Colonial era , built during the 17th century near
Smithfield, Virginia – the oldest Anglican church-building to have survived largely intact in North America The Episcopal Church has its origins in the
Church of England in the
American colonies, and it stresses continuity with the early universal
Western Church and claims to maintain
apostolic succession; while the Scandinavian Lutheran and
Moravian churches accept this claim, the Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches do not recognize this claim. The first
parish was founded in
Jamestown, Virginia, in 1607, under the charter of the
Virginia Company of London. The tower of
Jamestown Church ( 1639–1643) is one of the oldest surviving Anglican church structures in the United States. The Jamestown church building itself is a modern reconstruction. Although no American Anglican bishops existed in the colonial era, the Church of England had an official status in several colonies, which meant that local governments paid tax money to local parishes, and the parishes handled some civic functions. The Church of England was designated the
established church in
Virginia in 1609, in
New York in 1693, in
Maryland in 1702, in
South Carolina in 1706, in
North Carolina in 1730, and in
Georgia in 1758. From 1635 the
vestries and the clergy came loosely under the diocesan authority of the
Bishop of London. After 1702, the
Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts (SPG) began missionary activity throughout the colonies. On the eve of
American Revolution about 400 independent congregations were reported throughout the colonies. in
Colonial Williamsburg, established in 1674. The current building was completed in 1715. Under the leadership of
Lutheran bishop
Jesper Swedberg, parishes in colonial America that belonged to the Evangelical Lutheran
Church of Sweden established
ecumenical dialogue that resulted in
altar and pulpit fellowship with the Episcopal Church in the 1700s, which led to a merger of many of the Swedish Lutheran churches there into the Episcopal Church by 1846. A number of Swedes later would establish the
Augustana Evangelical Lutheran Church (a forerunner for the present-day
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and
North American Lutheran Church).
Revolutionary era More than any other denomination, the
American Revolutionary War internally divided both clergy and laity of the Church of England in America, and opinions covered a wide spectrum of political views:
patriots, conciliators, and
loyalists. While many Patriots were suspicious of Loyalism in the church, about three-quarters of the signers of the
Declaration of Independence were nominally Anglican laymen, including
Thomas Jefferson,
William Paca, and
George Wythe. It was often assumed that persons considered "
High Church" were Loyalists, whereas persons considered "
Low Church" were Patriots: assumptions with possibly dangerous implications for the time. in
Boston. Inspired by the work of
Christopher Wren, it was completed in 1723. Of the approximately three hundred clergy in the Church of England in America between 1776 and 1783, over 80 percent in New England, New York, and New Jersey were loyalists. This is in contrast to the less than 23 percent loyalist clergy in the four southern colonies. Many Church of England clergy remained loyalists as they took their two ordination oaths very seriously. Anglican clergy were obliged to swear allegiance to the king as well as to pray for the king, the royal family, and the
British Parliament. In general, loyalist clergy stayed by their oaths and prayed for the king or else suspended services. By the end of 1776, some Anglican churches were closing. Anglican priests held services in private homes or lay readers who were not bound by the oaths held morning and evening prayer. During 1775 and 1776, the Continental Congress issued decrees ordering churches to fast and pray on behalf of the Patriots. Starting July 4, 1776, Congress and several states passed laws making prayers for the king and British Parliament acts of treason. The patriot clergy in the South were quick to find reasons to transfer their oaths to the American cause and prayed for the success of the Revolution. One precedent was the transfer of oaths during the
Glorious Revolution in England. Most of the patriot clergy in the South were able to keep their churches open and services continued.
