SAINTS OF GEORGIA
Compiled by the Right
Reverend Henry I. Louttit, 9th Bishop of Georgia
First edition, June 1998,
Revised: June 1999, January 2004
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Note:
Two calendar days in Lesser Feasts and Fasts are of particular importance in
the history of the Diocese of Georgia. They are the Feast of John and
Charles Wesley, and the Feast of Thomas Bray. Both of those tend to fall in
Lent, not a good time for a major celebration in the parish.
I would like to suggest that the following days
might be celebrated on a regular basis in your parish at a mid-week service,
if you already have one scheduled. You may, therefore, observe the feast on
the given day if you wish, or you may move it to any day in the week in
which the feast falls when you already have the people gathered.
X Sir
Thomas Bray - April 14th transferred
X
John and Charles Wesley- May 13th transferred
X
Anson Dodge - June 18th
X
Albert Rhett Stuart - July 8th
X
Brother Jimmy Lawrence - September 3rd
X
Deaconess Alexander - September 24th
X
Bartholomew Zouberbuhler - October 22
X
Bland Tucker - November 19th
If I were trying to encourage people to have some
sense of the Communion of Saints, I would suggest using these dates plus a
selection chosen from those in the Prayer Book calendar, so that perhaps
twice a month you had a Eucharist focused around a special person, followed
by a meal. For instance, you might observe April 25th, the Feast of St.
Mark, not only as St. Mark's Day
but remembering all the evangelists.
Celebrate the Feast of the Ascension, May 21st
(or its eve). Celebrate the Nativity of St. John the Baptist on June 24th,
on which you could observe not only John but also all the Old Testament
forbearers of the faith. In July, it seems right to do a major celebration
in thanksgiving for our country in relationship to July 4th. In August, it's
the Feast of St. Mary. September, you could choose either Holy Cross Day or
the Feast of St. Michael and All Angels. In October, the Feast of St.
Francis seems widely observed. November, of course, you have the Feast of
All Saints, which the Prayer Book expects to be observed on its day as well
as on the following Sunday. Naturally, one would want to adapt this list to
the interest in the local community, certainly including the feast of the
title or patron saint.
Few parishes are going to be able to use all the
entries in the Prayer Book calendar and the propers for Lesser Feasts and
Fasts. On the other hand, for people almost to have no sense of the glorious
company of saints from all ages and peoples, and with a great diversity of
gifts, is to impoverish them. I believe most communities could work towards
at least one celebration a month on a festal day. This would normally mean a
meal, but it can be a very simple meal of soup and sandwiches. This is also
an opportunity if you have younger people in the congregation to involve
them in doing or taking part in liturgy in a way that is particularly age
appropriate.
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SIR THOMAS BRAY
(Propers: Lesser Feasts and Fasts)
Book of Common Prayer, February 15th (Lent is not a good
time for parish observance)
Diocese of Georgia Calendar, April 22, or closest weekday
service
Sir Thomas Bray is in our Prayer Book calendar
because he was the most imaginative developer of support in
England
for the struggling congregations of Anglicans in the British Colonies.
For most of his life, he was rector of St.
Botolph-Without-the-Walls, in London. The Bishop of London, who was
responsible for the colonies, sent him to Maryland as his
commissary (ambassador or representative). In his two-and-a-half month
tour, Thomas Bray encouraged priests and lay folk alike, but he saw the
terrible shortage of pastors and books - Bibles and Prayer Books. On his
return to England, he
founded the SPG, the Society for the Proclamation of the Gospel, to provide
priests with stipends for churches in the colonies. The SPG provided clergy
for Christ Church,
Savannah, and St. Paul's, Augusta.
The society also provided a great Jewish convert, Joseph Ottolenghe, as a
catechist to work with African slaves. He then founded the Society for the
Propagation of Christian Knowledge (SPCK), to provide books. The SPCK is
still the largest producer of theological books in the English language,
though they are not sold in the United States.
Today, there is a branch of the SPCK in the U.S. that works
to provide Christian books in Lakota and Spanish, and provides books for
seminary libraries throughout the world.
Thomas Bray was one of those great parish
priests, who was faithful, not only in the ministry of his parish where he
was very creative in social ministries and in preaching the Gospel, but also
to God's ministry to the whole
world.
