
Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Preface
- The project group
- Additions and corrections
- Summary list of particular occasions of worship, 1871–2016
- Reader’s guide and editorial conventions
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction: 1871–2016
- Special worship and the Book of Common Prayer
- Texts and Commentaries, 1871–2016
- Miscellaneous Endmatter
Texts and Commentaries, 1871–2016
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 May 2024
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Preface
- The project group
- Additions and corrections
- Summary list of particular occasions of worship, 1871–2016
- Reader’s guide and editorial conventions
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction: 1871–2016
- Special worship and the Book of Common Prayer
- Texts and Commentaries, 1871–2016
- Miscellaneous Endmatter
Summary
1871–1
Prayers during the illness of the prince of Wales
Sunday 10 December 1871 and daily to 27 December (England & Wales, Scotland)
The public announcement on 23 November 1871 that the prince of Wales was seriously ill, apparently with typhoid, aroused enormous popular interest – in the empire and in other nations, as well as the United Kingdom – not least because ten years earlier his father, the prince consort, had died in similar circumstances and at a similar time of year. Daily bulletins published on the prince’s condition prompted some clergy in various churches in England, Wales, Scotland and Ireland to pray for his recovery. By early December, there were criticisms of the lack of official orders for prayers in ‘the national church’. Under the heading ‘A precedent for Christian Churches’, The Times of 6 December pointedly reported that prayers had been read in Jewish synagogues on the previous Sabbath, 2 December.
When on Friday 8 December the prince appeared close to death, Gladstone as prime minister adopted a proposal from Earl Granville, the foreign secretary, that prayers should be said without delay throughout the Church of England. As there seemed insufficient time for the official procedure of council order and distribution of a form of prayer before services on the next Sunday, Gladstone asked Archibald Tait, the archbishop of Canterbury, to publish a prayer in the Saturday evening newspapers. Accordingly on Saturday morning, 9 December, Tait issued a public letter asking the clergy to remember the prince in their prayers. However, later that morning, Gladstone decided to follow the official procedure, evidently because he wished the prayers to be said for a longer period, to include Scotland and to have the sanction of the crown, and because he had been informed that even at such short notice the order and form of prayer could reach some English clergy for the church services next day. On the Saturday afternoon, a hurriedly assembled committee of the council approved the orders for the prayers to be said ‘on and after’ Sunday 10 December, now not just for the prince’s recovery but also for the queen, the princess of Wales and the royal family. Presumably under pressure of time, the clerks mixed the old and the new styles of the council order for Scotland, using both the word ‘ordered’ and the phrase ‘earnestly exhorted’.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- National PrayersVolume 3: Worship for National and Royal Occasions in the United Kingdom, 1871-2016, pp. 1 - 746Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2020