Anglican Commemoration
Deacon & Founder of the Little Gidding Community
December 1 · d. 1637
also known as Nicholas Ferrar of Little Gidding
Deacon and founder of the Little Gidding community, an intentional Anglican religious household devoted to prayer, work, and learning. His Gospel Harmonies represent monumental editorial scholarship, while Little Gidding itself became a model of lay and clerical cooperation, contemplative practice, and service that influenced Anglican religious thought and was later immortalized in T.S. Eliot's poetry.
Ferrar had no formal canonization or cult. His memory was preserved through community recollection and through Walton's Life. The Victorian era saw renewed interest in Little Gidding as an example of communal piety and liturgical practice. The definitive modern rehabilitation came through T.S. Eliot's poem 'Little Gidding' (1942), the final poem of Four Quartets, which reimagined the historical community as a model of spiritual search and loyalty. Eliot's poem revived general literary interest in Ferrar and Little Gidding. Contemporary Anglican religious communities and retreat houses sometimes invoke Little Gidding as an inspiration. Ferrar's approach—lay but serious, contemplative yet engaged in skilled labor, provincial yet connected to broader spiritual currents—has made him attractive to modern readers seeking alternative models to either clerical professionalism or purely individual piety. Modern editions of Gospel Harmonies have been published (20th and 21st centuries), keeping his scholarly work accessible.
Nicholas Ferrar was born in 1592 into a wealthy London merchant family with continental business interests. Educated at Cambridge (Clare College) and later at Padua in Italy (where his family had commercial connections), Ferrar acquired languages, theological learning, and continental spiritual awareness. Returning to England, he was active in overseas trade and colonial ventures, serving as director of the Virginia Company and investing in colonial enterprise.
Following a serious illness around 1625 that, like Herbert's, prompted spiritual reorientation, Ferrar withdrew from commerce and public life. He sought ordination as deacon (a rare choice for a layman of his social standing) and in 1625 established a religious community at Little Gidding, a small village in Huntingdonshire. The community consisted of his extended family—his mother, brother and sister-in-law, their children, and a few other devoted persons—living under a quasi-monastic rule of corporate prayer, scriptural study, and manual labor while maintaining lay status. Ferrar himself never married, committing to celibate devotion.
The Little Gidding household practiced an elaborate daily office of corporate prayer (the psalms, biblical canticles, and prayer), lectio divina, and communal work. The community engaged in artistic projects including fine bookbinding (visible in surviving examples), woodworking, and most notably the Gospel Harmonies—a monumental editorial synthesis of the four gospels arranged in harmonious narrative sequence with annotations coordinating the four accounts. This work, Ferrar's major scholarly contribution, demonstrates immense learning and editorial precision.
Little Gidding became a center of pilgrimage and spiritual counsel for nearby parishes and distant seekers. Its approach—combining Protestant biblical devotion with quasi-monastic structure, lay status with serious liturgical practice—made it distinctive and controversial. During the English Civil War, the community was disrupted; the house was briefly ransacked. Ferrar died of fever on December 1, 1637, just months after the initial raid. The community survived (briefly) under his brother's son, but ultimately dispersed during the Interregnum.
Almighty and everlasting God, you kindled the flame of your love in the heart of your servant Nicholas Ferrar to manifest your compassion and mercy to the poor and the persecuted: Grant to us, your humble servants, a like faith and power of love, that we who give thanks for his righteous zeal may profit by his example; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.