Among concerns of Thomas Bray was work to relieve
people in prison, particularly debtors, who had ended up in jail. He
developed a group of friends who ministered with beef and beer meals in the
prisons on Sundays. A young James Oglethorpe joined him in this work. Sir
Thomas Bray suggested the idea of a colony where people could have a new
chance at life. This was the germ of the idea of General Oglethorpe’s
Georgia. It is important to note that,
though Thomas Bray died before
Georgia
was founded, the charter reflects his Christian utopian vision held by
tolerant Anglicans of the 18th century. The Puritans were not the only
committed Christians involved in founding colonies to better anticipate and
work for the coming kingdom of Christ. Georgia was founded as a place where
there would be no slaves, lawyers, and no accumulation of land (wealth)
beyond 150 acres per family. The charter, as originally designed, also
tolerated Christians of all churches and in the first year of the life of
the colony they were wise to include tolerance of our forebears of the
faith, as Jewish settlers arrived founding the second synagogue in the
colonies. Christian idealism in the original charter was lost when Georgia became a royal colony.
Sir Thomas Bray, a parish priest who only left
his parish for a two-and-a-half month tour of Maryland,
provided a support system that was used by God, not only to plant the
Episcopal Church in the United States of America
but to build our communion as the second most widespread family of
Christians in the world.
Give thanks for those supporting the founding of churches
in our state. Pray that our Lord will be served by us, both in imaginative
work for those in trouble in our communities and in our support for ministry
in his name in other parts of the world.
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John and
Charles Wesley
(Propers: Lesser Feasts and Fasts)
BCP Calendar, March 3rd (Lent is not a good time for parish
observance)
Diocese of Georgia Calendar, week of May 13th
John's father was a priest in Epworth, Lincolnshire, England.
At Oxford,
John, as an undergraduate, became convinced the Book of Common Prayer
contained the discipline necessary to nurture a Christian into holiness. He
gathered other students around him and they followed directions of the
Prayer Book about daily Morning and Evening Prayer, fasting on Fridays, and
making their communion weekly. John's
group was derisively called “Methodist” because they were so methodical
following the rules or method of the Book of Common Prayer. John read
theology at university and was ordained in the Church of England.
Seeking a position from which he could preach to
non-Christians, he obtained appointment by the Society For the Proclamation
of the Gospel to be a priest in the Colony of Georgia. He intended to be a
missionary to Native Americans, but when he arrived in Savannah there was no priest or
English-speaking pastor in the colony. Thus, the people of
Savannah (and the SPG?) saw him as the rector of
Christ
Church. In
Savannah, he preached in German to the Salzburgers,
befriended the Jewish community, regularly led worship in German, Italian,
and French for various groups of settlers, and worked hard to build up the
parish church. At Christ Church on Sunday, he expected everybody
to be present three times, following the design of the Book of Common
Prayer. He scheduled Morning Prayer at 5 a.m., Ante-Communion (or, when the
people would agree, Communion) and the Litany at 11 a.m., and Evening Prayer
and the Catechism at 3 p.m.
John's energy and dedication cannot be questioned.
During his short ministry at Christ
Church, the first Sunday School of any
denomination was formed so that children and adults could learn to read and
know the stories of the Bible. For the parish of Christ Church,
John produced the first hymnal used in the Church of England (in
Anglicanism). However, John, at this stage of his life, was not gifted with
“people skills” and he made some serious pastoral mistakes. In the
Royal Court in
Charleston, the vestry brought charges against John
for having people sing hymns of man's composition -- in the 18th century, most Anglicans
only sang metrical psalms. Rather than face charges in court, John fled
back to England.
Charles Wesley followed his brother to
Oxford
and also read theology. After being ordained, he obtained a position as
General Oglethorpe's clerk
(secretary). He thus was a “bi-vocational” or non-stipendiary priest in the
18th century. Accompanying General Oglethorpe to Frederica on
St. Simons
Island, he served in his free time as chaplain to the
military community, and out of his work there, grew Christ Church,
Frederica. After he returned to England, his
brother John, the only priest in the colony, would come down on horseback to
hold services in Frederica, visiting other outlying settlements in the
colony on his way.
The next part of the story is much better known.
On the return voyage to
England, John found support and prayer with
a group of Moravian Christians. In
London, as a young priest who had messed up his first
position, had never had a chance to preach to the Indians, and who was a
fugitive from a warrant in the Royal Court, John
continued to keep the Prayer Book discipline. However, he was very
discouraged. On Wednesdays, he attended a Moravian Bible study and prayer
session, and it was in one of these that “his heart was strangely warmed.”
