Sunday, June 8, 2025
Liturgical Color: White/Gold
Pentecost
Almighty God, on this day, through the outpouring of the Holy Spirit, you revealed the way of eternal life to every race and nation: Pour out this gift anew, that by the preaching of the Gospel your salvation may reach to the ends of the earth; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
Pentecost
Through Jesus Christ our Lord; according to whose most true promise, the Holy Spirit came down from heaven, lighting upon the disciples, to teach them and to lead them into all truth, giving them boldness and fervent zeal constantly to preach the Gospel to all nations; by which we have been brought out of darkness and error into the clear light and true knowledge of you, and of your Son Jesus Christ.
Bishop of Bath and Wells and Non-Juror
Anglican Commemoration
Thomas Ken was an English bishop and a father of English hymnody, remembered most for the verses you now know as just “The Doxology.” Those verses were originally from two hymns he wrote for his students to frame the Christian day, the morning "Awake, my soul, and with the sun" and the evening "All praise to thee, my God, this night.” You can find both in the Commontide hymnal. As royal chaplain, Ken famously held to his conscience even standing up to monarchs repeatedly on principle. He refused to let the king’s mistress, Nell Gwyn, be lodged in his residence, a refusal Charles II apparently respected, later appointing him Bishop of Bath and Wells. After the Glorious Revolution brought William and Mary to the throne, Ken refused to swear a new oath of allegiance because he believed he remained bound by the oath he had already sworn to James II in exile. He lost his bishopric for it. He is called a Non-Juror confessor (those who do not swear), and is honored for choosing conscience over comfort, a theme throughout his life.
Thomas Ken was born in 1637 at Little Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire, the son of a Protestant gentry family. He attended The King's School, Canterbury, and later Winchester College, then studied at New College, Oxford, where he developed a reputation for theological acumen and piety.
After his ordination, Ken held various church positions, serving as a chaplain and parish minister. In 1679, he became chaplain to Mary of Modena, the Catholic queen of James II, but his unwavering Anglican principles and personal integrity earned him respect even in that delicate position. He refused to compromise the Church's doctrine despite the royal court's proximity to Catholicism.
In 1685, Ken was elevated to the bishopric of Bath and Wells, a position of considerable importance in the English hierarchy. He remained bishop for only three years before the Glorious Revolution of 1688 transformed the English religious and political landscape. When William III and Mary II ascended the throne as joint monarchs, they required all clergy to swear an oath of allegiance to the new sovereigns.
Ken, along with six other bishops, refused to take the oath to William III, maintaining his prior oath to James II as a matter of conscience and principle. This act of non-juror steadfastness cost him his bishopric, his income, and his freedom of movement. He spent his final years in relative poverty and obscurity, first living quietly at Longleat House, then on the Isle of Man (briefly imprisoned), and finally in small rooms in London. He died in 1711, unreconciled to the new regime.
Ken was a skilled theologian and prolific writer of devotional works, sermons, and—most enduringly—hymns. His two hymns, composed in the 1690s, were intended to frame the Christian day: the morning hymn 'Awake my soul and with the sun' and the evening hymn 'All praise to thee my God this night' became canonical in Anglican practice.
Thomas Ken developed no formal cult but became an emblematic figure for the non-juror cause and later for Anglo-Catholic and High Church traditions that valued conscience and principle over mere political pragmatism. His refusal to swear allegiance to William III, despite enormous personal cost, made him a martyr-confessor of principle—suffering not violent death but exile, deprivation, and lifelong poverty for fidelity to his oath. In the nineteenth century, the Oxford Movement and Anglo-Catholic revival recovered his figure as an exemplar of apostolic fidelity and ecclesiastical integrity. However, his commemoration in modern Anglican tradition is primarily through his hymns, which became canonical in Prayer Book services. His hymns frame the Christian day and remain among the most valued in English hymnody. Unlike more overtly hagiographic traditions, Ken's veneration rests on the enduring value of his spiritual compositions and on historical admiration for his conscientious stand, rather than on miraculous claims or a developed cult.