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» Bishops

May 16, 2008

Honor returns

Legendary figure recalled in new book
By JEFF THEODORE
Jersey City (NJ) JOURNAL
May 16, 2008

Tonight, Honor returns to Jersey City's Grace Van Vorst Church. Honor Moore, that is.

Moore, daughter of highly respected Episcopal bishop Paul Moore, who once served as rector at Grace Van Vorst, will read portions and sign copies of her new book, "The Bishop's Daughter," at the church. It's one of the main events for the church's annual Cathedral Arts Festival.

In "Bishop's Daughter," (WW Norton Press, $25.95) Honor Moore details a topsy-turvy relationship with her father, perhaps the best known Episcopal clergy figure in the nation, during his two-decade tenure as leader of the Episcopal Church in New York.

It’s all here

May 15, 2008

Give me rewrite

Delaware diocese quiet over gay bishop’s visit
By Melissa K. Steele
Dover (DE) Post

A Spring Clergy Day sponsored by the Episcopal Church Diocese of Delaware was held Tuesday at Christ Church in Dover featuring Bishop Gene Robinson, the first openly gay prelate to be ordained by any mainstream religious organization.

“This was scheduled a year ago because he has such a busy schedule,” said diocese spokesman the Rev. Gary L. Rowe. “Spring Clergy Day is for Gene Robinson to come and have a conversation.”

Whether or not that conversation would include discussion of the Anglican Church’s upcoming Lambeth Conference, in which there is a possibility the English church could cut its ties with the American branch, remains unknown.

“I wouldn’t assume anything,” Rowe said.

It’s all here … and here’s another one of those stories that reads like the reporter took notes really fast over the phone—kinda garbled: not always wrong, but not quite right either. Have at it…

May 04, 2008

Welcoming Bishop Lane in Maine

Bishop Stephen Taylor Lane consecrated at Episcopal Diocese of Maine
Kennebec Journal, Augusta, ME
BY ANNE GLEASON
May 4, 2008

PORTLAND -- Newly consecrated Bishop Stephen Taylor Lane stood for several minutes at the front of the Cathedral Church of Saint Luke facing the congregation after being adorned with Maine-themed vestments and presented with a ring, a cross and a crozier, which resembles a shepherd's staff.
The moment was striking to Harriet Gosnell, a candidate for holy orders and member of St. Mark's Episcopal Church in Waterville. "He looked so vulnerable and so receptive and open to the people of Maine, to his flock," Gosnell said, following the consecration service. "It was a joyful service."

Lane was consecrated bishop-coadjutor of the Episcopal Diocese of Maine on Saturday. He will assist current diocesan Bishop Chilton Knudsen until she retires in September.

Read it all here...

Future bishop awaits ‘adventure’
Bangor Daily News
By Judy Harrison
May 03, 2008

PORTLAND, Maine - The Rev. Canon Stephen Taylor Lane believes that he will begin the "grand adventure" of a lifetime today when he becomes the spiritual leader of the state’s 17,000 Episcopalians.

Members of Lane’s new flock will gather at St. Luke’s Cathedral today to participate in his consecration as the ninth bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Maine.

The Most Rev. Katharine Jefforts Schori, the presiding bishop and primate of the Episcopal Church, will lead the event. The Rt. Rev. Chilton Knudsen, bishop of the Maine diocese, will participate in the service that is expected to be similar to the one held in the same church a decade ago when she became the diocese’s first woman bishop.

Read it all here...

April 25, 2008

Announcing his plans

Gay Bishop Plans His Civil Union Rite
The New York Times
By LAURIE GOODSTEIN
April 25, 2008

Bishop Gene Robinson, the openly gay Episcopal prelate whose consecration led conservatives to split from the church, said in an interview on Thursday that he and his partner of 20 years were planning a civil union ceremony to be held in his home church in the diocese of New Hampshire in June.

Bishop Robinson said that by scheduling the ceremony for June, he did not intend to further inflame conservatives just before the Anglican Communion gathers in August in Cambridge, England, for the Lambeth Conference, which happens only once every 10 years.

He planned his civil union for June, he said, because he wanted to provide some legal protection to his partner and his children before he left for England for the conference. Bishop Robinson has received death threats, and he wore a bulletproof vest under his vestments at his consecration in 2003.

