Saturday, September 26, 2026
Proper 20
Liturgical Color: White/Gold
The Sixteenth Sunday after Trinity
O Lord, you never fail to support and govern those whom you bring up in your steadfast love and fear: Keep us, we pray, under your continual protection and providence, and give us a perpetual fear and love of your holy Name; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
Bishop of Winchester and Teacher of the Faith
Anglican Commemoration
The Sixteenth Sunday after Trinity
The Seventeenth Sunday after Trinity
Bishop of Winchester and principal translator of the King James Version, celebrated for his meticulous biblical scholarship, his mystical devotional practice recorded in the Preces Privatae, and his irenic theological method that sought to balance Reformation and Catholic tradition. His combination of erudition, piety, and pastoral care made him one of the defining figures of early Stuart Anglicanism.
Lancelot Andrewes was born in 1555 in London, the son of a merchant tradesman and well-educated mother who ensured his early instruction in languages. He attended the Merchant Taylors' School and then Pembroke College, Cambridge, where he became fellow and eventually master. His Cambridge years were spent in rigorous biblical and patristic study; he acquired proficiency in Hebrew, Greek, Latin, and modern languages—skills that would later make him invaluable as a biblical translator.
Andrewes was ordained in 1580 and served as chaplain to Sir Francis Walsingham before moving to London to serve as vicar of St Giles in the Fields (1589–1605). His reputation as a preacher grew rapidly. King James I, who valued Andrewes' learning and his irenic approach to religious controversy, appointed him to the Hampton Court Conference in 1604 and made him one of the principal translators and overseer of the King James Version (1611). Andrewes' Hebrew expertise and meticulous attention to translation principle shaped the KJV's language profoundly.
Andre was consecrated Bishop of Chichester in 1605, then moved to Winchester in 1619, where he remained until his death in 1626. He was also royal chaplain and a key theological advisor to the king. His sermons, delivered before the court and published posthumously, exemplify a sophisticated exegetical method combining historical, textual, and typological interpretation. His Latin meditations, the Preces Privatae, composed throughout his life and first published in 1648, reveal a deeply sacramental and contemplative piety—a daily discipline of intercessory prayer, recitation of creeds, and meditation on Christ's passion that stands apart from the more rhetorical devotion of his contemporaries. Andrewes' combination of scholarly rigor, pastoral gentleness, and mystical depth made him a model bishop.
Andrewes' cult was never formally instituted by Rome; his commemoration is entirely Anglican. His influence shaped seventeenth-century Anglican piety profoundly through his sermons (published in collected Works) and the posthumous discovery of the Preces Privatae (1648), which became a standard text for Anglo-Catholic devotional revival in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The Oxford Movement particularly revered Andrewes as a patristic-minded bishop who resisted both papal extremism and Puritan reductionism. His legacy as a translator of Scripture has been continuous; biblical scholars acknowledge the KJV's debt to his Hebrew learning. The sacramental theology implicit in the Preces Privatae aligned him with the Anglo-Catholic vision of Eucharistic devotion, making him an authority figure for that tradition. He was never formally canonized but has been consistently commemorated in Anglican calendars since the restoration of saint observance in the nineteenth century.