Layman Edward Stephens published a book in 1696 that spurred a movement of suggested revisions to the
Church of England's
legally mandated liturgy, the
1662 Book of Common Prayer. The movement's proposals generally sought to "shorten and unify the service". Inspired by Stephens,
William Whiston forwarded his own more unorthodox revisions in 1713, part of a trend that saw such proposals increasingly alter the Anglican prayer book in accordance with
Arian and
Unitarians theologies. However, these early revisions ultimately had little influence on later
Nonconformist liturgies. However, a set of Unitarian prayer book revisions by
Samuel Clarke which were edited and published after his death by
Theophilus Lindsey would heavily influence over a third of all
English Dissenters liturgies for 80 years. Clarke, the Church of England rector of
St James's Church, Piccadilly, privately created an altered version of the 1662 prayer book in 1724. He was a
Semi-Arian and, like early Unitarians in
Transylvania and what was then the
Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, a
subordinationist who held that
God the Father was supreme and, unlike
God the Son, alone worthy of worship. Clarke had previously published a study of 1,250
Bible verses,
The Scriptural Doctrine of the Trinity, in 1712. This book contained Clarke's theology and prescribed a new rule for prayer based on the notion
Jesus Christ derives his powers as
savior from the Father. In Clarke's view, the theology of the
Trinity had developed as a result of poor
metaphysics and the inclusion of the
Athanasian Creed in the 1662 prayer book perpetuated this inaccurate theology. He had seen and liked Whiston's
Liturgy of the Church of England reduced before its 1713 publication. However, Clarke deviated from Whiston's embrace of the
Apostolic Constitutions and favoured changes that did not substantially alter the prayer book's patterns while still expressing an Arian theology. In his 1724
manuscript of alterations to the 1662 prayer book, Clarke rewrote prayers to redirect them exclusively towards God the Father. Clarke was a friend of
Caroline of Ansbach, who later became queen consort of King
George II. After Caroline became queen in 1727, Clarke intended to request she push his nomination as a
bishop, a position that would allow him to formally revise the prayer book. Had he not declined to sign the
Thirty-nine Articles and encountered protests from
William Wake, the incumbent
Archbishop of Canterbury, over this
heterodoxy, historian A. Elliot Peaston believed Clarke might have become the Archbishop of Canterbury. Unable to secure official support for his views, Clarke's altered prayer book went unpublished. However, copies were made and the original manuscript alterations were given to the
British Library following his death. Clarke's alterations would eventually inspire several revised prayers books for
Presbyterian-influenced congregations and become the basis for what historian
G. J. Cuming deemed the most influential unofficial revision to the 1662 prayer book. Theophilus Lindsey, then a Presbyterian-minded Church of England vicar at the
Church of St Anne, Catterick, acquired a copy of Clarke's altered prayer book made by his brother-in-law and fellow clergyman
John Disney. Therein, Lindsey found Clarke's many revisions, including references to the Trinity "slashed out with violent strokes". Lindsey was so impressed with Clarke's work that he intended to introduce the changes to his congregation at Catterick, but ultimately decided against such action as he believed they would in violation of his
vows to the Church of England. However, following his resignation from the church and with influence by
John Jones's 1749
Free and Candid Disquisitions, Lindsey added further Unitarian alterations to Clarke's work and published them in 1774 as
The Book of Common Prayer reformed according to the plan of the late Dr Samuel Clarke. An enlarged edition was published in 1775. While Lindsey used Clarke's name, liturgist
Ronald Jasper later argued that little was borrowed from the 1724 alterations in producing the 1774 prayer book and that Lindsey's liturgy was more radical, with influence by
William Whiston. Lindsey's prayer book was utilized by the Dissenter congregation he founded at
Essex Street Chapel—the first formally Unitarian church in England—from its first service on 17 April 1774 onward. Lindsey was part of a network of like-minded churchmen, including
Joseph Priestley, that had influenced Lindsey's aversion to the unmodified 1662 prayer book before his resignation from the Church of England. Priestley would write in support of Unitarian liturgical worship in his 1783
Forms of Prayer. While Lindsey seems to have approved of Priestley's efforts to produce a paraphrased Bible, Lindsey retained the
King James Version and 1662 prayer book's
psalter for his revised prayer book on the premise that he was preserving the 1662 prayer book's scriptural foundations while replacing its theology. Lindsey's prayer book, which was repeatedly revised, proved popular with Presbyterians and helped cement the address of all prayers to God the Father as "one of the most tenacious characteristics of Unitarian worship". English Unitarian attempts to revise the Anglican prayer book continued into the 19th century. Lindsey's editions in particular remained a dominant influence in English Unitarian service books. However, some Unitarian liturgies including
John Prior Estlin's 1814
General Prayer-Book were derived from the 1662 prayer book independent of Lindsey's work. Despite their departure from Trinitarian orthodoxy, English Unitarian revisions often featured only conservative changes in hopes of limiting division between Unitarians and the Church of England. In 1861,
Thomas Sadler and
James Martineau published
Common Prayer for Christian Worship, initiating a departure from utilizing the Anglican prayer book as the basis of English Unitarian worship. However, some Anglican influences survived within Sadler and Martineau's text and five of the 40 English Unitarian liturgical books published from 1861 until the middle of the next century were derived from the Anglican prayer book.