At that moment he knew he was forgiven and that God could use him. Through
friends, John became interested in an attempt by some church members to
reach new dwellers in the rapidly growing towns caused by the Industrial
Revolution. A traditionalist and conservative, it was very hard for John to
change. His struggle about preaching outside of a church building and
outside of the regular schedule and worship of the church is recorded in his
diaries. John and Charles Wesley are important to Christian history for a
number of different reasons, including being two of the great sources and
creators of English hymnody. But twice in the history of the Church, the
Church has lost a whole segment of the population because the culture
changed. And both times, God raised up people who realized the Gospel --
God's love working for human
beings -- had not changed but the environment had. In such a way St.
Francis and his brothers (friars) reclaimed the new town dwellers uprooted
from the rural farms by the growth of crafts and commerce in the 12th
century. In the 18th century, the Industrial Revolution meant that towns,
which for almost a millennium had contained no more than fifty people,
suddenly had a thousand people. Of course, churches were built to hold
fifty and had been around for a long time -- six or seven hundred years in
many places. The service time had been set before anyone could remember,
but now the industrialized mills were running at that time, so the new folk
in town could not come. This was the world into which John and Charles were
called to preach. They gave their lives to preaching the Gospel to the
unchurched population produced by the Industrial Revolution. Some secular
historians credit the Methodist movement with giving hope to the urban poor,
thereby preventing a parallel in
England
to the bloody French Revolution. John organized his converts into classes
(similar to Cursillo Reunion Groups), where people prayed, studied
scripture, and took care of one another. He urged and directed them to go
to their local (Church of England) parish church to make their communions.
But the local Church of England parishes seldom arranged for the services at
a time when they could come, and almost never allowed John, Charles, their
friends or followers to preach within their walls. Socially, this was the
beginning of a new middle class, an opportunity and encouragement for a
person to work one's way out of
poverty. The Wesleys --members of the Church of England -- preached the
Gospel outside the church walls, when the church structure could not see the
harvest God had provided.
To preach to the tens of thousands of unchurched,
John called on his fellow pastors of the Church of England. But few wanted
to give up the security and comfort of the gracious religion of the landed
gentry. At the same time, John remembered being the only English-speaking
pastor in the whole colony of Georgia (there was a German-speaking
pastor among the Salzburgers). He knew that the situation was similar in
many of the British colonies. Both Oxford
and Cambridge
were founded to train priests. However, by the 18th century,
Oxford and Cambridge
graduates did not want to go and camp out in the greenbrier jungles in Georgia when
good church jobs could be had. Few volunteered. People converted by the
Wesleyan revival volunteered, but they were not “seminary” graduates! John
tried all of his life to get the church to ordain people willing to serve,
but our church could not hear him. Despite the stodginess of the church,
which could not see the harvest God had placed on its doorstep, John
remained loyal. On his deathbed, he said, “Do not leave the church. We are
here to revive it, not divide it.” However, in desperation, as no bishop
would ordain ministers for the colonies, John as a presbyter (following a
Roman Catholic doctrine of the time) ordained converts and sent them. These
folks were called “circuit riders.” One of the great missionary stories of
all time, they converted the American frontier. But don't be too hard on the Oxford graduates, the average age of death of
a circuit rider was 32 - it was a “killer job.”
We give thanks to the devotion of the circuit
riders in the colonies, and the itinerant preachers of the Gospel throughout
the British Isles, who converted through
their love of the Gospel a new people for Christ and a new culture that was
on the Church's doorstep. And we
give thanks to God for giving us leaders with the vision of John and Charles
Wesley, who see what God is doing in his world, and
Pray that God will give us the vision to see the mission he
has set before us, and the strength to minister in new ways under his
direction.
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The Rev. Anson G.P.
Dodge, Jr.
(Propers: For a Missionary II, LFF)
Diocese of Georgia Calendar, week of June 17th
The outline of Anson Dodge's
life is well portrayed in Eugenia Price's
historical novel, The Beloved Invader.
The young son of a wealthy
New York City family, he was sent south after the civil war to
see the condition of the family's timber property on St. Simons Island. He was so horrified by the Union Army's
treatment of the building of Christ Church, St. Simons, that on his return to New York he entered General Theological Seminary from
whence he returned to spend his life pastoring and rebuilding Christ Church,
Frederica, as a religious community, in addition to rebuilding its building.
What is not so clear from the novel is his energy
in riding out from St. Simons preaching to all he could gather, regardless
of race, and forming them into congregations. His foundations clearly stand
out in the old list of the Diocese of Georgia, because he was deeply
affected by the Latin and Greek fathers of the early Church, (the first 4
centuries).
