Readings:
Isaiah 56:6-8
Psalm
122
Ephesians
4:1-6
Matthew
9:35-38
Preface of Pentecost
[Common of a Missionary]
[Common of a Pastor]
[For the Unity of the Church]
[For the Mission of the Church]
PRAYER (traditional language)
Heavenly Father, whose Son
did pray that we all might be one: Deliver us from arrogance
and prejudice, and give us wisdom and forbearance, that, following thy
servant Charles Henry Brent, we may be united in one family with all who
confess the Name of thy Son Jesus Christ: who liveth and reigneth with
thee and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever.
Amen. PRAYER (contemporary language)
Heavenly Father, whose Son
prayed that we all might be one: Deliver us from arrogance and prejudice,
and give us wisdom and forbearance, that, following your servant Charles
Henry Brent, we may be united in one family with all who confess the Name
of thy Son Jesus Christ: who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever. Amen.
Lessons revised at Genral Convention 2024. Return to Lectionary
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CHARLES HENRY BRENT
Missionary Bishop (27 March 1929)
(from the Episcopal Calendar)
During
the Spanish-American War (1898), arising from a dispute over Cuba and
Puerto Rico, the United States also acquired Guam and the Philippines.
(For a brief note on the subsequent history of these territories, see
Kamehameha, 28 November.) In 1902, the Episcopal Church appointed Charles
Brent (at that time serving as priest in charge of a slum parish in Boston)
as Missionary Bishop of the Philippines. He arrived on the same ship with
the American Governor, William H. Taft, and carried with him the unofficial
but very real prestige of the American establishment.
Brent could easily have confined himself to providing a kind of ecclesiastical
"home away from home" for American officials and others stationed in the
Islands. Equally, he could have devoted himself chiefly to efforts to convert
the Roman Catholics, both of Spanish and of Filipino ancestry, whom the
previous government had left behind. Instead, he directed his efforts toward
the non-Christians of his diocese: the pagan Igorots of the mountains of
Luzon, the Muslims of the southern islands, the Chinese settlements in
Manila, all areas in which he made considerable inroads and established
thriving Christian communities.
He began a campaign against the opium traffic, and served on several
international commissions devoted to stamping out international traffic
in narcotics. During World War I, he was the Senior Chaplain for the American
Armed Forces in Europe. He declined three elections to bishoprics in the
United States in order to continue his work in the Philippines, but in
1918, he accepted the position of Bishop of Western New York. His experiences
in the Philippines had aroused in him a strong concern for the cause of
visible Christian unity. He wrote:
The unity of Christendom is not a luxury, but a necessity. The world
will go limping until Christ's prayer that all may be one is answered.
We must have unity, not at all costs, but at all risks. A unified Church
is the only offering we dare present to the coming Christ, for in it alone
will He find room to dwell.
He helped to organize the first World Conference on Faith and Order, which
met in Lausanne, Switzerland, in 1927. He died there in 1929, being 67
years minus 12 days old. The following prayer, written by him, is widely
used today:
Lord Jesus Christ, who didst stretch out thine arms of love upon the
hard wood of the Cross, that all men everywhere might come within the reach
of thy saving embrace: So clothe us with thy Spirit that we, reaching forth
our hands in love, may bring those who do not know thee to the knowledge
and love of thee; for the honor of thy Name.
The writer James Thayer Addison called him "a saint of disciplined mental
vigor, one whom soldiers were proud to salute and whom children were happy
to play with, who could dominate a parliament and minister to an invalid,
a priest and bishop who gloried in the heritage of his Church, yet who
stood among all Christian brothers as one who served."
by James Kiefer
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