Wednesday, April 1, 2026
Liturgical Color: White/Gold
Palm Sunday
Almighty and everlasting God, in your tender love for us you sent your Son our Savior Jesus Christ to take upon himself our nature, and to suffer death upon the Cross, giving us the example of his great humility: Mercifully grant that we may walk in the way of his suffering, and come to share in his resurrection; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
Holy Week
Through Jesus Christ our Lord. For our sins he was lifted high upon the Cross, that he might draw the whole world to himself; and by his suffering and death he became the author of eternal salvation for all who put their trust in him.
Priest, Theologian, and Renewer of Society
Anglican Commemoration
F.D. Maurice was an Anglican priest and theologian who became the intellectual father of Christian Socialism and one of the most original theological minds of Victorian England. His theology — centered on the conviction that Christ is already the head of every person and that the Kingdom of God is a present reality — challenged both conservative establishment and evangelical revivalists. He was dismissed from King's College London for questioning the doctrine of eternal punishment, founded the Working Men's College to provide education for laborers, and influenced a generation of social reformers.
Frederick Denison Maurice was born in 1805 near Lowestoft, Suffolk, into a Unitarian family. His childhood was marked by religious turmoil — his mother and sisters converted to various forms of evangelical Christianity, and the household was divided by competing convictions. Maurice himself was received into the Church of England in 1831 and ordained in 1834.
His major theological work, The Kingdom of Christ (1838, revised 1842), argued that the Church's visible structures — creeds, sacraments, episcopacy — are signs of a universal spiritual society that God has already established in Christ. This vision was neither Catholic nor Protestant in the conventional sense: Maurice believed that every party in the Church held part of the truth, and that the Church's calling was to manifest the unity that already existed in Christ rather than to create it.
In 1848, inspired by the Chartist movement and the failure of revolutionary politics, Maurice joined with Charles Kingsley and J.M. Ludlow to found the Christian Socialist movement. Their argument was that competition was unchristian, that cooperation was the economic principle implied by the gospel, and that the Church had a duty to engage with the social conditions of the working class.
Maurice's dismissal from King's College London in 1853 — for publishing Theological Essays, in which he questioned whether 'eternal' in 'eternal punishment' meant 'everlasting' — made him a cause célèbre. He founded the Working Men's College in 1854 and was eventually appointed to a chair at Cambridge, where he taught until his death in 1872.
Maurice's legacy in Anglican theology and Christian social thought was established immediately and has grown continuously. The Working Men's College he founded remains active and influential. His theological vision — emphasizing the universality of Christ's redemption, the present reality of God's kingdom, and the Church's responsibility to engage with social structures — became foundational for Anglican social ethics. Christian Socialism, which he helped launch, became a major current in Anglican thought. His willingness to question the doctrine of eternal punishment — which led to his dismissal — was later vindicated by theological development. The tradition presents Maurice as a prophetic figure who paid a price for intellectual and social honesty, and whose vindication came gradually through the acceptance of his ideas and the success of his institutions.