I don't think even the members of the SKCM claim that the person whose restoration they are presumably celebrating from home today was the same person as the one whose execution they commemorate on the 30th of January. 😜
I'm not expecting to see many oak apples today. I'd imagine even Grovely will have been cancelled or relocated to hyperspace in some way.
But no one ever got a day on a calendar for dying of Typhoid did they.
Well, not quite (though I wouldn't be surprised if someone did!), but St Mary Domenica Mazzarello, founder of the Salesian Sisters, was never really well after a bout of typhoid fever, dying in 1881 at the age of 44. Her feast day is May 14th, I am told.
One of the Ottawa Valley worthies whom I have been trying to get commemorated was John Beek Lindsay, Rector of Cornwall, who died of it in 1847 while ministering to Irish immigrants.
More likely to get places is the cause of Michael Power, the first RC Bishop of Toronto (IIRC the last to be appointed by Rome via the Colonial Office, and the last to receive viceregal endorsement and formal recognition), who died of typhus contracted in the slums of Toronto while visiting the sick. Likely f.d. 1 October, if anyone's following.
One of my Anglocatholic friends in the US celebrated a Mass in honor of the restoration of Charles II to the throne.
I guess the point is the restoration of episcopacy to the Church of England, because otherwise, I don't see the point of liturgically honoring such a historical event.
One of my Anglocatholic friends in the US celebrated a Mass in honor of the restoration of Charles II to the throne.
I guess the point is the restoration of episcopacy to the Church of England, because otherwise, I don't see the point of liturgically honoring such a historical event.
Not just to the CofE but the Church of Scotland too, and by such did the US Episcopal Church eventually come about.
One of my Anglocatholic friends in the US celebrated a Mass in honor of the restoration of Charles II to the throne.
I guess the point is the restoration of episcopacy to the Church of England, because otherwise, I don't see the point of liturgically honoring such a historical event.
Not just to the CofE but the Church of Scotland too, and by such did the US Episcopal Church eventually come about.
I have to check, but did the apostolic succession continue in secret during the Interregnum? Then the restoration of Charles II didn't 'restore' Episcopacy, because Episcopacy was preserved even if the Episcopalians were criminalized.
One of my Anglocatholic friends in the US celebrated a Mass in honor of the restoration of Charles II to the throne.
I guess the point is the restoration of episcopacy to the Church of England, because otherwise, I don't see the point of liturgically honoring such a historical event.
Not just to the CofE but the Church of Scotland too, and by such did the US Episcopal Church eventually come about.
I have to check, but did the apostolic succession continue in secret during the Interregnum? Then the restoration of Charles II didn't 'restore' Episcopacy, because Episcopacy was preserved even if the Episcopalians were criminalized.
My understanding is that the Bishops that remained (at least some survived from the start of the Bishops' Wars through to the restoration) consecrated the new Bishops, though it looks like none of the Bishops were restored to their sees (one was appointed to a different see).
William Juxon (1582-1663): Bishop of London from 1633; translated to Canterbury as Archbishop 1660. He administered the Blessed Sacrament to Charles I on the morning of his death, and was with him on the scaffold.
Henry King (1592-1669): Bishop of Chichester from 1642.
Brian Duppa (1689-1662): Bishop of Chichester from 1638; translated to Salisbury 1641; translated to Winchester 1660.
We know that it was only in 1689 that the(then Established) Church of Scotland became fully Presbyterian . I can't speak of the holders of the office of the (Protestant) diocesan bishops after the Reformation.
However we can see that Patrick Lindsay was the Protestant Archbishop of Glasgow from 1633 until in 1638 when he was deprived of the archbishopric and excommunicated by the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland. It seems that there were no further Protestant Archbishops of Glasgow.
In the Archbishopric of St Andrews John Spottiswoode was archbishop from 1615 till 1638 and then in 1661 James Sharp was appointed to the see at the restoration of episcopacy.
Whether or no there were any holders of protestant episcopal offices in Scotland during the period between 1638 and 1661 I assume that new holders of episcopal offices would have been consecrated by other holders of episcopal office elsewhere, presumably in England or Ireland
Should have checked before posting but in 1661 Andrew Fairfoul was appointed archbishop of Glasgow at the restoration of episcopacy and followed by a number of others till the appointment of John Paterson in 1687. In 1689 Paterson was deprived of the temporalities of the see when episcopacy was 'permanently abolished' by the Church of Scotland.
Paterson continued as non-juror archbishop till his death in 1708.
By 1724 the relatively young episcopal Church in Scotland was able to appoint Alex Duncan as Episcopalian Bishop of Glasgow
Comments
I'm not expecting to see many oak apples today. I'd imagine even Grovely will have been cancelled or relocated to hyperspace in some way.
Well, not quite (though I wouldn't be surprised if someone did!), but St Mary Domenica Mazzarello, founder of the Salesian Sisters, was never really well after a bout of typhoid fever, dying in 1881 at the age of 44. Her feast day is May 14th, I am told.
More likely to get places is the cause of Michael Power, the first RC Bishop of Toronto (IIRC the last to be appointed by Rome via the Colonial Office, and the last to receive viceregal endorsement and formal recognition), who died of typhus contracted in the slums of Toronto while visiting the sick. Likely f.d. 1 October, if anyone's following.
I guess the point is the restoration of episcopacy to the Church of England, because otherwise, I don't see the point of liturgically honoring such a historical event.
Not just to the CofE but the Church of Scotland too, and by such did the US Episcopal Church eventually come about.
I have to check, but did the apostolic succession continue in secret during the Interregnum? Then the restoration of Charles II didn't 'restore' Episcopacy, because Episcopacy was preserved even if the Episcopalians were criminalized.
My understanding is that the Bishops that remained (at least some survived from the start of the Bishops' Wars through to the restoration) consecrated the new Bishops, though it looks like none of the Bishops were restored to their sees (one was appointed to a different see).
Henry King (1592-1669): Bishop of Chichester from 1642.
Brian Duppa (1689-1662): Bishop of Chichester from 1638; translated to Salisbury 1641; translated to Winchester 1660.
However we can see that Patrick Lindsay was the Protestant Archbishop of Glasgow from 1633 until in 1638 when he was deprived of the archbishopric and excommunicated by the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland. It seems that there were no further Protestant Archbishops of Glasgow.
In the Archbishopric of St Andrews John Spottiswoode was archbishop from 1615 till 1638 and then in 1661 James Sharp was appointed to the see at the restoration of episcopacy.
Whether or no there were any holders of protestant episcopal offices in Scotland during the period between 1638 and 1661 I assume that new holders of episcopal offices would have been consecrated by other holders of episcopal office elsewhere, presumably in England or Ireland
Paterson continued as non-juror archbishop till his death in 1708.
By 1724 the relatively young episcopal Church in Scotland was able to appoint Alex Duncan as Episcopalian Bishop of Glasgow