Saturday, September 12, 2026
Proper 18
Liturgical Color: White/Gold
The Fourteenth 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.
Bishop of New York and Reformer of the Church
Anglican Commemoration
The Fifteenth Sunday after Trinity
John Henry Hobart (1775–1830) was the second bishop of New York and a principal architect of the high church party in the early Protestant Episcopal Church. He founded the General Theological Seminary in 1817 (the oldest surviving seminary in the nation) and advocated for the recovery of apostolic churchmanship, sacramental theology, and clerical formation. His pastoral letters and published works shaped Episcopal identity for a generation.
John Henry Hobart was born in Philadelphia in 1775. He was educated at the College of New Jersey (now Princeton) and initially trained for a merchant's career before converting to Anglicanism and entering the ministry. He was ordained a deacon in 1801 and a priest in 1802, serving first in New Jersey and Pennsylvania. In 1811, he was elected Assistant Bishop of New York (then vacant in leadership), and in 1815 he was promoted to Bishop of New York, a position he held for fifteen years until his death in 1830. Hobart's episcopacy was marked by aggressive expansion of the church's institutional presence in New York. He established parishes, ordained clergy, and worked tirelessly to build up the diocese. In 1817, he founded the General Theological Seminary in New York City to ensure a steady supply of theologically trained priests. This decision proved transformative not only for the Episcopal Church but for American Protestantism generally, as it established the paradigm of a denominational seminary. Hobart's leadership in the General Convention drove the development of the church's liturgical and doctrinal standards. He was a prolific writer and speaker, producing pastoral letters to his clergy (published annually), sermons, and treatises on church discipline and theology. His *The Clergyman's Companion* (1807) became a standard resource for Episcopal clergy, offering guidance on pastoral practice, sacramental theology, and liturgical conduct. Hobart's theological vision, articulated in his published charges to the clergy, emphasized apostolic succession, the real presence in the Eucharist, and the authority of the church to bind and loose through absolution. These positions aligned him with the emergent high church party, placing him in tension with evangelicals within the church. Despite controversy, Hobart's institutional vision prevailed: by his death, the diocese of New York was substantially stronger, and the General Theological Seminary had produced a generation of priests formed in his theological convictions. He died in office in 1830, universally recognized as one of the most powerful bishops in the church's history.
Traditionally, John Henry Hobart is venerated as the founder of American high churchmanship and as the architect of clerical formation in the American church. He is remembered for his pastoral zeal, his vision for sacramental theology, and his conviction that the Episcopal Church possessed a catholic faith and order distinct from evangelicalism and from the secular rationalism of the era. The General Theological Seminary is his abiding monument, and its theological trajectory for much of the 19th century reflected his convictions about apostolic succession, sound liturgical practice, and the recovery of patristic theology.