Thus, he dedicated his new congregations to St. Ignatius,
St. Cyprian, St. Ambrose, St. Perpetua, St. Athanasius, as well as to the
Messiah, Transfiguration, and St. Andrew, names still common today. He
founded six chapels along the Satilla River. He worked as far inland as
Waycross, founding the
Church
of St. Ambrose there.
His family fortune allowed him to financially
underwrite a priest to serve some of these congregations and assist him in
his work. He also restored life at what is now Christ Church, St. Marys,
St. Andrew's, Darien, (which had
been burnt to the ground), and St. Mark's, Brunswick.
Lovely Lane Chapel, now at Epworth, the
Methodist
Conference
Center, is the church he built for the mill
workers in St. Simon's Village.
His concern for the church led him to build a dorm still in use at General
Theological Seminary in New York City, and a cathedral in India, which was
destroyed in the India-Pakistan war.
Mr. Dodge was always a pastor. His concern for
people in trouble was a great witness to God's
compassion. His last work was to found an orphanage in his home for boys.
That work goes on as an endowment helping young men through the Episcopal
Youth and Children’s Service of our diocese.
Pray for leaders in our congregations, lay and ordained,
whose vision of God's call to
ministry reaches beyond the local scene and who have compassion to reach out
in Jesus' name to any person who
is hurt or lost.
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Albert Rhett
Stuart
(Propers: For the Unity of the Church, Book of
Occasional Services)
Diocese of Georgia Calendar, week of July 8th
After a distinguished ministry as a priest, as
rector of the Church of the Resurrection Greenwood, South Carolina, as
rector of St. Michael's,
Charleston, then as dean of Christ Church
Cathedral in New Orleans, Father Albert Rhett
Stuart was elected the sixth bishop of Georgia. He came to Georgia concerned about building a
church gathered around God's
altar that lived its sacramental heritage from the Book of Common Prayer.
He, for many, was an icon of Christ's presence. He attracted young priests as he moved
towards having a priest for every congregation. However, another issue
arose before the whole church out of the Gospel, which involved the
inclusion of all people in God's
church. In the early years of the twentieth century, Georgia, by law,
had strictly separated black and white folk. Despite protests, the church
had followed suit. For the first 110 years of the Church here in
Georgia, most congregations had
communicants of both races. In 1947, under the leadership of Dr. Bland
Tucker of Christ
Church,
Savannah,
African-American congregations had once again been given representation in
the diocesan convention, their presence there having been suspended in
1907. Housing and meals were complicated for the convention in a legally
segregated state, but now the issue of reintegration of congregations went
before the church and society. I remember a very large man in cope and
miter leaning against the outside of the pulpit of the small church that
seated 40 people in Statesboro, Georgia, and saying, "This is a free
country. You can belong to any kind of church you wish, but the Episcopal
Church has never asked anyone why they were coming to the church. We are
not starting asking people now. This church is open to anyone who wishes to
worship." That was before the Federal Civil Rights Act was passed. Not all
of our members agreed, but Bishop Stuart stood on the Gospel. He was a
leader in helping society face integration. He was often seen on the TV's news as the only white leader publicly speaking
for integration in Savannah
as public facilities were integrated. For this, he took much abuse and some
threats. A man of great personal conviction, he was seen by many priests
and lay people of Georgia as a "Moses," leading us to
a deeper relationship with God known in Jesus Christ. He caused many people
to have an understanding that the Episcopal Church was given special gifts
by God to share in Christ's name,
giving us confidence that, though we were a small part of the population, we
mattered in God's ministry. He
was committed to adult Christian education and built the
Honey
Creek
Conference
Center, which is a lasting
memorial to his vision of an adult church at work ministering in Christ's name. Of course, it was also a wonderful facility
for our young people and children.
One personal story from our current bishop: I
had begun my ministry at
Trinity
Church, Statesboro. After
a couple of years, St. Mary's Church in
Middlesboro,
Kentucky, called me as their
rector. They wined and dined Jan and me and showed us all the opportunities
for ministry in the area. Upon returning to Statesboro, the phone rang, I
answered, and a voice said, "Henry, this is the Holy Spirit, the answer is,
'No'," and the
phone line went dead. I knew the voice was that of the bishop, but never
doubted that they were the words of the Holy Spirit. I said, "No thank
you," to the lovely people of Kentucky
and continued to be blessed by God through his people in Georgia. I have
often wished for such clear direction in other difficult decisions.
