St. John's Episcopal Church (Elizabeth, New Jersey)

St. John's Episcopal Church (official name, St. John's Church) is a historic Episcopal church located at 61 Broad Street in the historic heart of Elizabeth, New Jersey. Now part of the Episcopal Diocese of New Jersey headquartered in Trenton, it was founded in 1706 by missionaries of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel, London, England. The current building, consecrated in 1860, is in the neo-Gothic style, with a 126-foot Gothic style tower (completed in 1864).

St. John's Episcopal Church
Part ofMid-Town Historic District (ID95001143)
NJRHP No.2665[1]
Significant dates
Designated CPOctober 5, 1995
Designated NJRHPSeptember 29, 1994

History

For almost four decades in the 18th century, Rev. Thomas Bradbury Chandler led this congregation and helped found what became the Episcopal Church in the United States. Massachusetts-born and a 1745 graduate of Yale College, Chandler became the lay reader and catechist for this parish in 1747, then sailed to England to complete his studies and was ordained by the Bishop of London in 1751, who formally installed him as this parish's rector despite remaining overseas. For much of his career, Chandler worked to establish the Church of England in the mid-Atlantic colonies, including publishing several works advocating a bishop based in North America, despite the opposition of the Presbyterian and Congregational churches. Following his Tory sympathies and fearing threats from the Sons of Liberty, Chandler fled to England in 1775, where he remained during the American Revolutionary War, only to accept the congregation's invitation and return to Elizabethtown and resume his duties during the last five years of his life. He cited health reasons for refusing to become the first Church of England bishop in North America, and died about a year after the 1789 founding of the Episcopal Church as an entity distinct from the Church of England.[2] The Episcopal Church recognizes Rev. Chandler liturgically on August 17 (together with his mentor Rev. Samuel Johnson and fellow colonial-era Rev. Timothy Cutler) and his son-n-law Bishop John Henry Hobart on September 17 and grandson Bishop William Hobart Hare on May 17.

Although this parish would gain a reputation for ecumenical tolerance, Rev. Chandler forbad famed revival preacher George Whitefield from preaching in his pulpit during the winter of 1763-64,[3] and also refused to marry the parents of Elizabeth Ann Seton, who would become the first American-born Roman Catholic saint. Nonetheless, for nearly 150 years both Anglicans/Episcopalians and Roman Catholics worshiped together at St. John's until the first Roman Catholic Church was established in Elizabeth in 1855, St. Mary of the Assumption Roman Catholic Church. However, the monthly Eucharist/Mass was always presided over by an Anglican/Episcopal vicar or rector or priest.

1860 church building

The current church building, consecrated in 1860, was designed after St. Mary's University Anglican Church (interior) in Oxford, England, and Merton College, Oxford (exterior). It seats approximately 700 and is the largest Episcopal worship site in New Jersey. It once had five of the largest Tiffany stained glass windows in the U.S. Underneath is the unmarked burial site of the youngest signer of the U.S. Constitution, U.S. Senator Jonathan Dayton.

Current status

St. John's has always been an ecumenical church and remains so today, but its governing body, the Vestry, is and was always composed of confirmed Episcopalians/Anglicans. Its principal Sunday worship service now is the Holy Eucharist/Mass. The church founded the Habitat for Humanity affiliate for eastern Union County in 1993. It is known as a lively sponsor of community social services and feeds as many as 150 persons a free meal each Sunday during the morning and afternoon following the 10:00 English Eucharist, the 11:30 Spanish Eucharist, and the 2:30 pm Vespers. Its three worship services are in English at 10:00 am, Holy Eucharist with Cantor and Organ followed by breakfast; 11:30 pm Spanish Eucharist with contemporary Spanish music, followed by a community fiesta; 1:30 pm Alpha Bible study; and 2:30 pm Karaoke Vespers, followed by a community lunch. Sunday School is at 10:00 am for children; Cub Scouts meet at 1:30 pm Sundays, with a focus on soccer as one key activity. Adult Christian Education and the new member classes are at 11:15 and 12:45 pm Sundays. Visitors are always welcome! The Rector Emeritus is the Rev. Joseph R. Parrish Jr., who served there from July 1989 until his retirement in July 2013; the Rev. Servio Moscoso is currently serving as Priest at both morning services. For 14 years, from September 2000 until 2014, the church telecast its church services each Sunday at 9:00 am on Elizabeth Cablevision Channel 18. The church web site is http://sjnj.org.

Churchyard and notable interments

St. John's Episcopal Churchyard is a cemetery on the grounds of St. John's Episcopal Church.[4] Notable interments in the church itself or the surrounding churchyard include:

gollark: Also, all hail our copper and Xenowyrm co-overlords.
gollark: So, looks like the copper is incuhatchable, but I'm hatchling locked for another hour until F Octothorpe grows.
gollark: We must create a keyboard cat simulation.
gollark: They do hatch, but veeeeery slowly, and then they get sick.
gollark: Ah, zyus, bane of people who want eggs which hatch.

References

  1. "New Jersey and National Registers of Historic Places - Union County" (PDF). New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection - Historic Preservation Office. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-10-16. Retrieved 2014-10-06.
  2. https://neatnik2009.wordpress.com/2016/01/22/feast-of-thomas-bradbury-chandler-john-henry-hobart-and-william-hobart-hare-may-17/
  3. Appleton's Cyclopedia Vol. 1, p. 574
  4. "Forced Open The Vault. A Lively War Promised Regarding an Old Burying Ground". New York Times. June 8, 1891.
  5. Jonathan Dayton, Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Accessed August 20, 2007.
  6. John De Hart, Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Accessed August 20, 2007.
  7. Isaac Williamson Scudder, Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Accessed August 20, 2007.

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