James DeKoven explained

James DeKoven
Birth Date:September 19, 1831
Death Date:March 19, 1879
Feast Day:March 22
Venerated In:Anglican Communion
Birth Place:Middletown, Connecticut, U.S.
Titles:Priest

James DeKoven (September 19, 1831 – March 19, 1879) was a priest, an educator and a leader of Anglican Ritualism in the Episcopal Church.

Early life and education

DeKoven was born in Middletown, Connecticut and educated at Columbia College. In 1851, he was admitted to General Theological Seminary and was ordained as a deacon in 1854 in Middletown.

Career

He accepted a teaching position at Nashotah House in Wisconsin and became rector of the nearby St. John Chrysostom parish in Delafield. It was there that he was ordained as a priest by Bishop Jackson Kemper.[1] While in Delafield, he established a school called St. John's Hall. In 1859 he became the warden of Racine College and continued to be at the center of that school for the rest of his life.

He spoke in support of the cause for ritualism at the National Conventions in 1871 and 1874. DeKoven was nominated several times and even elected as a bishop, but was never ordained to the episcopate. He was nominated or elected as bishop of Massachusetts (1873), Wisconsin (1874), Fond du Lac (1875), and Illinois (1875).

In the Illinois election, he was chosen by the clergy and the laity, but a majority of the standing committee refused to endorse his election. The reason given by the standing committee was his "Doctrine on the Holy Eucharist," an open letter published in the Milwaukee, Wisconsin newspaper on January 14, 1874, was at least partly responsible for his Eucharistic doctrine being questioned. The signers of this letter included three faculty members from Nashotah House.[2] [3] According to his opponents, his views on transubstantiation "were generally understood to approximate more closely to Romanism than the language of the Thirty-Nine Articles admitted."[4] He also addressed the Church Congress (a series of national meetings to provide a vision for the Episcopal Church) in 1876.[5]

DeKoven remained in Wisconsin for the rest of his life, turning down calls to serve at some of the nation's largest and wealthiest parish churches, including Trinity Church in New York City, Church of the Advent in Boston, and St. Mark's Church in Philadelphia.

Death and legacy

After suffering a fall on the ice, De Koven died on Saint Joseph's Day (March 19) in 1879. He is buried on the grounds of Racine College, now the DeKoven Center, in Racine, Wisconsin.[6] [7] His feast day is March 22.[8]

Popular culture

DeKoven's image is used as a graphic by the rock band Monstrance, which is composed of clergy from the Episcopal Diocese of Milwaukee.

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. William Pope, The Life of Reverend James De Koven, pp. 9-13
  2. The Life of Reverend James De Koven by William Cox Pope, pp. 44-63
  3. The Catholic Movement in the American Episcopal Church by George DeMille pp 92-94
  4. News: 1874-08-18 . THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH.; THE COMING GENERAL CONVENTION. PRESENT STATE OF THE CHURCH PARTY SPIRIT IN THE VARIOUS DIOCESES HIGH CHURCH AND LOW CHURCH RITUALISM INCREASE OF THE EPISCOPATE. THE SEVERAL COMMISSIONS. . 2024-06-17 . The New York Times . en-US . 0362-4331.
  5. Robert Prichard, A History of the Episcopal Church, p. 184
  6. http://elvis.rowan.edu/~kilroy/JEK/03/22.html James Kiefer's Christian Biographies
  7. William C. Pope, Life of the Reverend James de Koven, D. D., Sometime Warden of Racine College (New York: James Pott & Company, 1899). Chapter 8, available at http://anglicanhistory.org/bios/dekoven/dekoven8.html
  8. Lesser Feasts and Fasts p. 194