Bishop Stuart is still a model for me of God’s
patient love reaching out to others at the same time as he patiently works
for justice in society.
Pray that we may stand with integrity for justice in our
world but always with compassion for sinners, including perpetrators of
injustice.
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Brother Jimmy
Lawrence
(Propers: For a Pastor I, LFF)
Diocese of Georgia Calendar, week of September 3rd
Doctor Lawrence came to be rector of Calvary,
Americus, in 1904. He was a bachelor who had many
connections in New York City.
He immediately set about sharing the Gospel anywhere people would listen.
He would get on the train, and go to the next stop, get off and gather
people to hear the Gospel. He was a friend and image of God's
love to many who were or became active in other churches. But besides seeing
significant growth in the membership at Calvary in Americus, he founded
churches in Pennington (the log chapel is now in a historical reconstruction
of a village at the gates to Andersonville), in Vienna (Prince of Peace
Episcopal Church's building is now a civic concert hall and
auditorium standing next to the school) and in Cordele (Christ Church). He
started congregations in Cuthbert, Dawson, and Benevolence.
He served for 47 years as rector of Calvary
and archdeacon for missions in the west of our diocese! Upon his
retirement, he intended to be vicar of his beloved St. James’, Pennington,
but God called him into his heavenly kingdom.
His kindness and concern for people are still a
living memory for Sumter County.
Pray for people to offer themselves to the ordained
ministry of priests to serve as pastors in our congregations.
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Deaconess Anna E.B.
Alexander
(Propers: For Education, OS)
Diocese of Georgia Calendar, week of Sept. 24th
Born circa 1865,
Deaconess Alexander was the first African-American set aside as a deacon in
the Episcopal Church in 1907. She founded Good Shepherd Church
in rural Glynn County's
Pennick community where she taught children to read - by tradition, from the
Book of Common Prayer and the Bible - in a one-room
schoolhouse. The school was later expanded to two rooms with a loft
where Anna lived. She ministered in Pennick for 53 years, leaving a legacy
of love and devotion still felt in Glynn County.
Her love and concern for all children helped make summer camps possible for
young white members of the diocese. To honor her, these youngsters built a
cabin at the old diocesan camp center, Camp
Reese. Deaconess Alexander served in difficult
times, however. The diocese segregated her congregations in 1907 and
African-American congregations were not invited to another diocesan
convention until 1947. Similarly, it was only in the 1950s that a woman set
aside as a deaconess was recognized as being in deacon's orders. However, her witness - wearing the
distinctive dress of a deaconess, traveling by foot from
Brunswick
through Darien
to Pennick, showing care and love for all whom she met - represents the best
in Christian witness.
Pray for those who are faithful in small things with small
groups and through their love embody Christ for many. Pray for women and
men to be raised up to continue Christ's
mission and outreach in
Georgia.
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Bartholomew
Zouberbuhler
(Propers: For a Pastor II, LFF)
(d. in 1776, buried in Bonaventure
Cemetery in Savannah)
Diocese of Georgia Calendar, week of October 22nd
Mr. Zouberbuhler was appointed on November 1st,
(All Saints’ Day), 1745, by the SPG, to be pastor of
Christ Church,
Savannah. Ordained by the Bishop of London,
Bartholomew was the son of a native Swiss pastor who had originally served
congregations of Swiss Protestants in the colony of
South Carolina and then had become pastor of an
Anglican parish there. Bartholomew, believing himself called to the
ministry, made the long trip across the ocean to be ordained by the Bishop
of London.
The trustees of the Colony of Georgia, charged
pastor Zouberbuhler to minister to the French and German inhabitants of
Georgia in their own languages according to the ceremonies of the Prayer
Book! In 1748, of the 613 inhabitants of Savannah,
225 were members of Christ
Church and 388 were
dissenters of all sorts (Presbyterians, Congregationalists, Lutheran, etc.)
Of the 225 members, only 63 made their communions. In 1750, Christ
Church
moved, under pastor Zouberbuhler, into its first building. It had met in
the courthouse until then. The Rev. Bartholomew Zouberbuhler recorded in
his journal that many Negroes decently joined in our services.
