31
October 1832 A.D. George W. Doane Consecrated Episcopal Bishop
He stands out in the life of the American church as
one of the first ten great American churchmen." That is how the Rev. Paul
Matthews described George Washington Doane, one hundred years to the day after
he was consecrated as Bishop of New Jersey. Matthews ranked him with Samuel
Seabury, America's first ordained Episcopal bishop and William White, whose
efforts helped forge an independent existence for the Episcopal Church after
the Revolutionary War.
George earned his reputation as an educator,
mission organizer and hymn writer. Born at Trenton, New Jersey in 1799, he
studied hard as a boy and showed both conviction and courage. While preparing
for college, he was beaten for refusing to memorize a catechism which was not
the official catechism of his church. He stood firm. Other students joined him.
They won the privilege to study from the text they preferred.
After he graduated from Union College, New York in
1818, George thought of going into law; but six months of study for it changed
his mind. He determined to enter the ministry instead. His rise was steady
because he did good work. By 1821 he was ordained a deacon, by 1823 a priest.
He served in New York City, where he helped found St. Luke's Church, and taught
and edited his denomination's magazine, the Episcopal Watchman. Between 1828
and 1832 he served in Boston and then, at the relatively young age of thirty-three,
received a totally unexpected offer.
On October 3, 1832 a local convention held in New
Jersey asked him to become their bishop. George had just a few days in which to
reply. He accepted on the 19th. On this day, October 31, 1832, he was
consecrated to his new duties by the Right Rev. Dr. White, the presiding
Bishop, assisted by the Right Rev. Dr. Onderdonk, of New York, and the Right
Rev. Dr. Ives, of North Carolina.
George worked hard as bishop. Statistics show that
the church grew steadily and strongly under him. He began with eighteen
clergymen in 1832 and needed 99 when he died twenty-seven years later. "No
shepherd ever counted his sheep more carefully day by day, no merchant was ever
more solicitous to be adding something constantly to his stock in trade, than
Bishop Doane was to have each year's report of his diocese, his parish, his
schools, an improvement, if possible, upon all preceding years," said the
Rev. Milo Mahan, preaching a sermon in his memory in 1859.
He became ill with a fever believed to be typhoid.
He recovered from delirium weak and longing for rest. One of the last things he
said was, "I die in the Faith of the Son of God, and in the Confidence of
his one Catholic and Apostolic Church. I have no merits--no man has--but my trust
is in the Mercy of Jesus."
It is not for his scholarship, his hard work to
build up the diocese of New Jersey or for his efforts to plant the church in
New Jersey that he is best remembered by most Christians, but for his hymns, especially
the one which begins:
Softly
now the light of day
Fades upon my sight away;
Free from care, from labor free,
Lord, I would commune with Thee.
Bibliography:
1. Duffield, Samuel Willoughby.
English Hymns, their authors and history. New York: Funk and Wagnalls, 1894.
2. "George Washington
Doane." http://www.cyberhymnal.org
3. "George Washington
Doane." Encyclopedia Britannica. 1911
4. Mahan, Milo. "The Great
Hearted Shepherd." [Sermon preached in 1859] Project Canterbury.
5. Mathews, Paul. "A Bright and
Shining Light." [Sermon preached October 31, 1932] Project Canterbury.
6. Ninde, Edward S. The Story of the
American Hymn. New York, Abingdon, 1921. source of the portrait
7. Wells, Amos R. A Treasure of
Hymns; Brief biographies of 120 leading hymn- writers and Their best hymns.
Boston: W. A. Wilde company, 1945.
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