Answer:
A)True
Step-by-step explanation:
The Oxford Movement can be regarded as a movement of members of High Church, belonging to Church of England which later eventually developed into what is known as "Anglo-Catholicism". This movement, has its most of it's original devotees associated with the University of Oxford, Those devotees
argued that there should be reinstatement of some older traditions of faith of Christian as well as their inclusion into Anglican liturgy and theology. Anglicanism was thought by them as one of three branches of the Christian church. These branches are;
✓one holy
✓catholic,
✓ apostolic".
Around 1840s
some of the participants make a decision that the Anglican Church was lacking grace, they then converted to Roman Catholicism.Some of the Leaders of the movement are: John Henry Newman and Richard Hurrell Froude. The primary objective of this movement was about renewal as regards to the spiritual aspect of Church of England through reviving of certain Roman Catholic doctrines as well as rituals which has been neglected by Anglicans during the struggles of the Protestant Reformation. It should be noted that a movement within the Anglican church, also known as the Tractarian Revival, with roots in the High Church movement of the seventeenth century, that sought to revive lost Christian traditions from the first four centuries and resulted in the formation of Anglo-Catholicism.