Early Republic era In the wake of the Revolution, American Episcopalians faced the task of preserving a hierarchical church structure in a society infused with
republican values. in
Swedesboro, New Jersey. Originally serving a
Church of Sweden congregation, it became an Episcopal church in 1786, when this building was completed. When the clergy of
Connecticut elected
Samuel Seabury as their bishop in 1783, he sought
consecration in England. The
Oath of Supremacy prevented Seabury's consecration in England, so he went to Scotland; the
non-juring bishops of the
Scottish Episcopal Church consecrated him in
Aberdeen on November 14, 1784, making him, in the words of scholar Arthur Carl Piepkorn, "the first Anglican bishop appointed to minister outside the British Isles". On August 3, 1785, the first ordinations on American soil took place at Christ Church in
Middletown, Connecticut. That same year, 1785, deputations of clergy and laity met in the first General Convention. They drafted a constitution, proposed a first draft of an American Book of Common Prayer, and began negotiating with English Bishops for the consecration of three bishops. The convention met again in 1786 to make several changes that made their liturgy acceptable to the English bishops and to recommend three clergy (who had been elected by state meetings in Virginia, Pennsylvania, and New York) for consecration as bishops. General Convention met again in 1789, beginning a regular process of meeting every three years. At the 1789 convention they adopted a constitution and canons, and reorganized as a House of Deputies and a House of Bishops. The structure of the Episcopal Church was then complete. Later, through the efforts of Bishop
Philander Chase (1775–1852) of Ohio, Americans successfully sought material assistance from England for the purpose of training Episcopal clergy. The development of the Protestant Episcopal Church provides an example of how Americans in the early republic maintained important cultural ties with England. In 1787, two priests –
William White of
Pennsylvania and
Samuel Provoost of
New York – were consecrated as bishops by the
archbishop of Canterbury, the
archbishop of York, and the
bishop of Bath and Wells, the legal obstacles having been removed by the passage through Parliament of the Consecration of Bishops Abroad Act 1786. Thus there are two branches of
apostolic succession for the American bishops: through the non-juring bishops of Scotland who consecrated Samuel Seabury and through the English bishops who consecrated William White, Samuel Provoost, and
James Madison (not the future President). All bishops in the American church are ordained by at least three bishops. The succession of each bishop can be historically traced back to Seabury, White, Provoost, and Madison. (
See Succession of Bishops of the Episcopal Church.) From July 28 to August 8, 1789, representative clergy from
nine dioceses met in Philadelphia to ratify the church's initial constitution; they also formally adopted the name Protestant Episcopal Church. The fourth bishop of the Episcopal Church was James Madison, the first bishop of Virginia. Madison was consecrated in 1790 by the Archbishop of Canterbury and two other Church of England bishops. This third American bishop consecrated within the English line of succession occurred because of continuing unease within the Church of England over Seabury's
non-juring Scottish orders. The Episcopal Church thus became the first Anglican province outside the
British Isles. On 17 September 1792, at the triennial General Convention (
synod) of the Episcopal Church at
Trinity Church on
Wall Street, in
New York City,
Thomas John Claggett who had been elected by the clergy and laity of Maryland, was consecrated by all four of the existing bishops. He was the first bishop of the Episcopal Church ordained and consecrated in America and the
fifth bishop consecrated for the Episcopal Church in the United States.
Nineteenth century , built in 1816 in
Washington, D.C., is known as the "Church of the Presidents" for the many presidents who have worshiped there. , c. 1877 In 1856, the first society for African Americans in the Episcopal Church was founded by
James Theodore Holly. Named
The Protestant Episcopal Society for Promoting The Extension of The Church Among Colored People, the society argued that blacks should be allowed to participate in seminaries and diocesan conventions. The group lost its focus when Holly emigrated to Haiti, but other groups followed after the Civil War. The current
Union of Black Episcopalians traces its history to the society. Holly went on to found the
Anglican Church in Haiti, where he became the first African-American bishop on November 8, 1874. As Bishop of Haiti, Holly was the first African American to attend the
Lambeth Conference. However, he was consecrated by the American Church Missionary Society, an Evangelical Episcopal branch of the Church. Episcopal missions chartered by African Americans in this era were chartered as a
Colored Episcopal Mission. All other missions (white) were chartered as an Organized Episcopal Mission. Many historically Black parishes are still in existence to date. in
Montgomery, Alabama, established in 1834. The church building was completed in 1855. The Secession Convention of Southern Churches was held here in 1861. When the
American Civil War began in 1861, Episcopalians in the South formed the
Protestant Episcopal Church in the Confederate States of America. However, in the North, the separation was never officially recognized. In particular, the Episcopalian communities in Pennsylvania supported free black communities and the Underground Railroad. By May 16, 1866, the southern dioceses had rejoined the national church. By the middle of the 19th century,
evangelical Episcopalians disturbed by
High Church Tractarianism, while continuing to work in interdenominational agencies, formed their own voluntary societies, and eventually, in 1874, a faction objecting to the revival of ritual practices established the
Reformed Episcopal Church.
