Readings:
Isaiah
35:1-7
Psalm 119:1-8
2 Thessalonians 1:3-4
Mark
7:31-37
Preface of Pentecost
[Common of a Missionary] [Common of a Prophetic Witness]
[For the Mission of the Church]
[For Prophetic Witness in the Church]
PRAYER (traditional language)
O Loving God, whose will it is that everyone shouldst come to thee and be saved: We bless thy holy Name for thy servants Thomas Gallaudet and Henry Winter Syle, and we pray that thou wilt continually move thy Church to respond in love to the needs of all people; through Jesus Christ, who liveth and reigneth with thee and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.
PRAYER (contemporary language)
O Loving God, whose will it is that everyone should come to you and be saved: We bless your holy Name for your servants Thomas Gallaudet and Henry Winter Syle, and we pray that you will continually move your Church to respond in love to the needs of all people; through Jesus Christ, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.
Lessons revised at General Convention 2024
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THOMAS GALLAUDET & HENRY WINTER SYLE
PRIESTS (27 AUGUST 1902 & 6 JANUARY 1890)
Thomas
Gallaudet was born in 1822, in Hartford, Connecticut. His mother, Sophia
was deaf, and his father, Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet, was the founder of the
West Hartford School for the deaf, which was the principal institution for
the education of the deaf in America from 1806 to 1857 (the year of the
founding of Gallaudet College in Washington, DC). The father had intended
to become a priest, but had become an educator of the deaf instead. The
son also intended to seek ordination, but was persuaded by his father to
work for a while first as a teacher of the deaf. He did, and so met and
married Miss Elizabeth Budd, who was deaf. He was ordained in 1851, and
the next year established St. Ann's Church in New York, especially for deaf
persons, with services primarily in sign language. As a result of his work,
congregations for the deaf were established in many cities. (Alternatively,
some congregations that are mostly hearing will have someone standing near
the front and signing the service for the benefit of deaf parishioners.)
Gallaudet died 27 August 1902.
One of Gallaudet's students and parishioners was Henry Winter Syle, deaf
from an early age, who had attended Trinity College (Hartford, Conn),
St John's (Cambridge, England), and Yale. Gallaudet encouraged him to
become a priest, and in 1876 he became the first deaf person to
be ordained by the Episcopal Church in the United States. He established
a congregation for the deaf in 1888, and died 6 January 1890.
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