“We could have, I suppose, just gone to the town clerk and had that signed,” he said, “but, you know, I’m a religious person, and every major event in my life has been marked with some kind of liturgy and giving thanks to God.”

Read it all here...

April 19, 2008

Episcopal Bishop Lee visits La Salle County

Festive Eucharist planned April 20 at Ottawa church
Morris Daily Herald
April 18, 2008

OTTAWA - The LaSalle County Episcopal Ministry, a cluster of the Episcopal churches in La Salle County, will welcome the newly installed leader of the Diocese of Chicago.

Bishop Jeffrey D. Lee will visit Christ Episcopal Church at Columbus and Lafayette Streets in Ottawa for a Festive Eucharist at 10 a.m. Sunday, April 20.

Bishop Lee was consecrated as the 12th Bishop of Chicago in early February, following his election at the Diocesan Convention in November.

It’s all here

April 17, 2008

Maine thing

Retiring Bishop To Visit Blue Hill
Ellsworth (ME) American
April 17, 2008

BLUE HILL — On Sunday, April 20, the Rt. Rev. Chilton Knudsen, eighth bishop of Maine, will make her final official visit to St Francis by the Sea Episcopal Church in Blue Hill to officiate at a festive 10 a.m. service during which new members will be baptized, confirmed, reaffirmed and received into the church.

Accompanying Knudsen will be the Rev. Cn. Stephen Lane, who will be consecrated as the new bishop of Maine in Portland in September.

Elected in November 1997, Knudsen is the first woman to serve as the bishop of Maine.

It’s all here

April 15, 2008

Suspension suspended

Retired bishop allowed to perform son's funeral
Peoria (IL) Journal Star
April 15, 2008

PEORIA - Episcopal Church officials on Monday said that retired Bishop Edward MacBurney, whose ability to exercise his office has been removed until a canon law trial this fall, may take part in his son's funeral on Saturday.

MacBurney, who was bishop of the Peoria-based Diocese of Quincy from 1988 to 1994, has been accused of breaking church law by performing confirmations at a breakaway parish in the Diocese of San Diego in June 2007 without that bishop's permission.

Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori suspended MacBurney's right to act as a bishop or priest, which would have included taking part in the Roman Catholic funeral of his son, Page Grubb, who died April 4.

"In light of the personal tragedy that Bishop and Mrs. MacBurney are facing, Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori wishes to offer the bishop the opportunity to function liturgically in any services for his son if he desires to do so," the Rev. Charles Robertson, canon to Schori, said in a statement.

It's all here ...

April 14, 2008

22 Episcopal clergy deposed

Bishop says they abandoned church, but spokesman for group says act was spiteful
By Jeff Brumley
Florida Times-Union
4/12/2008

A Jacksonville bishop has sacked 19 priests and three deacons from his Northeast Florida diocese, saying they abandoned the Episcopal Church by joining or starting parishes aligned with theologically conservative bishops in places as far away as Africa and South America.

But a spokesman for the 22 deposed clergy said the Right Rev. John Howard's action was heavy-handed and spiteful because the provinces they've joined are, like the Episcopal Church, part of the worldwide Anglican Communion.

The March 25 action may largely represent the culmination of nearly five years of discord between Howard and theologically conservative Episcopalians who have joined a national movement abandoning the denomination since an openly gay New Hampshire priest was elected a bishop in 2003.

It’s all here

Retired bishop can't perform son's funeral UPDATED

Inhibition of bishop temporarily lifted
April 14, 2008
[Episcopal News Service] Inhibition of the Rt. Rev. Edward H. MacBurney, retired bishop of the Diocese of Quincy, Illinois, has been temporarily lifted to allow him to participate in liturgical services for a son who died April 4, the Presiding Bishop's canon said April 14.

"In light of the personal tragedy that Bishop and Mrs. MacBurney are facing, Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori wishes to offer the bishop the opportunity to function liturgically in any services for his son if he desires to do so," said the Rev. Dr. Charles Robertson, canon to the Presiding Bishop.

It's all here ...

Episcopal Church bans ex-Quincy leader from administering any rites

By MICHAEL MILLER
Peoria Journal Star
April 11, 2008

PEORIA - A retired bishop of the Peoria-based Episcopal Diocese of Quincy has been banned by The Episcopal Church from performing any rites until a trial on charges that he broke canon law can be held.