Samuel David Ferguson was the first black bishop consecrated by the Episcopal Church, the first to practice in the U.S. and the first black person to sit in the
House of Bishops. Bishop Ferguson was consecrated on June 24, 1885, with the then-Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church acting as a consecrator. In the following year,
Henry C. Potter, Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of New York, addressed his clergymen upon the question of Labor.
Church Association for the Advancement of the Interests of Labor was formed in 1887. During the
Gilded Age, highly prominent laity such as bankers
J. P. Morgan, industrialist
Henry Ford, and art collector
Isabella Stewart Gardner played a central role in shaping a distinctive upper class Episcopalian ethos, especially with regard to preserving the arts and history. These philanthropists propelled the Episcopal Church into a quasi-national position of importance while at the same time giving the church a central role in the cultural transformation of the country. Another mark of influence is the fact that more than a quarter of all
presidents of the United States have been Episcopalians (see
religious affiliations of presidents of the United States). It was during this period that the
Book of Common Prayer was revised, first in 1892 and later in 1928.
Era of change (1958–1970s) In 1955, the church's general convention was moved from Houston to Honolulu, due to continuing racial segregation in the former city. At the 1958 general convention, a coalition of
liberal church members succeeded in passing a resolution recognizing "the natural dignity and value of every man, of whatever color or race, as created in the image of God". It called on Episcopalians "to work together, in charity and forbearance, towards the establishment ... of full opportunities in fields such as education, housing, employment and public accommodations". A 2,500-word pastoral letter was sent by the House of Bishops to be read at all 7,290 Episcopal churches, urging justice in racial matters, with reference to the
Supreme Court decision on integration in public schools. In response, the Episcopal Society for Cultural and Racial Unity (ESCRU) was founded in December 1959 in order to eliminate racial, ethnic, and class barriers within the Episcopal Church. Opposition from southern church leaders prevented the Episcopal Church from taking a strong stand on civil rights prior to 1963. One prominent opponent of the movement was
Charles C.J. Carpenter, the bishop of Alabama. By 1963, many church leaders felt more comfortable speaking out in support of racial equality. That year, Presiding Bishop
Arthur Lichtenberger wrote a pastoral letter urging Christians to work "across lines of racial separation, in a common struggle for justice", and the House of Bishops endorsed civil rights legislation. Tensions around the civil rights movement persisted, however. At the 1964 General Convention, when the House of Deputies rejected a resolution sanctioning civil disobedience under special circumstances,
Thurgood Marshall, a deputy to the convention, led many African-American deputies in a "walk out" protest of the convention. In 1967, Lichtenberger's successor,
John Hines, led the Episcopal Church to implement the General Convention Special Program (GCSP). The program was designed to redirect nine million dollars over a three-year period (a quarter of the church's operating budget at the time) to fund special grants for community organizations and grassroots efforts facilitating black empowerment in America's urban ghettos. The effectiveness of the GCSP was limited due to the reluctance of conservative bishops in southern dioceses, who objected to the awarding of grants to groups perceived as radical. The GCSP drew opposition from the recently formed Foundation for Christian Theology, a conservative organization opposed to "involv[ing] the Church in the social, political, and economic activities of our times". The Special General Convention also witnessed protests of the Vietnam War. During this time period, African-American clergy organized the
Union of Black Episcopalians to achieve full inclusion of African Americans at all levels of the Episcopal Church. Women were first admitted as delegates to the church's general convention in 1970. In 1975, Vaughan Booker, who confessed to the murder of his wife and was sentenced to life in prison, was ordained to the diaconate in
Graterford State Prison's chapel in Pennsylvania after having repented of his sins, becoming a symbol of redemption and atonement.
Recent history In recent decades, the Episcopal Church, like other
mainline churches, has experienced a decline in membership as well as internal controversy over
women's ordination and the
place of homosexuals in the church. The 1976 General Convention also passed a resolution calling for an end to
apartheid in
South Africa and in 1985 called for "dioceses, institutions, and agencies" to create
equal opportunity employment and
affirmative action policies to address any potential "racial inequities" in clergy placement. Because of these and other controversial issues including abortion, individual members and clergy can and do frequently disagree with the stated position of the church's leadership. In January 2016, the Anglican Primates Meeting at Canterbury, England, decided that in response to the "distance" caused by what it called "unilateral action on matters of doctrine without catholic unity", "for a period of three years, The Episcopal Church [would neither] represent [the Communion] on ecumenical and interfaith bodies… [nor] take part in decision making on any issues pertaining to doctrine or
polity."
