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William Paret

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Name
  
William Paret


Died
  
1911

William Paret January 18 William Paret 1911 The Church of the EpiphanyThe

Education
  
Hobart and William Smith Colleges

Books
  
The Pastoral Use of the Prayer Book: The Substance of Plain Talks Given to His Students and Younger Clergy

William Paret was the 137th bishop of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America and was a bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Maryland.

Contents

William Paret William Paret Wikipedia

Early life and education

William Paret was born in New York City on September 23, 1826. His parents were John and Hester Paret. His father was a merchant in that city. His paternal grandfather, Stephen Paret, a Frenchman had come to the United States in 1760. Reared in New York City, he attended grammar school until age 14, at which time he began working as a clerk in a wholesale dry good store. He studied for his orders under the Right Reverend William Heathcote DeLancey. While pursuing his education at Hobart College he also taught in Syracuse, New York and at the Academy at Moravia, New York. He received his doctorate of divinity degree from Hobart College in 1867. In 1886 Hobart College awarded him his LL.D.

Ministry

William Paret was ordained a deacon on July 2, 1852 in Trinity Church, Geneva, New York by Bishop Carlton Chase. He received his priest's orders in Grace Church, Rochester, New York on June 38, 1853 from Bishop DeLancey.

He was rector of these churches:

  • St. John's, Clyde, New York, 1852–1854
  • Zion, Pierrepont Manor, New York, 1854–1864
  • St. Paul's, East Saginaw, Michigan, 1864–1866
  • Trinity Church, Elmira, New York, 1866–1888
  • Christ Church, Williamsport, Pennsylvania, 1868–1876
  • Church of the Epiphany, Washington, D.C., 1876–1884
  • In 1882, Rev. Paret exchanged public letters concerning church practices with Rev. John Habersham Elliott (1832-1906).

    In 1884 Paret was elected to succeed Bishop William Pinkney as Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Maryland, following Bishop Pinkney's death in 1883. Paret was consecrated the sixth Bishop of Maryland on January 8, 1885 at his own Church of the Epiphany in Washington, D.C. At the Maryland Episcopal Diocesan Convention of 1894, Paret denounced - "a stinging phillipic fell from his lips"—those parishes that used incense and other ritualstic practices, such as the use of confessionals, which was an attack on high church Anglican parishes such as Mount Calvary Church in Baltimore and St. Andrew's Church in Princess Anne, Maryland. Those parishes were "practically excommunicated" as Paret refused to visit them. In 1895 the Diocese of Maryland was divided to form the Episcopal Diocese of Washington.

    In 1904, the diocese of Maryland published a collection of his pastoral instructions concerning pastoral use of the prayer book. Two years later, T. Whittaker publishers of New York published his The place and function of the Sunday school in the church. G.W. Jacobs Co. of Philadelphia published Paret's Remniscences in the year of his death.

    Death and legacy

    Bishop Paret died of pneumonia January 18, 1911 in Baltimore. He is buried in Rock Creek Cemetery in Washington, D.C.

    References

    William Paret Wikipedia