The ban includes taking part in the April 19 funeral of his son, Page MacBurney, who died April 4.

Bishop Edward MacBurney, 80, who now lives in Iowa, is accused of breaking canon law when he performed confirmations in June 2007 at a San Diego, Calif., Anglican parish without permission of the San Diego Episcopal bishop. The church had broken away from the U.S. province and is now part of the Southern Cone Anglican province.

It’s all here

April 07, 2008

New York bishop visits diocese

She conducts confirmations for 16 in parish
By Raja Abdulrahim
Times Herald-Record
April 06, 2008

GOSHEN — "Amen," the congregants said.

Bishop Catherine Roskam of the Episcopal Diocese of New York raised her hands to indicate she wanted to hear it louder.

"Amen," the congregation of St. James Episcopal Church said a little louder.

Roskam raised her hands again.

"Amen."

Loud enough. The congregation got the double-thumbs-up from Roskam.

Yesterday she was on hand to conduct the confirmations, reaffirming baptismal vows of 16 young people: girls in frilly dresses with corsages and boys in dark suit jackets with a white flower on the lapel.

It’s all here

April 03, 2008

Episcopal Diocese of Dallas elects bishop suffragan

Church's OK needed before he assumes post
By SAM HODGES
The Dallas Morning News
April 3, 2008

The Rev. Canon Paul Lambert has been elected bishop suffragan of the Episcopal Diocese of Dallas.

Clergy and laity of the diocese chose him last weekend from a field of six nominees.

Canon Lambert still must gain consent of the broader church, through its bishops and diocesan standing committees, to assume the new post. The Episcopal Church allows 120 days for that process.

"Bishop suffragan" is defined as a "helping bishop" to the bishop of the diocese – in this case Bishop James Stanton. Not all dioceses have one, and the Dallas diocese has not had one lately.

It’s all here

April 02, 2008

Top choice

Episcopalians choose new bishop of Maryland in historic election
By VAL HYMES
Annapolis (MD) Capital
April 02, 2008

Anne Arundel County Episcopalians from 13 parishes took part in an historic election Saturday in an historic place and helped elect a new bishop in record time.

The Rev. Eugene T. Sutton, 54, canon pastor of the Washington National Cathedral, was elected on the first ballot to be the 14th bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Maryland.

The election was held at St. James' Church, Lafayette Square, Baltimore, which is the first black parish south of the Mason-Dixon Line. The Rev. Sutton is the first African American chosen to head the diocese in its 227-year history.

The Rev. Sutton is also the first diocesan bishop elected in Maryland on the first ballot since the unanimous choice in 1792 of Bishop Thomas John Claggett, the first Episcopal bishop ordained on American soil.

It’s all here

Ends and beginnings

Despite church's closing, Episcopal mission will continue in Avondale
BY BISHOP THOMAS E. BREIDENTHAL
Cincinnati (OH) Enquirer

The Episcopal Diocese of Southern Ohio is embarked on a new venture in Avondale, and I want to enlist the wisdom and the support of the community as we move forward. We intend to develop a ministry center on the site of historic St. Michael & All Angels Church, 3626 Reading Road. This center will preserve and revitalize the beautiful landmark church, while extending established ministries and developing new ones in the surrounding neighborhood.

As some know, the parish of St. Michael & All Angels has been closed, owing to dwindling numbers. This is understandably a sad time for those who are losing their accustomed weekly gathering for worship in a place they love. But this is not the whole story. The Episcopal Church is not leaving Avondale. On the contrary, we are convinced that now, more than ever, we are called to stand with those who seek peace and justice and the possibility of common life in the inner city. God has provided us in St. Michael's with a strategic location for such a ministry, and we intend to move forward as quickly as possible to make this a reality.

I know there are Episcopal parishes in Cincinnati who stand ready to pledge financial and personal resources to create an effective urban mission at St. Michael's. I dream of a powerful ministry to children in Avondale - providing a space on St. Michael's ample property for tutoring, athletics and after-school events. A focus on children would make great sense, given the proximity of Cincinnati Children's Hospital.