Revised prayer book In 1976, the General Convention adopted a new prayer book, which was a substantial revision and modernization of the previous 1928 edition. It incorporated many principles of the
ecumenical movement and
liturgical movement, which had been discussed at
Vatican II as well. This version was adopted as the official prayer book in 1979 after an initial three-year trial use. As such, the liturgies used by the Catholic, Lutheran, Episcopal, Presbyterian/ Reformed and Methodist traditions are "nearly identical". Several conservative parishes, however, continued to use the 1928 version. In Advent of 2007, the use of the ecumenical
Revised Common Lectionary in the Episcopal Church became the standard.
Ordination of women On July 29, 1974, a group of women known as the
Philadelphia Eleven were irregularly ordained as priests in the Episcopal Church by bishops Daniel Corrigan, Robert L. DeWitt, and Edward R. Welles, assisted by
Antonio Ramos. On September 7, 1975, four more women (the "
Washington Four") were irregularly ordained by retired bishop
George W. Barrett. In the wake of the controversy over the ordination of the Philadelphia Eleven, the General Convention permitted the ordination of women in 1976 and recognized the ordinations of the 15 forerunners. The first woman canonically ordained to the Episcopal priesthood was
Jacqueline Means on January 1, 1977, followed shortly thereafter by
Tanya Vonnegut Beck. Both were ordained at All Saints Church in Indianapolis, Indiana. The first woman to become a bishop,
Barbara Harris, was consecrated on February 11, 1989. At the same time, there was still tolerance for those dioceses which opposed women's ordination. In 1994, the General Convention affirmed that there was value in the theological position that women should not be ordained. In 1997, however, the General Convention then determined that "the canons regarding the ordination, licensing, and deployment of women are mandatory" and required noncompliant dioceses to issue status reports on their progress towards full compliance. In 2006, the General Convention elected
Katharine Jefferts Schori as
Presiding Bishop. She was the first woman to become a
primate in the Anglican Communion. Schori's election was controversial in the wider Anglican Communion because not all of the communion recognized the ordination of women. At the time of the formation of the
Anglican Church in North America (ACNA), three U.S. dioceses did not ordain women as priests or bishops:
San Joaquin,
Quincy, and
Fort Worth. Following the departures of their conservative majorities, all three dioceses now ordain women. With the October 16, 2010, ordination of Margaret Lee, in the Peoria-based Diocese of Quincy, Illinois, women have been ordained as priests in all dioceses of the Episcopal Church in the United States.
LGBT issues The Episcopal Church affirmed at the 1976
General Convention that
homosexuals are "children of God" who deserve acceptance and
pastoral care from the church and
equal protection under the law. The first openly
gay person ordained as a priest was
Ellen Barrett in 1977. Despite such an affirmation of
gay rights, the General Convention affirmed in 1991 that "physical sexual expression" is only appropriate within the
monogamous lifelong "union of husband and wife". The church elected its first openly gay bishop,
Gene Robinson, in June 2003. News of Robinson's election caused a crisis in both the American church and the wider
Anglican Communion. In October 2003, Anglican primates (the heads of the Anglican Communion's 38 member churches) convened an emergency meeting. The meeting's final communiqué included the warning that if Robinson's consecration proceeded, it would "tear the fabric of the communion at its deepest level". The news of his ordination caused such an outrage that during the ceremony Robinson wore a
bullet-proof vest beneath his
vestments, and he also received numerous death threats following his installation as bishop of the
Episcopal Diocese of New Hampshire. In 2009, the General Convention charged the Standing Commission on Liturgy and Music to develop theological and liturgical resources for same-sex blessings and report back to the General Convention in 2012. It also gave bishops an option to provide "generous pastoral support", especially where civil authorities have legalized same-gender marriage, civil unions, or domestic partnerships. On July 14, 2009, the Episcopal Church's House of Bishops voted that "any ordained ministry" is open to homosexual men and women.