Freeman and the King's Chapel liturgy In 1784, Essex Street Chapel congregant
William Hazlitt provided a copy of Lindsey's prayer book to his friend
James Freeman of
King's Chapel in
Boston, spurring a Unitarian revision of the prayer book that remains in use there today. Founded in 1686, King's Chapel was the oldest Anglican church in Boston. As the
American Revolutionary War escalated, King's Chapel's
Loyalist Anglican minister and much of its congregation fled with the
British Army when it
evacuated Boston in 1776. The Anglicans who remained permitted members of the
Old South Church congregation to use King's Chapel, with the two groups celebrating separately at alternating times in the day. Under this scheme, Freeman—a
Harvard graduate and
Congregationalist—was invited to serve as a
lay reader at King's Chapel in 1782. The congregation's proprietors chose Freeman as pastor on 21 April 1783. Freeman was initially content with using the 1662 prayer book as modified at
Trinity Church. In the aftermath of the
American Revolution, there was broad support for both a new American Anglican church and a local revision to the 1662 prayer book. Simultaneously, there was a rise of Unitarian sentiment across
New England congregations, including at King's Chapel. Already, King's Chapel had ceased praying the 1662 prayer book's prescribed prayer for the king and
royal family, instead substituting prayers for the
president and
Congress. Additionally, Freeman's position enabled him to say the Athanasian Creed at his discretion. Hazlitt, who had arrived in Boston from England in search of a preaching position, informed Freeman of Lindsey's prayer book and convinced Freeman and "several respectable ministers" to abandon the ubiquitous Trinitarian
doxology. At age 24, Freeman pressed King's Chapel to adopt a revised prayer book. On 20 February 1785, the proprietors voted to create a committee composed of seven men to report on Freeman's alterations. Drawing upon Clarke and Lindsey's work, Freeman worked with Hazlitt on a prayer book which was then put to a vote by the proprietor's of King's Chapel. Freeman wrote to his father before the vote, saying that he was optimistic that he had the necessary support but would resign from his position as pastor should the prayer book vote fail. On 19 June, Freeman's prayer book was adopted by a 20–7 majority. "Thus,"
Francis William Pitt Greenwood said in his sermon at Freeman's funeral, "the first Episcopal church in New England became the first Unitarian church in the
New World." edited three editions of the King's Chapel liturgy between 1828 and 1841 (title page from 1841 printing of fifth edition pictured). The 1785 prayer book's preface held that "no Christian, it is supposed, can take offence at, or find his conscience wounded" by the King's Chapel liturgy, and that "the Trinitarian, the Unitarian, the
Calvinist, and the
Arminian will read nothing in it which can give him any reasonable umbrage." Despite this, there was dissent and controversy over the liturgy's publication. With Freeman still not
ordained, he applied for ordination in the new Anglican
Episcopal Church in 1786. This application was rejected by Bishops
Samuel Seabury and
Samuel Provoost after Freeman refused to assent to the Episcopalians' own prayer book and the Trinitarian theology within it. The congregation decided to ordain Freeman themselves, devising and performing their own "solemn and appropriate form" in November 1787, with the senior
churchwarden performing the
laying on of hands on Freeman. This event ended King's Chapel's association with the Episcopal Church.
Samuel J. May wrote that Freeman was isolated during his early ministry through his exclusion from the Episcopal Church and poor integration with nearby Congregationalist ministers who were "embarrassed" by Freeman's use of a prayer book and liturgies. Freeman retired from ministry in 1826. Under the guidance of assistant minister Samuel Cary, a second edition of the liturgy was published in 1811 which included services from other congregations and reintroduced prayers removed in the 1785 edition. Greenwood oversaw three revisions between 1828 and 1841, which sought to improve the prayer book's
private devotional functionality and introduced over 100 hymns to the psalter. Theses additions were subsequently removed in the 1918 sixth edition by senior minister Howard N. Brown. This version would remain largely unchanged through 1980, though minister Joseph Barth introduced services from 1955 to 1965 which were likely influenced by his
Catholic upbringing. The congregation also borrowed liturgical concepts from the Catholic Church's
Second Vatican Council reforms. In 1980, the
vestry voted to create a committee of nine lay members to revise a new prayer book. This revision process took five years, culminating in the current ninth edition in 1986. The congregation is now part of the
Unitarian Universalist Association. King's Chapel is described as "Unitarian in theology, Anglican in worship, and congregational in governance," and its prayer book stands in contrast with the preference for
humanist- and non-Christian-inspired forms of radical free worship among modern Unitarians. ==Contents==