It’s all here

March 31, 2008

Episcopalians elect leader

Rev. Canon Eugene Sutton picked as 14th bishop for Md. diocese
By Tyeesha Dixon
Baltimore (MD) Sun
March 30, 2008

Maryland Episcopalians elected the Rev. Canon Eugene Taylor Sutton, canon pastor of the National Cathedral in Washington and an advocate of environmental causes, as the diocese's 14th bishop yesterday on a single ballot.

Sutton, 54, the first African-American elected to lead the diocese in its 227-year history, also works as director of the Cathedral Center for Prayer and Pilgrimage.

If the majority of bishops and standing committees of the national Episcopal Church consent, he will replace Bishop Robert Wilkes Ihloff, who retired in April. Bishop Suffragan John Leslie Rabb, who was named bishop-in-charge after Ihloff's retirement, will resume his position as second-in-command once a new bishop is ordained and consecrated.

It's all here ...

March 29, 2008

A shared sadness

In suicide’s wake, questions: Bishop and police chief will share their experiences
By Tom Mooney
The Providence Journal
March 29, 2008

He is the chief of police in Barrington. She is the Episcopal bishop of Rhode Island. They’ve never met, but they know intimately the other’s pain, guilt and anger.

Though sadness eclipsed anger long ago.

In 1979, Chief John M. LaCross’ brother Joseph took his own life at Wesleyan University, where the 20-year-old hockey player and psychology major stood months away from graduation.

In 1998, Bishop Geralyn Wolf’s sister Valerie killed herself at home in Los Angeles, where she and her husband ran a real-estate business and raised three young boys.

Neither left a note, just voids that now brim with lifetimes of questions.

Bishop Wolf and LaCross have something else in common. The two high-profile public servants have never talked much publicly about their loss. Until now.

It’s all here

March 26, 2008

Bishop readies for next round

Key conference, book lie ahead for Robinson
By Michael Paulson
Boston (MA) Globe
March 25, 2008

CONCORD, N.H. - Five years after he was consecrated a bishop in a nearby hockey arena, wearing a bulletproof vest under his new golden vestments, Gene Robinson is bracing for another round of controversy.

Next month, his new book is to be published, and in it, amid the assertions of his deep faith in Jesus and a self-examination of his theological beliefs, are the emphatic expressions of disappointment in the leadership of his Anglican Church. Robinson is frustrated that those Anglican leaders, known as primates, asked for time to consider the issues but then refused to meet with him.

In June, Robinson plans to enter into a civil union with his partner of 20 years, Mark Andrew. He says he will do everything he can to keep photographers away, out of deference to those who find his same-sex relationship offensive, but he acknowledges that the event is likely to attract negative attention nonetheless.

It’s all here

March 24, 2008

Winter into spring

Gay bishop's mission to unite
Riazat Butt in New Hampshire
The Guardian
March 24 2008

It is fitting that Bishop Gene Robinson spent much of his Easter enduring the wintry conditions of the Great North Woods of New Hampshire, performing his ministry to small but loyal congregations. For although he is one of the few bishops who could claim to be a household name across the world's Anglican communion, he has been all but frozen out by the head of his church, the Archbishop of Canterbury.

As the first bishop to speak openly about having a homosexual relationship, he has heard fellow Anglicans describe gays as "lower than beasts".

The Guardian spent the Easter weekend with Robinson as he battled the winds and blizzards on a 400-mile road trip around his US diocese. But the conditions were nothing compared with those he has encountered trying to make it to the Lambeth conference, the 10-yearly gathering of the world's Anglican bishops, which takes place in Canterbury, Kent, from July 16 to August 3.

It’s all here

Request denied

Baldwin brings gay priest issue to light
Stephen J. Lee
Grand Forks Herald
March 21, 2008

A Grand Forks priest went public this Holy Week with her request to the Episcopal bishop of North Dakota for a license to minister here.

An associate professor of religion at UND, the Rev. Gayle Baldwin, 62, was ordained an Episcopal priest in 1980 in Wyoming. Before coming to UND in 2000, she served in several parishes, last in the Wyoming diocese, where she has a license to preach and administer the sacraments.

That’s where she was when she came out as a lesbian a decade ago.

She says she’s remained silent for 10 years. But, partly because the issue of gay clergy is dividing the Episcopal Church rather dramatically now, Baldwin decided to press the issue. She issued a letter this week to Episcopal leaders explaining her wish to be licensed in North Dakota.

