historic Anglican doctrine
- 8.2 Avoiding Partisanship
Articles may describe disagreements (e.g., women’s ordination, liturgical revision) but must:
- Avoid mocking tone
- Avoid partisan Anglican internet slang
- State historical facts and ecclesial positions clearly
- 8.3 No Attack Pages
No article may target an individual or group for ridicule.
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- 9. **Templates & Conventions**
- Use existing templates whenever possible.
- Use MediaWiki markup consistently.
- Keep articles readable for both scholars and visitors.
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- 10. **Future Development**
This Style Guide will expand to include:
- Templates for commonly used article types
- Detailed citation formatting
- A glossary of Anglican terms
- Recommendations for uploading media and graphics
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- "Do all things decently and in order." — 1 Corinthians 14:40**