St Thomas's Anglican Church
Church façade on Huron Street
St Thomas's Anglican Church is located in Toronto
St Thomas's Anglican Church
St Thomas's Anglican Church
43°39′57″N 79°24′02″W / 43.6659°N 79.4005°W / 43.6659; -79.4005
Location383 Huron Street
Toronto, Ontario
M5S 2G5
DenominationAnglican Church of Canada
TraditionAnglo-Catholic
ChurchmanshipHigh Church
Websitestthomas.on.ca
History
Founded1874 (1874)
DedicationThomas the Apostle
Architecture
Heritage designationToronto Designated Part IV
Designated1976[1]
Architect(s)Eden Smith
Architectural typeArts and Crafts
Administration
ProvinceOntario
DioceseToronto
ArchdeaconrySouth
DeaneryParkdale
ParishSt Thomas, Huron Street
Clergy
RectorRev. Nathan J.A. Humphrey
Assistant priest(s)Rev. James Shire
Honorary priest(s)Rev. Ian D. Nichols
Rev. Jeffry Kennedy
Rev. Roy A. Hoult
(Rector Emeritus)
Laity
Organist/Director of musicElizabeth Anderson Manuel Piazza (assistant)
Churchwarden(s)Carroll Guen Hart
Jessica Nee
Parish administratorChristine Cover
St Thomas's Church, Huron Street logo

St. Thomas's Church, Huron Street is a parish of the Anglican Church of Canada in Toronto, Ontario. One of the earliest Anglo-Catholic congregations in Canada, it was established in 1874, moving twice before settling into its present building, adjacent to the Annex on the western edge of the University of Toronto's downtown campus.

The liturgy and music at St. Thomas's make it a destination church. Many people who do not live within the boundaries of the parish attend its services, especially students, staff, and faculty at the University of Toronto. The parish describes itself as "an active and welcoming Anglo-Catholic parish rooted in Scripture, Reason, and Tradition."[2]

St. Thomas's currently has two full-time priests, the Rector and an Interim Associate Priest, being the Rev'd Fr. Nathan J. A. Humphrey and the Rev'd Fr. James Shire respectively, who are assisted by honorary associate priests. There is also a choirmaster and assistant choirmaster, currently being Elizabeth Anderson and Manuel Piazza.

History

The Arts and Crafts building, designed by architect and parishioner Eden Smith (1858–1949), was opened on January 17, 1893.[3] The First World War Memorial Baptistery with Bromsgrove Guild stained-glass windows was completed in 1922.

The aesthetic theorist and poet T. E. Hulme attended St Thomas's while living in Toronto briefly in 1906 after leaving Cambridge University. He is an important figure in Modernist literature, influencing, among others, Ezra Pound and T.S. Eliot.[4] The world-famous English pianist Gerald Moore (1899–1987) grew up and obtained most of his music education in Toronto.[5] In his early life, he was sub-organist at St Thomas's.

The parish's logo was designed by Allan Fleming for its centenary celebrations in 1974.[6]

Liturgy

St. Thomas's is notable for its intricate liturgy, and is known for its high standards in music and liturgy. Liturgy at St. Thomas's is more formal and complex than would be encountered in all but a few Anglican churches in Canada and indeed in the rest of North America today. Of interest is its dedicated Acolytes' Guild and the parish's preservation of complex liturgical roles and minor orders like that of the subdiaconate, which are no longer found in the vast majority of Anglicanism and Western Christianity as a whole, including in contemporary Roman Catholicism. St. Thomas's draws mainly, however, from the high church tradition within Anglicanism, distinct from the Anglican Papalist movement, which takes its inspiration from contemporary Roman Catholicism. This tradition, as former rector Fr. Roy Hoult explains, sought

to rediscover the forms of dress and general tenor of worship that pertained in England prior to their destruction at the time of the Reformation. St. Thomas's is an example of this second kind of Anglo-Catholicism; its lack of lace and the predominance instead of plain albs and long surplices bear witness to this, as does the traditional Anglican arrangement of the chancel with its choir stalls.[7]

Liturgical particularities native to St. Thomas's reflect a notable influence of pre-conciliar Latin Rite practice on the parish as well, which puts St. Thomas's liturgy at the intersection of High Church Anglican and of Tridentine liturgy. The parish is locally nicknamed "Smoky Tom's" for its use of generous quantities of incense. However, influences from the Liturgical Movement of the twentieth century have been somewhat introduced, notably in the replacement of the prayer for the church militant with the prayers of the people, and especially in the contemporary Sung Mass which uses a contemporary text and is celebrated ad populum (towards the people).

