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Authority record
Jones, Everett Holland
Person · 1902-1995

Everett Holland Jones was born on June 9, 1902, in San Antonio, Texas. After studying journalism at the University of Texas, from where he received a BA in 1922, Jones pursued studies in theology at Virginia Theological Seminary (VTS). In 1926, he was ordained a deacon at the same church in which he had been baptized and confirmed, St. Mark’s Church in San Antonio. He would become the rector there in 1938 and serve until his ordination as Bishop of West Texas in 1943.

Deeply committed to the well-being of his native town of San Antonio, Jones established the first chapter of Alcoholics Anonymous in San Antonio in 1945. In 1967, he and others founded San Antonio’s Ecumenical Center for Religion and Health (now called the Ecumenical Center for Education, Counseling, and Health). Jones described the Center’s purpose: “It is to bring together the best resources of religion (in all its varied expressions) and of medical science (including psychology and psychiatry) for the healing and fullest development of persons. The goal is what the Bible calls wholeness of life. We seek to help the forces of religion and medicine to understand each other and to work together as a team.” Jones’ vision became a successful community resource that has since expanded and serves the community in a variety of ways through education, counseling, health, and pastoral services.

A writer from his college days, Jones wrote a weekly newspaper column that ran in many Texas newspapers from 1959 to 1984. The column, A Bishop Looks at Life, which he also called the “sermonettes,” were his “...effort to look on life around [him] and comment upon it from a Christian perspective.” Sixty of these sermonettes were published in 1967 by the Anglican Press in a book also entitled A Bishop Looks at Life. Jones authored two other books as well: Getting Life Into Perspective (1983) and Finding God (1943).

Jones retired from the church in 1969, although he remained active as a speaker and writer as well as continuing to work with Alcoholics Anonymous and the Ecumenical Center. He died on November 18, 1995 at the age of 93.

Corporate body · 1982

The Joint Nominating Committee for the Election of the Presiding Bishop, which first met in 1982, was chosen at that year’s General Convention, in accordance with Title I, Canon 2, Sections (b) and (c). The House of Deputies elected one clerical and one Lay Deputy from each Province and the House of Bishops elected one Bishop from each Province as members of the committee. The Joint Nominating Committee’s canonical mandate was the selection of no fewer than three members of the House of Bishops to be considered by General Convention for the position of Presiding Bishop.

This marked the first time when a Joint Nominating Committee was composed of elected members of both Houses. Previously, both bishops and deputies were appointed to the Nominating Committee by the presiding officers of their respective Houses.

Currently, the Committee elects members in person at the meeting of General Convention three years before the new presiding bishop is to be elected. The Committee is composed of 20 people. Five bishops were elected by the House of Bishops, and five clergy and five lay people were elected by the House of Deputies (Canon I.2.1.a). Two members between ages 16-21 were appointed by the president of the House of Deputies (Canon I.2.1.a). Three members were jointly appointed by the presiding bishop and House of Deputies president “to ensure the cultural and geographic diversity of the church” (Canon I.2.1.c).

Corporate body · 1937-1952

At the 1937 General Convention, the Joint Commission on Revision of the Hymnal (JCRH) was formed and authorized to undertake a revision of The Hymnal 1916 with the goal of presenting its proposed changes to the General Convention in 1940 for approval. It was renewed in 1943, 1946, and 1949 to continue work on a companion handbook to The Hymnal 1940 that would contain authoritative information about the words, music, and authors of the hymns. After the publication of the companion book, the Joint Commission was discharged by the 1952 General Convention.

Joint Commission on Renewal
Corporate body · 1967-1970

The Joint Commission on Renewal was formed as the result of a call for Church renewal from the House of Bishops during its 1966 meeting. The group of 18 members was appointed by Presiding Bishop Hines in January 1967 and initially called the Committee to Develop a Council. Its task was to prepare a report for the House of Bishops meeting in September of that year.

The group presented a document that was frank in describing the immense difficulty of navigating the deep tensions in the Church, but that argued for the absolute necessity of continuing the work of renewal. The committee felt that the process of renewal would have to be developed ecumenically and requested the creation of a successor committee, which was approved by the 1967 General Convention. As a result, the Joint Commission on Renewal was formed, answerable not only to the House of Bishops but to the entire General Convention.

