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Richard Meux Benson

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Richard Meux Benson

SSJE
The Rev. Richard Meux Benson
Born6 July 1824
London,England
Died14 January 1915
Cowley,Oxford,England
Venerated inAnglican Church of Canada,Episcopal Church (United States)
Feast15 January, 14 January

Richard Meux BensonSSJE(6 July 1824 – 14 January 1915)[1]was a priest in theChurch of Englandand founder of theSociety of St. John the Evangelist,the first religious order of monks in theAnglican Communionsince theReformation.He is commemorated in theCalendar of Saintsof theAnglican Church of Canadaon 15 January and on theEpiscopal Church calendaron January 14 withCharles Gore.[2]

Early life[edit]

Benson was born into a wealthyLondonfamily in 1824, the son of merchant Thomas Starling Benson and his second wife, Elizabeth Meux, daughter of Richard Meux.Henry Roxby Bensonwas his elder brother.[3][4]Benson was taught at home by a private tutor and enteredChrist Church, Oxford.[5]After his degree andordinationand a curacy atSurbiton,in 1850 he becamevicarofCowley, Oxford.He was consideredHigh Church.[citation needed]

In 1858, Benson conducted aretreatfor priests using material taken in part from theSpiritual ExercisesofIgnatius of Loyola.In 1859, having erected a new parish church dedicated to St.John the Evangelist,Benson planned a mission to India, but abandoned the plan at his bishop's request.

Society of St John the Evangelist[edit]

In 1865, two priests joined Benson in Cowley to begin community life under the name of the Mission Priests of St. John the Evangelist with Benson as thesuperior.At the time there were only convents ofAnglicanwomen inEngland.

The form of religious life Benson instituted was not purely contemplative—its members engaged in active external ministry—but they recited theDivine Officetogether daily in choir. Benson also emphasised contemplation. The brothers were to have an hour's meditation daily if possible. The community also took a summer retreat of four weeks, later reduced to a fortnight. Benson prescribed other retreat days and silence days. As a religious founder, he concentrated on essentials, among which he advised life-vows (taken with precautions as to maturity); regularconfession;choir office, prayer and meditation; and priestly ministry. Benson fully recognised hisbishop's authority over the community's priests, who wereclergyof thediocese,but not as extending to their private life together. From around 1868 until the opening of Keble College in 1870, Benson was the licensed master of Benson's Hall, aprivate hall of the University of Oxfordbased at the Mission House.[6]

From 1870 to 1883 the society spread to theUnited States,IndiaandSouth Africa.Benson himself made an American mission tour. In 1884 the society adopted a constitution and rule that Benson drafted.

During the society's formative phase, Benson continued his duties as a parish priest. In 1886, he resigned this ministry to devote all his attention to the society and its mission.

In 1890 Benson stepped aside for another to be elected superior. He spent one year in India and eight years at the American house in Boston. The season of Lent in 1895 he spent in Baltimore, giving lectures at several churches there.[7]These includedMount Calvary Church,which had been denounced less than a year before by BishopWilliam Paretof theEpiscopal Diocese of Marylandfor itshigh churchpractices.[8]

The last sixteen years of Benson's life were lived at home again. He celebrated theEucharistas long as he could stand at the altar. During his last years, he was wheeled in a chair to receive communion every morning. He died on 14 January 1915.

Benson's writings influencedC. S. Lewisvia Lewis' spiritual director Father Walter Adams, who was a member of the Society of St John the Evangelist.[9]

Works[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^Armentrout, Don S. & Robert Boak Slocum (eds.) (2000)An Episcopal Dictionary of the Church,New York: Church Publishing Incorporated, p. 44
  2. ^"Lectionary Calendar".The Episcopal Church.Retrieved19 July2022.
  3. ^London, England, Church of England Births and Baptisms, 1813–1917
  4. ^Burke, John Bernard (1865).A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerage and Baronetage of the British Empire. 27. Ed.Harrison. p. 759.
  5. ^Foster, Joseph(1888–1892)."Benson, Richard Meux".Alumni Oxonienses: the Members of the University of Oxford, 1715–1886.Oxford: Parker and Co – viaWikisource.
  6. ^OxoniensiaVolume 63, 1999, page 140.
  7. ^The Churchman,16 March 1895, page 384
  8. ^New York Times,31 May 1894, page 5.
  9. ^Dorsett, Lyle W. (2004).Seeking the secret place: the spiritual formation of C.S. Lewis.Grand Rapids, Mich.: Brazos Press. pp. 88–92.ISBN978-1-58743-122-7.

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