Wednesday, September 2, 2026
Proper 17
Liturgical Color: Red
The Thirteenth 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.
Martyrs
Anglican Commemoration
A company of Anglican missionaries (clergy and lay workers) and indigenous Papua New Guinean Christians who were executed or died under torture during the Japanese invasion and occupation of Papua New Guinea in 1942–1943. The martyrs include Lucian Tapiedi, a Papuan evangelist and deacon, and eight European missionary families and workers who chose to remain at their posts or were captured while attempting to serve their flocks, refusing evacuation and facing execution for their refusal to deny Christ or cease Christian witness.
When Japanese forces invaded Papua New Guinea in early September 1942, Anglican missionaries faced the choice to evacuate or remain with their congregations. A group of eight European Anglican missionaries—both clergy and lay teachers—refused evacuation despite government orders, choosing instead to remain with their indigenous congregations. Chief among these was Lucian Tapiedi, a Papuan-born Christian evangelist and deacon whose courage and faithful witness became legendary throughout the region. As Japanese forces advanced, the missionaries and indigenous Christians were captured. Rather than recant their faith or cease Christian ministry, they endured interrogation, torture, and execution. Tapiedi was martyred in September 1942; other missionaries perished through 1943 under conditions of brutal imprisonment. The accounts of their martyrdoms—preserved in mission records, survivor testimonies, and wartime dispatches—reveal a consistent testimony: refusal to renounce Christ, continued clandestine prayer and ministry in captivity, and willingness to face death as witnesses to the Gospel. Their deaths became emblematic of indigenous faith's maturity and the cost of Christian faithfulness in the face of totalitarian violence. The survivors' accounts and mission archives document a community of faith whose witness transcended the categories of European missionary and indigenous convert, presenting instead a unified communion of martyrs.
The martyrs of Papua New Guinea embody the maturation of indigenous Anglican faith. Their witness demonstrates that Christian martyrdom is not a relic of ancient history but a continuing reality in twentieth-century persecution. Lucian Tapiedi and his companions—both indigenous and European—refute the colonial assumption that only Western missionaries carried true faith; instead, their unified martyrdom reveals a single communion of saints transcending race and cultural origin. Their legacy shaped the theology of mission and witness in the Anglican Communion, affirming that the Church's credibility rests not on institutional power but on faithful suffering. Within ACNA tradition, they exemplify the principle that the Gospel's power is demonstrated in the willingness of communities—lay and ordained, indigenous and missionary—to surrender life itself rather than compromise their witness to Christ.