Wednesday, March 31, 2027
Liturgical Color: White/Gold
Easter
Almighty God, who through your only-begotten Son Jesus Christ overcame death and opened to us the gate of everlasting life: Grant that we, who celebrate with joy the day of the Lord’s resurrection, may, by your life-giving Spirit, be delivered from sin and raised from death; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.
Easter
But chiefly are we bound to praise you for the glorious resurrection of your Son Jesus Christ our Lord; for he is the true Paschal Lamb, who was offered for us, and has taken away the sin of the world; who by his death has destroyed death, and by his rising to life again has won for us everlasting life.
Priest and Poet
Anglican Commemoration
Psalms 144, 145, 146
Psalms 147, 148, 149, 150
Dean of St. Paul's Cathedral, master of metaphysical poetry, and one of the most powerful preachers of the Stuart age. His Holy Sonnets and Devotions Upon Emergent Occasions combine intellectual wit with theological depth, while his sermons, marked by learning, passion, and innovation, exemplified the integration of art and faith that defined Caroline divinity.
John Donne was born in 1572 into a prominent Catholic family during the Elizabethan penal period. His mother was descended from the More family (John More's niece); his uncle was a Jesuit missionary. This Catholic inheritance—intellectual, spiritual, and dangerous—shaped his entire life. He was educated at Hart Hall, Oxford, and Lincoln's Inn, London, studying law and languages. In his youth he was a courtier, wit, and writer of erotic poetry (songs, satires) that circulated in manuscript among the literary elite.
At age nineteen he may have secretly married Ann More, ward of Sir George More; the marriage was acknowledged around 1601 and sundered his legal prospects. His most productive years (1600s–1610s) saw him in poverty and professional limbo, dependent on patronage. During this period he composed many of his Holy Sonnets (c. 1609–1611)—wrestling with faith, guilt, sexuality, and death—and his metaphysical love poetry.
In 1610 he published Pseudodoxia (a theological treatise) and began to secure patronage. A turning point came in 1615 when, at age forty-two and in financial desperation, he sought ordination in the Church of England. King James I, impressed by Donne's learning, encouraged him. He was ordained and rapidly rose in the Church: appointed chaplain to the king, then (1621) Dean of St. Paul's, one of the most prestigious ecclesiastical posts in England.
As dean (1621–1631), Donne preached an estimated 160 sermons, many surviving in print. These sermons—delivered from the famous Paul's Cross pulpit and in the Cathedral—combined learning (biblical, patristic, legal), innovation (vivid imagery, dramatic rhetoric), and theological depth. In 1624, seriously ill, he wrote his Devotions Upon Emergent Occasions, a sequence of twenty-three meditations, expostulations, and prayers following the course of a grave fever. This work, published posthumously in 1624, stands with the Preces Privatae as a masterpiece of Stuart devotional literature. Donne died on March 31, 1631, and was buried in St. Paul's; his last sermon, 'Death's Duel,' was preached the month before his death.
Donne had no medieval cult or formal canonization. His reputation rested entirely on his literary achievement and preaching fame during his lifetime. After his death, his works went through cycles of recovery and eclipse. The seventeenth and eighteenth centuries valued his sermons more than his poetry; the poetry was largely forgotten until nineteenth-century revival (T.S. Eliot's 1921 essays on metaphysical poetry resurrected Donne's literary reputation). Modern Anglo-Catholicism reclaimed him as a figure of integration—poet-priest, wit and saint, passionate and learned. His Devotions has been continuously reprinted and remains a standard spiritual text. His inclusion in Anglican calendars dates to nineteenth-century revival of saint commemoration and reflects modern rather than unbroken tradition. The Holy Sonnets, published posthumously (1633) and long attributed to his youth, are now recognized as written in middle age during spiritual crisis, making them central to understanding his conversion and faith.