Wednesday, November 15, 2017

Year A Proper 27 Wed Samuel Seabury

Year A Proper 27 Wednesday, 15 November 2017
St. James the Less, Ashland, Virginia
“Samuel Seabury”


Eternal God, you blessed your servant Samuel Seabury with the gift of perseverance to renew the Anglican inheritance in North America: Grant that, joined together in unity with our bishops and nourished by your holy Sacraments, we may proclaim the Gospel of redemption with apostolic zeal; through Jesus Christ, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
Today is one day after the anniversary of his consecration.


FROM A Great Cloud of Witnesses:
Samuel Seabury, the first Bishop of the Episcopal Church, was born in Groton, Connecticut, November 30, 1729. After ordination in England in 1753, he was assigned, as a missionary of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel, to Christ Church, New Brunswick, New Jersey. In 1757, he became rector of Grace Church, Jamaica, Long Island, and in 1766 rector of St. Peter’s, Westchester County. During the American Revolution, he remained loyal to the British crown, and served as a chaplain in the British army.

After the Revolution, a secret meeting of Connecticut clergymen in Woodbury, on March 25, 1783, named Seabury or the Rev. Jeremiah Leaming, whichever would be able or willing, to seek episcopal consecration in England. Leaming declined; Seabury accepted, and sailed for England.

After a year of negotiation, Seabury found it impossible to obtain episcopal orders from the Church of England because, as an American citizen, he could not swear allegiance to the crown. He then turned to the Non–juring bishops of the Episcopal Church in Scotland. On November 14, 1784, in Aberdeen, he was consecrated by the Bishop and the Bishop Coadjutor of Aberdeen and the Bishop of Ross and Caithness, in the presence of a number of the clergy and laity.

On his return home, Seabury was recognized as Bishop of Connecticut in Convocation on August 3, 1785, at Middletown. With Bishop William White, he was active in the organization of the Episcopal Church at the General Convention of 1789. With the support of William Smith of Maryland, William Smith of Rhode Island, William White of Pennsylvania, and Samuel Parker of Boston, Seabury kept his promise, made in a concordat with the Scottish bishops, to persuade the American Church to adopt the Scottish form for the celebration of the Holy Eucharist.

In 1790 Seabury became responsible for episcopal oversight of the churches in Rhode Island; and at the General Convention of 1792 he participated in the first consecration of a bishop on American soil, that of John Claggett of Maryland. Seabury died on February 25, 1796, and is buried beneath St. James’ Church, New London.


We have much to be thankful for in the Episcopal Church. And I wanted to point out the uniqueness of our origins in our flag. We have the white and red Cross of St. George, recognizing our Anglican origins. And we have the Cross of St. Andrew in the blue field representing our debt to the Episcopal Church of Scotland. Also, the Saltire (St. Andrew’s Cross) is made up of nine stars representing the founding dioceses of the Protestant Episcopal Church in America. He served as a chaplain to the British troops during the Revolutionary War, and remained loyal to the Crown throughout the war. Once a United States citizen, though, we became committed to their spiritual welfare. We owe a debt to Samuel Seabury who overcame his differences with his fellow citizens for the sake of the propagation of the Gospel.

A lesson to be learned there. Amen.

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Blessings, Rock