Thursday, April 2, 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.
First Indigenous Priest of the Church of England in Western Canada
Anglican Commemoration
Henry Budd was a Cree man who became the first Indigenous person ordained as a priest in the Church of England in western Canada, serving for over thirty years as a missionary to his own people in what is now Manitoba and Saskatchewan. Baptized as a child at the Church Missionary Society post at Norway House, he was educated in the Anglican tradition and became a schoolteacher and catechist before his ordination in 1853. His ministry was marked by quiet faithfulness — teaching, translating Scripture and hymns into Cree, and building a Christian community from within Indigenous culture.
Henry Budd was born around 1812 at Norway House, a Hudson's Bay Company post on Lake Winnipeg. His Cree name was Sakacewescam, and he was born into a Cree-speaking family at a time when European contact and the fur trade were transforming Indigenous communities across the continent.
Budd was among the first Indigenous children baptized by the Church Missionary Society missionaries who arrived in the region in the 1820s. He was educated at the CMS mission school and showed exceptional aptitude for learning. He became a schoolteacher and catechist, working among the Cree communities of the Saskatchewan River district, teaching reading, writing, and Christian doctrine.
In 1840, he was sent to The Pas (then called Devon Mission), where he established a mission that became one of the most successful in western Canada. For over a decade, he worked as a deacon and missionary, earning the respect of both his own people and the European clergy.
He was ordained deacon in 1850 and priest in 1853 by Bishop David Anderson of Rupert's Land — the first Indigenous person to be ordained in the western Canadian church. His ordination was a milestone, but Budd wore the distinction lightly. He continued his quiet work of teaching, translating, and pastoring.
Budd's most significant contribution was the development of Cree-language Christian materials. He translated portions of Scripture, prayers, and hymns into Cree syllabics — the writing system developed by James Evans — making the faith accessible to communities that had no English. He also served as a cultural bridge between Indigenous and European communities, navigating the complex dynamics of the fur trade and colonial expansion with integrity.
He spent his final years at Cumberland House, continuing his ministry until his death in 1875. His work laid the foundation for Indigenous Anglican Christianity in western Canada and demonstrated that the gospel could take root in Indigenous culture without requiring the destruction of that culture.
Henry Budd's legacy in Canadian Anglicanism is that of the pioneer Indigenous priest whose ministry demonstrated that Cree Christian faith could flourish through the Cree language and culture. His translation work — making Scripture and prayer accessible in syllabics — established a model of inculturation that influenced subsequent Indigenous ministry. The tradition acknowledges the complexity of his role as both a beneficiary of missionary education and a voice for Indigenous Christians. Modern Indigenous Anglican historiography has recovered Budd's significance as a figure of agency and cultural bridge-building in a period of colonial expansion. His ordination in 1853 became a watershed moment, proving that Indigenous clergy could lead their own communities. The tradition emphasizes his faithfulness and quiet dignity rather than dramatic gestures or miracles.