Readings:
Psalm
41:1-5, 10-13
Jeremiah 7:1-7
2 Corinthians
9:8-15
John 13:12-17
Preface of God the Holy Spirit
[Common of a Missionary]
[Of the Holy Spirit]
[For the Ministry III]
[For the Mission of the Church]
PRAYER (traditional language)
God of boundless energy and light: We offer thanks for the courage and
passion of Wilson Carlile who, after the example of thy Son, sought new
ways to open thy Church to diverse leaders as beacons of the Gospel of
Christ. Quicken our hearts to give bold witness to Jesus Christ; who with
thee and the Holy Spirit, livest and reignest, one God, now and for ever.
Amen.
PRAYER (contemporary language)
God of boundless energy and light: We thank you for the courage and passion
of Wilson Carlile who, after the example of your Son, sought new ways
to open your Church to diverse leaders as beacons of the Gospel of Christ.
Quicken our hearts to give bold witness to Jesus Christ; who with you
and the Holy Spirit, lives and reigns, one God, now and for ever. Amen.
This commemoration appears in A Great Cloud of Witnesses.
Return to Lectionary Home
Page
Webmaster: Charles
Wohlers
Last updated: 25 July 2020
|
WILSON
CARLILE
PRIEST, FOUNDER
OF THE CHURCH ARMY,
26 September 1942.
Wilson Carlile was
born in 1847 in Brixton. He suffered from a spinal weakness all his life,
which hampered his education. He entered his grandfather's business at
the age of thirteen but soon moved on and learnt fluent French, which
he used to good advantage in France trading in silk. He later learned
German and Italian to enhance his business, but was ruined in a slump
in 1873. After a serious illness, he began to take his religion more seriously
and became confirmed in the Church of England. He acted as organist to
Ira D Sankey, during the Moody and Sankey missions and in 1881 was ordained
priest, serving his curacy at St Mary Abbots in Kensington, together with
a dozen other curates. The lack of contact between the Church and the
working classes was a cause of real concern to him and he began outdoor
preaching. In 1882, he resigned his curacy and founded the Church Army,
four years after the foundation of the Salvation Army. He continued to
take part in its administration until a few weeks before his death on
this day [26 September] in 1942.
[Source: Report on the Calendar, Lectionary
and Collects, 2000, by The Liturgical Commission of the Church of England,
July 1995. Additional information is available from Wikipedia] |