The Commission’s main task was to report to the Special General Convention in 1969. At that session, the Commission’s resolution declaring the Church’s readiness to participate ecumenically in a process of renewal was passed by both Houses. The Commission also set up a “gathering space” for attendees to participate in discussion after sessions in a casual setting, fostering openness and dialogue. At the 1970 General Convention in Houston, the Commission reported that its main task had been accomplished and, by its own recommendation, was dissolved.

Johnson, Howard Albert
Person · 1915-1974

Howard Albert Johnson (1915–1974) was an Episcopal clergyman, theologian, author, and educator. He was born on October 8, 1915, to Mark Peter Johnson and Jessie Lulu (Howard). He earned an Associate of Arts degree from Riverside Junior College in 1934, a Bachelor of Arts from the University of California, Los Angeles in 1936, and a Bachelor of Divinity from Virginia Theological Seminary in 1939.

He was ordained to the diaconate in July 1939 and to the priesthood in March 1940 by Bishop Stevens of the Diocese of Fond du Lac. His early ministry included service as Vicar of St. Andrew’s Mission in Elsinore, California (1939–1940), and Minister of All Saints’ Church in Pasadena (1940–1941). In 1942, he worked as Assistant Student Worker at the Procter Foundation in Princeton, New Jersey. He then served as Assistant Minister of St. John’s Church in Washington, D.C. from 1943 to 1946. From 1946 to 1948, he was Assistant at St. Alban’s Church in Copenhagen and a Fellow of the American-Scandinavian Foundation.

Johnson was Associate Professor of Theology at the University of the South from 1949 to 1953 and served as Adjunct Professor of Religion at Columbia University from 1954 to 1958. Concurrently, he was Canon Theologian at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City from 1954 to 1964. He was a visiting lecturer in Hong Kong and Macao in 1969 and served briefly as Rector of St. Paul’s Church in Oakland, California (1969–1970).

In addition to his academic and clerical work, Johnson was an author, editor, and contributor to numerous theological and religious publications. He died on June 13, 1974.

Jarvis, Samuel Farmar
Person · 1796-1851

Samuel Farmar Jarvis was born on January 20, 1786, the son of the Rt. Rev. Abraham Jarvis, second Bishop of the Diocese of Connecticut. He graduated from Yale College and was ordained in 1811 before serving at St. Michael’s Church in Bloomingdale, New York, followed by St. James’ Church in New York City (1813-1820) and St. Paul’s Church in Boston (1820-1826). During this period, he earned a Doctor of Divinity degree from the University of Pennsylvania (1819) and taught Biblical Learning at the newly established General Theological Seminary (GTS) (1819-1820). In 1820, he transferred to Boston, where he served as the Rector of St. Paul’s Church.

Jarvis resigned from St. Paul’s in 1826 and spent the next nine years living in Europe, at which time he assembled his collection of fine Italian paintings. He returned to the United States in 1835 and began a professorship of Oriental Literature at Washington (Trinity) College; however, he resigned to become the Rector of Christ Church (Holy Trinity Church) in Middletown, Connecticut, in 1837. He would resign from that position in 1842.

Jarvis additionally served as Historiographer for The Episcopal Church (appointed in 1838) and wrote multiple books on the history of the church. He was a Trusteed of both Washington College and GTS and elected as a deputy to the 1844, 1847, and 1850 General Conventions. He died on March 26, 1851.

Edgar Legare Pennington, was born on January 15, 1891, in Madison, Georgia. He earned his Bachelor of Arts (1911) and Bachelor of Laws (1914) from the University of Georgia and practiced law for three years prior to serving in the United States Navy, during which time he survived the sinking of the USS President Lincoln by a German U-boat in 1918. After World War I, he pursued religious studies and was ordained in 1922. He served in multiple churches before rejoining the US Navy during World War II. He then served as Rector of St. John’s Church in Mobile, Alabama, until his death on September 10, 1951.

Pennington contributed not only to the understanding of The Episcopal Church’s history, particularly its American Colonial period, but also to the development of historical practices in The Episcopal Church. He was a co-founder of the Historical Magazine of the Protestant Episcopal Church, member of the Church Historical Society, and Historiographer of The Episcopal Church from 1949 to 1951.