Tuesday, March 10, 2026
Liturgical Color: White/Gold
The Third Sunday in Lent
Heavenly Father, you have made us for yourself, and our hearts are restless until they rest in you: Look with compassion upon the heartfelt desires of your servants, and purify our disordered affections, that we may behold your eternal glory in the face of Christ Jesus; who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
Lent
You bid your faithful people cleanse their hearts, and prepare with joy for the Paschal feast; that, fervent in prayer and in works of mercy, and renewed by your Word and Sacraments, they may come to the fullness of grace which you have prepared for those who love you.
First Primate of Canada
Anglican Commemoration
Robert Machray (1831–1904), first Primate of the Anglican Church of Canada, was the transformative ecclesiastical leader who established the institutional, liturgical, and missionary infrastructure of Canadian Anglicanism. Consecrated Bishop of Rupert's Land in 1865, he served for 39 years, overseeing missionary expansion across the prairie provinces and establishing an Anglican presence in the Canadian northwest. Elected the first Primate in 1893, Machray shaped the theological and institutional identity of the fledgling Canadian church during its formative decades.
Robert Machray was born in Aberdeen, Scotland, in 1831 and trained at Oxford University. He was ordained in the Church of England and served as chaplain to the British garrison in Canada before being elected Bishop of Rupert's Land in 1865. His 39-year episcopate fundamentally transformed the religious landscape of British North America. Machray established missionary stations across the prairies, advocated for Indigenous ministry, and built the institutional scaffolding of Canadian Anglicanism: diocesan structures, synodal governance, and theological formation. In 1893, the House of Bishops elected him first Primate of the Anglican Church of Canada in recognition of his leadership and influence. He continued to guide the church through complex questions of disestablishment, liturgical adaptation, and missionary expansion. Machray retired to Montreal in 1902 and died on September 16, 1904. His legacy fundamentally shapes Canadian Anglican identity and practice.
Machray exemplifies the institutional founder of Canadian Anglicanism and the episcopal missionary leader of the 19th-century colonial church. His tenure established canonical structures, clergy formation systems, and Indigenous outreach patterns that persist in Canadian Anglican practice. Venerated in Canadian Anglican memory as the 'father of Canadian Anglicanism.'