Pastor Zouberbuhler was a very hard worker. He
walked the streets of the community of
Savannah. He led worship in outlying villages and in
Frederica. He managed finally to get the promised church that had been
planned when Oglethorpe laid out the colony, actually built and open for
worship. He cared for those that were hurting or in trouble. His health was
not good and he asked at several times during years of ministry to be
replaced as the pastor in the colony. In the records of the SPG in
London are letters from the vestry of Christ
Church
urging that he not be relieved and asking that he continue as pastor. He
did not see things moving as quickly and as well as he would like, but the
congregation loved him and grew under him. The roots of Episcopal worship
really began to be established. They proved to be deep and able to survive
some pretty tough times in the revolutionary days that followed.
Mr. Zouberbuhler’s concern was not only for
Christians of other languages and church traditions who had settled in
Georgia, but for all the inhabitants, including the
Negro slaves from Africa. He included
Negroes in the worship at Christ
Church
and there baptized the first African slave to be baptized in the colony.
He begged the SPG and other friends in
England
to provide money to employ a catechist for African slaves. Mr. Joseph
Ottolenghe was appointed and came to
Georgia
and talked to slaves about Christianity (catechized them). Of course, this
was a difficult job, because first, one had to convince their owners to give
you access and time with their slaves in order that they might be taught
about God's love and the stories
of his love acting for us in scripture. Ottolenghe held meetings on Sunday,
Tuesday, and Thursday evenings, with prayer and scripture reading preceding
the gathering, and the group learned the Lord's
Prayer, the Creed, and the Prayer Book Catechism. Many slave-masters would
not give him time with their slaves, but St. Bartholomew’s, Burroughs, was
built by his converts on Wild Heron Plantation in south
Chatham
County. The great
Ogeechee Mission started from his work. It was scattered by the Civil War.
Some of its dispersed converts were the nucleus of St. Cyprian’s,
Darien, and St. Athanasius’, Brunswick,
as well as St. Stephen’s in
Savannah. When Mr. Zouberbuhler died, he left a
sizable portion of his estate as a trust to be used to employ qualified
teachers "to teach Anglican Christianity to Negroes."
The Episcopal Church in
Georgia
was touched by the presence of three of the greatest change agents in the
history of the Church. All three belonged to the Anglican Church in the
18th century. John Wesley served as rector of Christ Church,
and Charles Wesley, as a non-stipendiary priest, established worship on St.
Simons, and George Whitfield was rector of Christ Church.
However, as much as George Whitfield changed the face of American
Christianity in preaching “the great awakening,” and as much as John Wesley
changed the face of American Christianity and the world with the Evangelical
commitment to share the Gospel with people of other classes and colors, not
one of these three was particularly effective in their ministry in
Georgia. It was Bartholomew Zouberbuhler,
born of German-speaking parents, who was the first great pastor in the
Episcopal tradition in
Georgia.
Pray that, as many people, known and unknown,
have worked and stayed faithful to preserve and present the good news about
Jesus in Georgia, so we may have the patience
and the loving concern for others. These were the gifts from a deep
commitment to Jesus that Bartholomew Zouberbuhler used in the building up of
the Church in our area.
Pray for faithful, patient and outgoing pastors.
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Dr. F. Bland
Tucker
(Propers: For the Ministry II, OS)
Diocese of Georgia Calendar, week of November 13th
Dr. Tucker came from a distinguished family of
servants to the Episcopal Church in Virginia. His oldest
brother was a great Presiding Bishop of our Church, having served as a
missionary in Japan. Dr.
Tucker was the eleventh child. He was a great servant of Christ here in Georgia as rector of Christ Church,
our mother congregation, in the very difficult time of integration. It was
he who led our 1947 convention to once again admit African-American
congregations as full participants.
Dr. Tucker was a gentleman whose demeanor glowed
with Christ's compassion. Not
only was he a great pastor to anyone in need but a hymn writer who has
blessed the whole English-speaking world. In The Hymnal 1982,
only two eighteenth century hymn writers - Charles Wesley (who served us
also as a priest in
Georgia), and Isaac Watts, (a
Congregationalist) - have more hymns.
Even in his eighties, he was a keen wordsmith,
reworking many of our favorite hymns to avoid phrases that seem to some folk
to exclude them - but doing it in such a way that enriched the hymn for
everyone, rather than substituting mundane words, or "government-ese."
His knowledge of English and other languages
allowed him to enrich our prayer life by translating great hymns written in
Greek, Latin, and German, into rich, singing English. It would be
appropriate to pray in his words, using Hymn 121, 302, or 477.
Pray for poets, artists, and musicians to help the Church
show forth the Gospel to the people of the third Christian millennium.
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