St. Thomas's celebrates daily Low Mass and Morning & Evening Prayer, one of the only Anglican parish churches in Toronto which offers such a schedule. Low Mass is celebrated in the Lady Chapel at 12:15 pm on Monday, Wednesday and Friday, at 5:30 pm on Tuesday and Thursday, and at 10:00 am on Saturday. Morning Prayer is said in the chancel from Monday to Friday at 8:30 am, and on Saturday at 9:30 am. Evening Prayer is said in the chancel as well from Monday to Friday at 5:00 pm. The church is open for private prayer daily from early in the morning to late at night, except on Saturdays.

Major Feast Days are usually observed with one or two Low Masses during the day and a Procession and High Mass in the evening. Service details, livestream links, and service leaflets are posted on the parish website.

On a normal Sunday, the services are:

  • Mattins, 7:30 a.m. & Low Mass, 8:00 a.m. A spoken ad orientem (eastward-facing) traditional-language service of Morning Prayer and a re-ordered version of the Holy Eucharist in the 1962 Canadian Book of Common Prayer, using the Revised Common Lectionary readings.

Sung Mass, High Mass, and Evensong are livestreamed on YouTube. See the parish website.

Music

Music is an important part of the liturgy and mission of St. Thomas's and the high calibre of the music program attracts talent to St Thomas's. Past Directors of Music include John Tuttle, who served from 1989 to 2016 in the post, along with Matthew Larkin and Matthew Whitfield. The famous English accompanist Gerald Moore, who grew up in Toronto, was briefly an assistant organist at St. Thomas's. Elizabeth Anderson was Interim Organist and Choirmaster from July 2016 until August 2017, and was further appointed Interim Director of Music in September 2022. In March 2023, Anderson became the parish's permanent choirmaster. Manuel Piazza was also appointed organist and assistant choirmaster in the same month.

There are three choral services each Sunday. The choristers are mainly volunteers, with paid section leads. To date, the choir has toured to the U.K. three times in 2005, 2010, and 2013 to serve as choir-in-residence in cathedrals during the summer.

Parish culture

St. Thomas's publishes an e-newsletter from the rector called The Thurible weekly. The parish sponsors a Friday Food Ministry program and has a long tradition of refugee sponsorship. All are supported by volunteers from the parish and the community. It also occasionally hosts meetings of the Society of Mary, although these meetings also occur at St. Bartholomew's Anglican Church in Regent Park.

Many St. Thomas's parishioners are active as performers, writers, and artists, and the church has participated in events like Nuit Blanche and Doors Open Toronto.

The parish, although well-known for its liturgical conservatism, houses a sizable portion of parishioners who embrace a more liberal Anglo-Catholicism, following trends in the Anglican Church of Canada, although theologically traditional elements remain alive and well.[8]

On Sunday mornings, there is a small church school and a nursery school. The church also conducts an adult Christian education program, including programs targeted to young adults, Bible study series during the Lent and Advent seasons, discussion groups, and occasional lectures. From 2006 to 2015, there was also an active St Elmo's Youth Group; some of its members have gone on to serve as choristers and acolytes.

University connections

The church has had a long relationship with Trinity College, which hosts a theology department in the Liberal Catholic tradition. More recently, it has mended ties with Wycliffe College, a seminary in the evangelical Anglican tradition, which as recently as the late 1930s banned its students from entering St. Thomas's. Nowadays, however, seminarians from both Trinity and Wycliffe serve regularly during the academic term, involved in the liturgy and many aspects of parish, such as the Friday Food Ministry. Other students of Toronto School of Theology-affiliated institutions are involved in the parish as well.

St. Thomas's is the closest parish church for students of the Toronto School of Theology and of the wider University of Toronto. The church has an active outreach program to university students, and students of the University of Toronto are active in its various guilds and activities, most notably the weekly university-level bible study, as well as being general parishioners.

See also

Further reading

  • Kent, David A., ed. (1993). Household of God: a parish history of St. Thomas's Church, Toronto. Toronto: St Thomas's, Huron Street. ISBN 978-0-9697802-0-5.

References

  1. "Heritage Property Detail: 383 Huron Street". City of Toronto's Heritage Property Search. Retrieved 8 August 2018.
  2. "Mission Statement". St. Thomas’s Church, Toronto. Retrieved 2023-02-22.
  3. Robertson, J. Ross (1904). Landmarks of Toronto: a collection of historical sketches of the old town of York from 1792 until 1837, and of Toronto from 1834 to 1904. Toronto: Robertson. p. 74.
  4. Whitworth, Michael (2001). "T. E. Hulme". The Literary Encyclopedia.
  5. Moore, Gerald (1944). The unashamed accompanist. New York: The Macmillan Company. ISBN 978-0-86203-496-2. OCLC 944441960.
  6. Kent, David. "Poetry Series". St Thomas's Anglican Church, Toronto. Retrieved 8 August 2018.
  7. "St Thomas's Traditions". St Thomas's Anglican Church, Toronto. Retrieved 15 November 2013.
  8. "Parish Profile". St. Thomas’s Church, Toronto. p. 38-39. Retrieved 2023-06-01.
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