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Elizabeth II of England, Britainās longest-serving monarch and official head of the Church of England, died Sept. 8 at Balmoral Castle in Scotland at age 96. Commonwealth countries, including Canada, are marking her death with a 10-day period of mourning. She came to the throne in 1952 but had dedicated her life to service of her nation six years earlier, as a 21-year-old princess, saying, āGod help me to make good my vow.ā
The queenās two titles of Defender of the Faith and Supreme Governor of the Church of England, given to her at her accession, owe their existence to Reformation history. The first was first bestowed on Henry VIII by a grateful pope for the kingās rebuttal of the teachings of Martin Luther. Henry defiantly held onto it even after breaking with Rome to declare himself head of the new Church of England.
His daughter, the first Elizabeth, dubbed herself Supreme Governor of the Church of England, saying Jesus Christ was its head. To this day, the British monarch retains constitutional authority in the established church but does not govern it. The modern Elizabeth left that to the bishops, although she addressed general synods and maintained a role as a listener and guide to her primate, the Archbishop of Canterbury.
On Sept. 8, Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby noting the āsigns of a deeply rooted Christian faithā in the queenās life: her courage even as she mourned her husband, Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh, who died in April 2021; her reminders in the darkest days of the COVID-19 pandemic that darkness cannot overcome light; her service to āher people and her God.ā
āAs a faithful Christian disciple, and also Supreme Governor of the Church of England, she lived out her faith every day of her life. Her trust in God and profound love for God was foundational in how she led her lifeāhour by hour, day by day,ā Welby wrote.
While Defender of the Faith has been an inherited title and little more, Elizabeth II embraced it and in recent years made it her own, speaking very openly about her faith and explaining how it provided the framework of her life.
She did this mostly through her annual Christmas message, a tradition begun by her grandfather, George V, in 1932, and continued by her father. Her early Christmas Day broadcasts were platitudinousāthe holidays as an occasion for family was a frequent theme. In 2000, however, she spoke of the millennium as the 2,000-year anniversary of the birth of Jesus Christ, āwho was destined to change the course of our history.ā
She went on to speak very personally and frankly about her faith: āFor me the teachings of Christ and my own personal accountability before God provide a framework in which I try to lead my life. I, like so many of you, have drawn great comfort in difficult times from Christās words and example.ā Similar sentiments have been aired at Christmas ever since.
The queen led the nation at regular services honoring the war dead, or offering thanksgiving for her jubilees. She attended church regularly throughout her life and is said to have had an uncomplicated, Bible- and prayer-book-based faith.
That love of the Bible was something she shared with American evangelist Billy Graham, with whom she shared a friendship that Grahamās son Franklin Graham described as ābuilt on a shared love for Jesus Christ and belief in Godās Word.ā
āMy father said he found Queen Elizabeth āto be a woman of rare modesty and character,ā and made a pledge to pray for her and her family every day. He also appreciated how she often talked about Jesus Christ during her public addressesāthere was never any question about where she placed her faith,ā said Franklin Graham, who heads the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association and Samaritanās Purse.
Elizabeth relied on the deans of Windsorāthe clerics who run St. Georgeās Chapel at Windsor Castleāfor spiritual solace.
Her husband and her son Charles, who succeeds her, has displayed a more intellectual curiosity about religion, including a great interest in both other Christian denominations and other faiths as Britainās religious landscape has become increasingly diverse.
Elizabeth expressed an increasing openness as well. She encouraged members of all faiths to be present at great church occasions and in the annual Commonwealth Day service at Westminster Abbey. She met five popesāa remarkable turnaround for a monarchy that once broke so spectacularly from Romeāthough she never went so far as to ask other religious leaders to be a chaplain or offer other spiritual advice.
At her Platinum Jubilee thanksgiving service at St. Paulās Cathedral in London, in June, Buddhist and Jewish leaders were present alongside Anglicans and other Christians.
On Thursday, many religious leaders shared statements mourning the queenās death.
In a telegram offering his condolences to Britainās new monarch, King Charles III, Pope Francis , āI willingly join all who mourn her loss in praying for the late Queenās eternal rest, and in paying tribute to her life of unstinting service to the good of the Nation and the Commonwealth, her example of devotion to duty, her steadfast witness of faith in Jesus Christ and her firm hope in his promises.ā
Presiding Bishop Michael Curry of the Episcopal Church, who spoke at the wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle, said he was praying for all those who knew and loved Elizabeth.
āHer resilience, her dignity, and her model of quiet faith and piety have beenāand will continue to beāan example for so many,ā Curry said.
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