Friday, April 10, 2026
Liturgical Color: White/Gold
Easter
Almighty God, who through your only-begotten Son Jesus Christ overcame death and opened to us the gate of everlasting life: Grant that we, who celebrate with joy the day of the Lord’s resurrection, may, by your life-giving Spirit, be delivered from sin and raised from death; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.
Easter
But chiefly are we bound to praise you for the glorious resurrection of your Son Jesus Christ our Lord; for he is the true Paschal Lamb, who was offered for us, and has taken away the sin of the world; who by his death has destroyed death, and by his rising to life again has won for us everlasting life.
Priest and Teacher of the Faith
Anglican Commemoration
William Law was an English priest and spiritual writer whose A Serious Call to a Devout and Holy Life (1728) became one of the most influential devotional works in the English language. With devastating clarity, he argued that half-hearted Christianity is a contradiction—that baptized believers are called to order every dimension of life around the love of God. The book shaped the spiritual formation of Samuel Johnson, John Wesley, George Whitefield, and generations of Anglican clergy and devout laity. Later in life, Law withdrew to King's Cliffe in Northamptonshire, where he devoted himself to contemplative prayer, charitable work, and the mystical theology of Jakob Böhme, demonstrating that rigorous moral reasoning and deepening mysticism could coexist in a single Christian life.
William Law was born in 1686 at King's Cliffe, Northamptonshire, the son of a grocer of respectable standing. He received an excellent education at Grantham School and at Emmanuel College, Cambridge, where he developed the classical learning and theological acuity that would mark his mature work. After ordination and election as a fellow of Emmanuel College, he served as chaplain and tutor—positions that promised a distinguished academic ecclesiastical career.
His life took a sudden and defining turn in 1714 when he refused to take the oath of allegiance to George I, declaring his conscience bound to the Stuart line. This act of principled nonjury cost him his fellowship and any possibility of preferment in the Church of England. Rather than retreat into obscurity, Law relocated to London, where he supported himself as a private tutor. He served for several years in the household of Edward Gibbon, grandfather of the historian, as chaplain and domestic tutor—a position that provided both security and the leisure to write.
During this period of apparent restriction, Law produced his greatest works. A Treatise upon Christian Perfection appeared in 1726, but it was A Serious Call to a Devout and Holy Life (1728) that would reshape Anglican spirituality and influence the broader Protestant world. The Serious Call is remarkable for its combination of theological sophistication, moral clarity, and vivid character portraiture. Law populated its pages with satirical yet sympathetic portraits—Flavia the fashionable woman, Calidus the businessman preoccupied with worldly gain, Miranda the truly devout—showing how ordinary Christians either evade or embrace the radical demands of Gospel charity and holiness.
The book's impact was immediate and profound. Samuel Johnson, then a young man adrift in spiritual uncertainty, credited reading the Serious Call with making him 'think in earnest of religion' for the first time. John Wesley reported that Law's teaching shaped his understanding of holiness and Christian perfection, though Wesley later diverged from Law's theology on several points. George Whitefield acknowledged Law's formative influence on his own spiritual awakening. The Serious Call became standard reading for Anglican ordinands, devout laity, and educated dissenting ministers throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Its influence extended to figures as diverse as Samuel Taylor Coleridge and the Tractarian theologians of the nineteenth century.
In his mature years, Law returned to King's Cliffe, where he lived with extraordinary simplicity and ascetic discipline. He devoted himself to prayer, charitable work among the poor of the parish, and deep study of the German mystical theologian Jakob Böhme. This turn toward mysticism puzzled some contemporaries who had known him only through the moral and intellectual rigor of the Serious Call. To Law, however, there was no contradiction: the God who demands holy living and moral transformation is the same God who draws the soul into deeper union and contemplative knowledge. His later writings—The Spirit of Prayer (1749) and The Spirit of Love (1754)—explored this interior dimension of faith, seeking to show how systematic prayer and mystical awareness interpenetrate.
Law died peacefully at King's Cliffe on April 9, 1761, in his seventy-fifth year, having lived as a living embodiment of the devout and austere Christianity he had commended to others.
Traditionally, Law is remembered as a model of spiritual integrity and intellectual rigor in prayer. His insistence that Christianity demands the transformation of the whole person—commerce, dress, conversation, leisure—rather than sequestering piety to private devotion was revolutionary in its scope and influential across denominational lines. The tradition emphasizes not only his moral clarity but his growth into contemplative depth in his later years, suggesting that rigorous asceticism naturally flowers into mystical union rather than remaining sterile discipline.
Contemporaries and successors highlighted Law's personal integrity: he lived according to the demanding standards he commended in writing, neither accumulating wealth nor seeking preferment. His return to King's Cliffe and his dedicated charitable work among the poor established him as a figure of voluntary simplicity and genuine pastoral concern. Later Anglican tradition identified him as a precursor to the Tractarian movement, which similarly emphasized the integration of rigorous theological learning with deep spirituality and ascetic practice.
Law's influence extended beyond the Church of England. His writings were read and revered by Methodist, Presbyterian, and Congregationalist clergy. In the nineteenth century, Coleridge, the Tractarians, and later figures in the Catholic Revival found in Law a resource for integrating mysticism with Anglican ecclesiology and theology.