The New York Times said the move was "likely to send shockwaves through the Anglican Communion". This vote ended a moratorium on ordaining gay bishops passed in 2006 and passed in spite of Archbishop
Rowan Williams's personal call at the start of the convention that, "I hope and pray that there won't be decisions in the coming days that will push us further apart." On July 10, 2012, the Episcopal Church approved an official liturgy for the blessing of same-sex relationships. This liturgy was not a marriage rite, but the blessing included an exchange of vows and the couple's agreement to enter into a lifelong committed relationship. On June 29, 2015, at the 78th General Convention of the Episcopal Church, a resolution removing the definition of marriage as being between one man and one woman was passed by the House of Bishops with 129 in favor, 26 against, and 5 abstaining. The then archbishop of Canterbury,
Justin Welby, expressed "deep concern" over the ruling. In 2016, Anglican leaders temporarily suspended the Episcopal Church from key positions in their global fellowship in response to the church changing its canons on marriage.
Transgender people have also joined the priesthood in the Episcopal Church. The Rev.
Cameron Partridge, who transitioned in 2001 and was ordained in 2005, was the first openly transgender priest to preach at the Washington National Cathedral. In 2022, the 80th General Convention of the Episcopal Church, affirmed its position in favor of access to gender affirming care, including all forms of medical transition for people of any age, as a part of the Baptismal call to "respect the dignity of every human being."
Separations from the church left the Episcopal Church in 2012, eventually becoming a diocese of the
Anglican Church in North America. Following the ordination of Bp. Gene Robinson in 2003, some members of a number of congregations left the Episcopal Church. For example, in Cleveland, Ohio, four parishes "with about 1,300 active members, decided to leave the U.S. church and the local diocese because of 'divergent understandings of the authority of scripture and traditional Christian teaching. Four dioceses also voted to leave the church; Pittsburgh, Quincy, Fort Worth, and San Joaquin. The stated reasons included those expressed by the Pittsburgh diocese, which complained that the church had been "hijacked" by liberal bishops. A few years later, in 2012, the
Diocese of South Carolina voted to withdraw. The Episcopal Church did not acknowledge any of the purported diocesan withdrawals, stating that under
canon law an Episcopal diocese cannot withdraw itself from the larger Episcopal Church. In a "pastoral letter" to the South Carolina diocese, Presiding Bishop Schori wrote that "While some leaders have expressed a desire to leave the Episcopal Church, the Diocese has not left. It cannot, by its own action. The alteration, dissolution, or departure of a diocese of the Episcopal Church requires the consent of General Convention, which has not been consulted." She further wrote that the South Carolina diocese "continues to be a constituent part of The Episcopal Church, even if a number of its leaders have departed. If it becomes fully evident that those former leaders have, indeed, fully severed their ties with the Episcopal Church, new leaders will be elected and installed by the action of a Diocesan Convention recognized by the wider Episcopal Church, in accordance with our Constitution and Canons." Many departing members joined the
Continuing Anglican movement or advocated
Anglican realignment, claiming alignment with overseas Anglican provinces including the
Anglican Province of the Southern Cone of America and the
Church of Nigeria. Some former members formed the
Anglican Church in North America which, as of 2017, claimed over 1,000 congregations and 134,000 members. Episcopal Church leaders, particularly former presiding bishop
Katharine Jefferts Schori, responded by taking a firm stance against the separatists. Litigation between the church and departing dioceses and parishes cost all parties tens of millions of dollars; one estimate has the Episcopal Church spending over $42 million and separatists roughly $18 million, for a total of over $60 million in court costs. Litigation has largely centered on church properties. Episcopal leadership asserts that, as a hierarchical church, they retain ownership of parish property when parishioners leave. Departing groups, in contrast, assert that they should be able to retain ownership of individual church facilities and diocesan property.
Church property disputes In a letter to the House of Bishops during summer 2009, Presiding Bishop
Katharine Jefferts Schori instructed local dioceses not to sell parish property to departing groups. She stated: "We do not make settlements that encourage religious bodies who seek to replace the Episcopal Church". Before Schori took this stand, prior bishops had treated parish property disputes as internal diocesan matters that are "not subject to the review or oversight of the presiding bishop". One example was when then-Presiding Bishop
Frank Griswold told the Diocese of Western Louisiana on May 11, 2006, that the national church involved itself in parish property disputes only upon invitation of the local bishop and diocesan standing committees. Schori's letter stated that her firm stance was the consensus of the Council of Advice and expressed hope that "those who have departed can gain clarity about their own identity". The name "Episcopal Diocese of South Carolina" and related names and marks were initially claimed by the departing group. In 2019, a federal court ruled that they legally belonged to the Episcopal Church. The departing diocese was renamed the Anglican Diocese of South Carolina. ==Membership==