The adaptation of the rite was the work of Joseph Angwin. The naming of the liturgy after Tikhon the Enlightener of America is based upon events that occurred when Tikhon was the ruling bishop of the American diocese of the Russian Orthodox Church.[1] Some Episcopalians who wished to become Orthodox asked Bishop Tikhon whether they might be allowed to continue to use their Anglicanliturgy, that of the American 1892 Book of Common Prayer (BCP). He sent the BCP to Moscow, where a commission was appointed to examine the issue. The final report addressed the changes that would need to be made in the BCP in order to make it suitable for Orthodox worship, but neither the commission nor Bishop Tikhon actually approved a rite.