Peter Johnston

The Ven. Dr. Peter Johnston serves as the Ministry President of Anglican Compass. He is a priest and archdeacon in the Anglican Diocese of All Nations and the founding rector of Trinity Lafayette. He lives with his wife, Carla, and their eight children near Lafayette, Louisiana.

Peter Johnston

Peter Johnston

Ministry President

The Ven. Dr. Peter Johnston serves as the Ministry President of Anglican Compass. He is a priest and archdeacon in the Anglican Diocese of All Nations and the founding rector of Trinity Lafayette. He lives with his wife, Carla, and their eight children near Lafayette, Louisiana.

    Hymn Guide: Ye Holy Angels Bright

    Posted on September 25, 2025
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    “Ye Holy Angels Bright” is a majestic exhortation to the everlasting praise of God, even in the midst of persecution or trial. Inspired by Psalm 148, it addresses multiple categories of creation: angels, saints in heaven, saints on earth, and finally the singer’s individual soul.ย Richard Baxter, a 17th-century Anglican of the Puritan party, composed the…

    Psalms and Prayers after an Assassination

    Posted on September 15, 2025
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    After an assassination, we really ought to pray. By definition, an assassination is a surprise, a shocking and unexpected murder of a political or religious leader. We remember assassinations because we feel them personally; at the assassination of public figures, our minds and bodies participate in the shock. This shock produces anger, and anger can…

    Lindisfarne Gospels and Anglican Ethos of Translation

    The Lindisfarne Gospels and the Anglican Ethos of Translation

    Posted on August 29, 2025
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    The Lindisfarne Gospels are an illuminated Gospel book first created around 700 AD on the Holy Island of Lindisfarne. Now held by the British Library, it is one of the great surviving treasures of the early English Church, broadly appreciated for its precise calligraphy, elegant Celtic designs, jeweled colors, and symbolic art. The manuscript also…

    Church Planting in National Parks

    Posted on August 22, 2025
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    National parks provide a unique and strategic context for church planting. Though their gateway cities tend to have a small permanent population, they host millions of seasonal visitors every year. And many of these seasonal visitors are uniquely open to spiritual experience. For those who come to experience the beautiful creation, there is a missional…

    Brother Roger of Taizeฬ

    Taizรฉ: Brother Roger’s Vision of Christian Unity

    Posted on August 12, 2025
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    Taizรฉ is the name of a small village in France, which is home to a monastic community of ecumenical Christian brothers and hosts many thousands of pilgrims from all denominations who visit each year. When these pilgrims return to their homes, they carry with them the spirit of Taizรฉ, expressed in song, silence, and a…

    Megachurch congregation

    Rise of the Anglican Megachurch: Observations from the ACNA’s Largest Churches

    Posted on July 21, 2025
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    The vast majority of Anglican churches have fewer than 100 attendees on a Sunday. But there have always been a few parishes that welcome many more. These are typically legacy churches with centuries of history, such as Falls Church in Virginia (est. 1732) and St. Philip’s in Charleston, South Carolina (est. 1680). Even newcomers to these ranks, such…

    America the Beautiful Purple Mountain

    Hymn Guide: America the Beautiful

    Posted on July 3, 2025
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    “America the Beautiful” is one of our popular patriotic hymns, sung often at civic celebrations and even before sporting events. But in the church, this hymn is a victim of its own success. Because we associate it with secular gatherings and only remember its first verse, we are often reluctant to sing it in church….

    Good Shepherd stained glass. For Green: Ordinary Time.

    Green is for Growth: The Color of Ordinary Time

    Posted on June 23, 2025
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    In most Anglican churches, you will see the color green during the season of Ordinary Time. It appears in green clergy vestments, in green fabrics on the altar and pulpit, and sometimes in green hangings or other adornments. You might even choose to wear green on occasion (no obligation to do so!). This green represents…

    Pointing to Heaven. For One God.

    We Believe: In One God

    Posted on May 8, 2025
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    To Christians today, it seems hardly remarkable that the Nicene Creed should begin with a declaration of monotheism: “We believe in one God.” We tend to gloss over this line, often saying it without thinking. When we do discuss it, we can treat it as boring and basic, as monotheistic milk before the trinitarian meat….

    The Crucifixion by Jacob Cornelisz van Oostsanen

    Behold This Thy Family: Cranmer’s Good Friday Collects

    Posted on April 16, 2025
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    Archbishop Thomas Cranmer, who led the development of the Book of Common Prayer, crafted collects for Good Friday with a special emphasis on the church as the family of God. There are three collects for the day, the only occasion for which Cranmer appointed more than one. The first asks God to “behold this thy…