It’s all here

Lesbian priest says she wants license to minister in ND
March 21, 2008

GRAND FORKS, N.D.—A lesbian priest says she wants to start a dialogue with church leaders after the Episcopal bishop of North Dakota refused her request for a license to minister in the state.

The Rev. Gayle Baldwin, 62, an associate professor of religion at the University of North Dakota, was ordained an Episcopal priest in 1980. She came out as a lesbian a decade ago in Wyoming, where she has a license to preach and administer the sacraments. She came to UND in 2000.

Baldwin went public this week with a letter Episcopal leaders explaining her request to be licensed in North Dakota.

It’s all here

March 19, 2008

Another loss

Retired Episcopal Church bishop Robert Spears dies
Stephanie Veale
Rochester (NY) Democrat and Chronicle
March 19, 2008

Bishop Robert R. Spears Jr., who died Tuesday at the age of 89, was a progressive force in Rochester and on the Episcopal Church's national stage, those who knew him say.

Bishop Spears led the Episcopal Diocese of Rochester from 1970 to 1984. He fought for the ordination of women to the priesthood, a practice that was approved in 1976. He also took up the cause of Rochester's black community during the racial strife of the early 1970s. He advocated for the inclusion of gays and lesbians in church life.

"He was a visionary," said retired priest George Exley-Stiegler, who is with the Episcopal Church of the Epiphany in Gates and who first met Bishop Spears in 1953. "He was a good, caring pastor of the diocese, with both the lay people and the clergy, and he had a special interest in the young people."

It’s all here

March 18, 2008

RSVP

Episcopal bishop answers letter
By Steve Levin
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
March 18, 2008

Pittsburgh Episcopal Bishop Robert W. Duncan Jr. has told the presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church that far from her charge that he has "abandoned the communion of this church," he has instead been "fully subject to the doctrine, discipline and worship" of it.

The bishop's response, released by the diocese yesterday, was accompanied by a letter from his Philadelphia attorney, John H. Lewis Jr. That letter said Bishop Duncan's response met the requests presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori set out in her Jan. 15 letter and that "we expect that there will be no further action" against the Pittsburgh bishop.

The presiding bishop has warned Bishop Duncan that he may face civil lawsuits and expulsion for his efforts to move the Pittsburgh diocese out of the Episcopal Church into realignment with a more conservative province of the worldwide Anglican Communion.

It’s all here

March 16, 2008

Succession

Episcopals [sic] nominate bishop's successor
By Robert Rodriguez
The Fresno Bee
03/15/08

U.S. Episcopal Church leaders have selected the likely successor to John-David Schofield, who was deposed last week as bishop of the Fresno-based Diocese of San Joaquin.

Jerry A. Lamb, a past bishop of the Sacramento-based Diocese of Northern California, has been recommended by Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori to fill the vacancy.

Lamb was in Fresno on Friday and Stockton on Saturday meeting with church members before his nomination is confirmed at a diocesan special convention on March 29 in Lodi.

It’s all here

March 15, 2008

The latest

Episcopal church votes to expel two bishops
March 14, 2008

The decision this week by leaders of the Episcopal Church to oust two bishops was the latest step in a long-playing conflict within the church and the global Anglican Communion over theology and the role of gays in religious life.

The Episcopal House of Bishops clearly has an eye on the once-a-decade meeting this summer of the world's Anglican bishops in England, where the Anglican Communion faces schism. The ousting of the two conservative bishops is certain to fuel even more controversy at the worldwide meeting.

The Episcopal House of Bishops, meeting at Camp Allen near Navasota, voted to expel John-David Schofield, whose Diocese of San Joaquin, Calif., became the first in the nation to secede from the Episcopal Church over the issues, placing itself under the authority of a theologically conservative Anglican archbishop in South America.

It’s all here

Episcopalians Name New Bishop
By: Clint Olivier & Caryn Kochergen
KMPH
March 15, 2008

KMPH news has learned that the new head of the Episcopal Church in the valley will be retired Bishop Jerry Lamb.

"Jerry Lamb and I have been friends for many, many years, He was the bishop in Northern California," former Episcopal and current Anglican Bishop of San Joaquin John-David Schofield says he knows the national church is replacing him, but the bishop says he's not an Episcopalian anymore.

