Saturday, June 6, 2026
Liturgical Color: White/Gold
Proper 4 (May 29-June 4)
O God, the protector of all those who trust in you, without whom nothing is strong, nothing is holy: Increase and multiply upon us your mercy, that, with you as our ruler and guide, we may so pass through things temporal that we lose not the things eternal; grant this, heavenly Father, for the sake of your Son Jesus Christ, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
Bishop and Missionary to Australia
Anglican Commemoration
William Grant Broughton was the first and only Bishop of Australia, an English high churchman sent to a young penal colony who spent a quarter-century building a church there from almost nothing. Born in 1788, he arrived in New South Wales in 1829 and was consecrated bishop in 1836. He founded schools, began a cathedral, and divided his vast see before his death in 1853.
William Grant Broughton was born in 1788 in Yorkshire, England. He was educated at Harrow School and at Cambridge University, where he studied theology and showed considerable promise in classical learning. After ordination in the Church of England, he served in various parochial positions in England, gaining a reputation as a sound theologian, an effective preacher, and a disciplined administrator. He was known for his high church theology, his appreciation for patristic learning, and his conviction that the church needed strong episcopal leadership to maintain order and spiritual vitality.
In 1834, Broughton was appointed Archdeacon of New South Wales—not yet a bishop, but a position that gave him considerable authority over the scattered Anglican clergy serving in the Australian colonies. He arrived in Sydney in 1835 and was shocked by what he found. The Anglican Church in Australia was, in his estimation, in a state of near-collapse. There were few ordained clergy; many of those present were intemperate, theologically incompetent, or scandalous in their personal behavior. There was no centralized authority, no consistent liturgical practice, no systematic catechesis. The Church of England had official status in the colonies, but its institutional reality was one of decay.
Broughton threw himself into reform with remarkable energy. He undertook visitations of parishes across New South Wales, assessing the state of the church in each locality. He deposed or suspended priests whose conduct was unworthy. He established a system of clerical discipline and accountability. Most importantly, he began the work of educating and training new clergy suited to the colonial context. He recognized that Australia needed not imported English clergy but locally trained ministers who understood the colonial society and could minister effectively within it.
In 1836, Broughton was consecrated as the first Bishop of Australia (the title was later changed to Bishop of Sydney, with the appointment of additional bishops as the colonies developed). With episcopal authority, he accelerated his reforming program. He established St. Andrew's Cathedral in Sydney as the seat of his bishopric and as a symbol of Anglican institutional presence. He founded schools, including the important Church of England Grammar School, as a means of providing Christian education and of training future clergy. He established charitable institutions to care for the poor and sick. He brought liturgical order and doctrinal clarity to diocesan worship.
Broughton's approach was hierarchical and, by modern standards, quite authoritarian. But his authority was exercised in service of what he understood as the church's spiritual mission. He insisted on doctrinal orthodoxy, on the centrality of the sacraments, on the importance of episcopal succession, and on the integration of the Australian church into the worldwide Anglican communion. He was not an Evangelical in the manner of Simeon; he was closer to a high church traditionalist. But he shared Simeon's conviction that the established church needed to be reformed through rigorous pastoral leadership and through the ordination of worthy clergy.
As the Australian colonies expanded and new dioceses were established, Broughton's title was elevated to Metropolitan of Australasia (roughly equivalent to archbishop), reflecting his authority over the emerging Anglican provinces. He worked to establish cooperative relationships with bishops of neighboring dioceses and to create institutional structures that would allow the Australian church to function with autonomy while maintaining communion with the Church of England.
Broughton died on September 20, 1853, after eighteen years of intensive episcopal work. By the time of his death, he had accomplished a remarkable transformation. The Australian Anglican Church had passed from chaos into order; it had genuine episcopal leadership, a coherent structure, educated clergy, and a strong institutional presence. His legacy was a church that would continue to develop and to take on distinctive Australian characteristics, but that was founded on solid ecclesiastical and theological ground.
Traditionally, Broughton is venerated in Australian Anglican tradition as the founder and organizer of the church in the colonies. The tradition emphasizes his episcopal authority and his effective use of it to bring order, discipline, and theological integrity to a chaotic and underdeveloped ecclesiastical situation. He is remembered as a figure of moral courage who did not hesitate to discipline errant clergy and to insist on standards of conduct and competence. The tradition also recognizes his institutional vision: he understood that the church needed schools, cathedrals, and organized structures to take deep root in colonial society. His high church theology and his insistence on episcopal authority and sacramental worship are part of his legacy. Later developments in Australian Anglicanism, including its eventual establishment as an independent church (the Anglican Church of Australia became a separate entity from the Church of England), grew from the foundations he laid.