Sewanee Theological Review 62:4 Everyday Trinity: Theology, Prayer, and the Christian Life DANIEL WADE MCCLAIN Is there an Anglican theology of the Trinity? While planning the Christology section of my doctoral comprehensive exams several years ago, I suggested to my exam director we include some Anglican sources. He responded by suggesting that Anglicans have made no substantial contribution to Christology and therefore did not merit inclusion in the list. 1 Initially, I was bothered by my director’s assessment, and ran it by Ellen Charry, a member of my parish at the time and an Episcopalian professor then teaching at Princeton Theological Seminary. Her response took me aback; not only did she agree but she considered it to be one of the redeeming aspects of Anglican theology. In her estimation, Anglicans have not contributed to Christology because they have been satisfied with the long deposit of the Catholic tradition’s teaching on the matter. 1 A conclusion echoed by John MacQuarrie in 1997. “Strictly speaking, I suppose there is no such thing as an Anglican christology, and indeed I hope that there is not”: (MacQuarrie, “Current Trends in Anglican Christology,” Anglican Theological Review (1997): 563.