Wednesday, September 20, 2028
Proper 19
Liturgical Color: Red
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 Melanesia, and his Companions, Martyrs
Anglican Commemoration
The first Bishop of Melanesia, murdered on a Pacific beach in reprisal for crimes he had spent his life opposing. Patteson mastered more than twenty island languages and built a mission founded on respect for the peoples he served. When the kidnappers called blackbirders raided the islands for plantation labor, he warned that their violence would one day fall on him; on the twentieth of September, 1871, on the island of Nukapu, it did.
Patteson was born in 1827 into a privileged English family — his father was a judge, his godfather was the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge's nephew John Taylor Coleridge, and he was educated at Eton and Balliol College, Oxford. He excelled at cricket and languages, gifts that would both prove useful in the Pacific.
In 1855, Patteson joined George Augustus Selwyn, the Bishop of New Zealand, on a missionary voyage through the Melanesian islands. The experience transformed him. He found in the island peoples a responsiveness to the gospel that moved him deeply, and he threw himself into language study with extraordinary results — eventually mastering elements of more than twenty Pacific languages.
Patteson was consecrated Bishop of Melanesia in 1861, with a see that encompassed the Solomon Islands, the New Hebrides (now Vanuatu), and the Santa Cruz Islands — hundreds of islands spread across thousands of miles of ocean. His method was distinctive: rather than establishing Western-style mission stations, he would visit islands repeatedly by ship, build relationships, learn languages, and eventually bring young men to a central training school on Norfolk Island, where they would be educated and returned to their own communities as teachers and catechists.
This approach — patient, relational, and respectful of existing cultures — bore fruit. But Patteson's work was constantly undermined by the labor trade. European ships would arrive at islands, seize men by force or deception, and carry them to Queensland plantations. Some traders even disguised their ships to look like mission vessels. Patteson condemned the practice repeatedly and lobbied the British government for its suppression.
On September 20, 1871, Patteson landed on Nukapu in the Santa Cruz Islands. Five young men had recently been kidnapped from the island by labor traders. The islanders, unable to distinguish one European from another and retaliating against the violence done to their community, killed Patteson and two companions. His body was found in a canoe, wrapped in a mat, with five wounds — one for each kidnapped man — and a palm frond placed on his chest, the traditional Melanesian symbol of a completed act of justice.
Patteson's martyrdom was recognized immediately by the Anglican Communion as a powerful witness to the gospel among peoples caught in the destructive wake of colonial trading abuses. His willingness to learn indigenous languages and respect indigenous cultures — radically countercultural for the 1860s — established him as a model of missional integrity. His death ironically vindicated his critique of the labor trade; the incident brought international attention to 'blackbirding' and contributed to government regulation. The placement of the palm frond on his body by the islanders — a sign of justice in their own cultural logic — was read by later Anglican tradition as a sign that his death was not meaningless violence but was received within the islanders' own moral universe. Patteson's willingness to lay down his life without retaliation against the islanders themselves (he recognized their violence as a response to European violence done to them) made him a prophetic figure in Anglican missiology.