I was just wondering if there was some online material for me to study Anglicanism. Anything would be helpful.
One very neutral site collects strands of history on all the traditions inside Anglicanism today: http://justus.anglican.org/ The "Society of Archbishop Justus" above has many resources, especially its detailed history, at Project Canterbury: http://anglicanhistory.org/
Oh, one thing you must remember is that historically, Anglicanism is defined by its "Formularies": the Book of Common Prayer, including the 39 Articles: http://justus.anglican.org/resources/bcp/1662/articles.pdf Our Catechism, fully in its modern form by 1662, is also essential. It is on Anglican Forum's own host site: http://www.anglican.net/catechism.php
Thank you for those sites. I would like to ask if there really is no "traditional view of Anglicanism" and if so, what does it mean to be an Anglican. Note: this was posted before Consular's second post...
I've edited out the caveat about people disagreeing about what is "truly" Anglican. I should've been more cautious with my words. There is a consensus around the 39 articles & BCP, and historically has been since 1560. They define our whole view of the Scripture, Fathers, and salvation. That was traditional Anglicanism for 300 years, until various experimental ideas in the 19th century. Don't worry.