Monday, July 27, 2026
Proper 12
Liturgical Color: White/Gold
The Eighth Sunday after Trinity
O God, the strength of all who put their trust in you: Mercifully accept our prayers, and because, through the weakness of our mortal nature, we can do no good thing without you, grant us the help of your grace to keep your commandments, that we may please you in will and deed; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
The Eighth Sunday after Trinity
Priest and Ecumenist
Anglican Commemoration
William Reed Huntington (1838–1909), rector of Grace Church in New York City, was the theological architect of the Lambeth Quadrilateral—the four essentials of church unity (Scripture, historic creeds, sacraments, and historic episcopate) that became the foundational ecumenical framework for the Anglican Communion and influenced Christian unity conversations worldwide. His book The Church-Idea (1870) articulated a vision of Anglican catholicity that transcended both Roman pretension and Protestant fragmentation, and his frameworks shaped the 1888 Lambeth Conference's epochal ecumenical commitments.
William Reed Huntington was born in 1838 in Haddam, Connecticut, to a prominent Episcopal family. He was educated at Harvard and the Berkeley Divinity School, and ordained a priest of the Episcopal Church in 1862. In 1883, he became rector of Grace Church, Manhattan—one of the most influential pulpits in American Protestantism. A prolific writer and theologian, Huntington published numerous works on ecclesiology, liturgy, and church unity. His masterwork, The Church-Idea (1870), proposed a framework for Christian reunion grounded in four essential elements: the Holy Scriptures, the historic creeds (particularly the Nicene and Apostles' Creeds), the two dominical sacraments (Baptism and Eucharist), and the historic episcopate. This framework—later called the Lambeth Quadrilateral—offered a middle way between Roman Catholic claims to papal supremacy and Protestant fragmentation. Huntington argued that these four elements constituted the irreducible core of catholicity, and that reunion could be achieved if diverse Christian bodies affirmed these essentials while permitting diversity in polity, discipline, and custom. His vision profoundly influenced the 1888 Lambeth Conference, which formally adopted the Quadrilateral as a basis for ecumenical dialogue. Huntington was also a liturgical scholar who contributed to Prayer Book revision discussions and articulated the theological principles underlying Anglican worship. He remained rector of Grace Church until his death on July 27, 1909, having shaped both Anglican identity and the broader ecumenical movement.
William Reed Huntington exemplifies the ecumenical pastor-theologian and prophetic voice calling the church to unity. His Lambeth Quadrilateral became the foundational framework for Anglican ecumenism and influenced Christian reunion conversations globally. He is venerated in Anglican tradition as the theological architect of ecumenical openness and the articulator of a catholicity that transcends both sectarian Protestant fragmentation and Roman centralism.