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John Churchill Sibley

John Churchill Sibley
Predecessor Frederick Ebenezer Lloyd
Successor Ebenezer Johnson Anderson
Orders
Ordination 1924
by Frederick Ebenezer Lloyd
Consecration September 8, 1929
by Frederick Ebenezer Lloyd
Personal details
Born (1858-12-12)December 12, 1858
Crewkerne, Somerset, England
Died 15 December 1938(1938-12-15) (aged 80)
Nationality British
Denomination Orthodox Catholic Church in the British Empire

John Churchill Sibley was born on December 12, 1858, in Crewkerne, Somerset and became a boarder at the local School, where, from the age of 13 he played the school organ.

At 18 Sibley became a teacher at Clifton Grammar School in Warwickshire, where he was also the organist. To avoid making a noise, he practiced on a small harmonium. without using the bellows and eventually gained his Doctor of Music degree in 1894.

Later he was appointed to the position of Director of the Queen’s Music and became well known as a composer of both sacred and secular music. He continued to work both as a conductor and composer but after the First World War began to take a greater interest in spiritual matters and a common bond through music led to him accepting ordination as a priest from F.E.J. Lloyd in 1924.

When he retired in 1929, he determined to devote his declining years to the service of God, and after his consecration by Lloyd in 1929, returned to England as Archbishop Metropolitan of the Orthodox Catholic Church in the British Empire.

Unfortunately in this new role he rapidly attracted enemies in the established Church who often employed agent provocateurs and the gutter press against him. Despite this persecution he was always the perfect gentleman, and there was a firm chin under his George V beard.

Yet he was often deceived by people who appealed to his kindly nature and both he and his wife suffered greatly from treachery by those they sought to help. Eventually he was to admit, ‘One can be too easily accessible.’ One such attack came from a young woman reporter from the gutter press, who first sought his help and then launched a vicious attack through “John Bull” a gutter press magazine. The same woman later tried a similar trick with the Rev. Father, John Ward, but warned by the Archbishop, he was less easily duped.

In his ecclesiastical capacity Sibley wore a black suit, black spats, purple stock, and a wide-brimmed hat with a rosette. He was a likeable old man with steady blue eyes behind his gold-rimmed glasses, very upright in stance and courteous in the extreme, yet underneath was a will of iron. Sibley himself suffered great pain from an enlarged prostate, and many persecutions but struggled on.

Wishing to establish a religious community he sought to purchase Minster Abbey on the Isle of Thanet in the River Thames, where once St Sexburga had been in charge, but he was attacked so vehemently in John Bull that the whole scheme fell through. Nevertheless, it was through this contact that some of the bones of St Sexburga came into the possession of John Ward and the Abbey of Christ the King. They are still preserved at St Michael’s in Caboolture.


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