About 30 of the 50 parishes in the central valley left the Episcopal Church late last year over disagreements involving biblical principals [sic].

It’s all here

Clock is ticking for fate of Bishop Duncan
American Episcopal bishops to be polled
By Steve Levin
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
March 15, 2008

The leader of the Episcopal Church will poll bishops nationally next month in an effort to move the possible deposition of Pittsburgh Bishop Robert W. Duncan Jr. ahead to May.

While Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori's reasons have not been made public, the impact of accelerating the deposition could be far reaching not only for Bishop Duncan but the entire worldwide Anglican Communion.

If the Episcopal Church's House of Bishops were to depose Bishop Duncan -- essentially defrocking him for abandoning the communion of the church for his efforts to move the Pittsburgh diocese out of the American church to a more conservative province within the worldwide Anglican Communion -- then the Archbishop of Canterbury would have to decide whether to disinvite him to this summer's once-a-decade meeting in Lambeth, England of all bishops in the worldwide church.

It’s all here

Continue reading "The latest" »

March 14, 2008

Bishop admits to church infraction

'I'm guilty' says retired head of Quincy Diocese for ministering at a breakaway parish
By MICHAEL MILLER
Peoria (IL) Journal Star
March 14, 2008

PEORIA - A retired bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Quincy on Thursday said he won't fight charges that he broke church law last year by performing confirmations at a San Diego church.

"You can't fight them because it's true - I did it," Bishop Retired Edward MacBurney said.

The 80-year-old MacBurney, who lives in Clinton Valley, Iowa, served as bishop of the west-central Illinois diocese from 1988 to 1994.

He is being accused of performing the confirmations in June 2007 at Holy Trinity Parish without getting the permission of the San Diego Episcopal bishop. The parish broke away from the Diocese of San Diego in 2006 and affiliated with the Diocese of Argentina.

It’s all here

'Thank goodness; it's about time'

St. John's parishioners: Schofield's removal lets church move on
By Ross Farrow
Lodi (CA) News-Sentinel
March 13, 2008

Leaders at Lodi's St. John's Episcopal Church say they are ready to move forward now that John-David Schofield has been officially deposed from the American Episcopal Church.

"Thank goodness; it's about time," said Andee Zetterbaum, a voting delegate in the former San Joaquin Diocese under Schofield's tenure.

The Episcopal House of Bishops, meeting in Texas, took the action Wednesday against Bishop John-David Schofield who last December led the Fresno-based diocese to secede from the Episcopal Church.

It’s all here

March 13, 2008

Schofield minus plus

Let’s just get some housekeeping out of the way first.

1. We’re Episcopalians, not “Episcopals.” (Just like those folks down the street are Methodists, not Methods.)
2. The ecclesiastical body known as the Episcopal Diocese of San Joaquin hasn’t left the Episcopal Church just because some of its members have.
3. +Gene Robinson isn’t the first gay bishop, or the first openly gay bishop, in the Episcopal Church, the Anglican Communion, or Christendom. He’s the first openly gay man to be consecrated bishop. (That we know of. 1,980 years--plus or minus a few--is a long, long time to go without the Internet.)

4. Deposed clergy are not "stripped." They may retain their frocks, along with other contents of their closets. It's the title and the property they can't keep.

Breakaway Episcopal Bishop Defrocked
By GARANCE BURKE

FRESNO, Calif. (AP) — Episcopal leaders ousted a breakaway conservative bishop Wednesday in a struggle for control of the Diocese of San Joaquin and its properties.

The Episcopal House of Bishops, meeting in Texas, took the action against Bishop John-David Schofield, who last December led the Fresno diocese to secede from the Episcopal Church.

San Joaquin is the first full diocese to split from the liberal-leaning denomination, which in 2003 consecrated the first openly gay Episcopal bishop, V. Gene Robinson of New Hampshire.

It’s all here

Episcopal church deposes two dissident bishops
By Michael Conlon
Mar 12, 2008

CHICAGO (Reuters) - Bishops of the U.S. Episcopal Church on Wednesday formally kicked two conservative prelates out of the church in the latest jolt for a worldwide Anglican community divided over the role of gays, biblical interpretation and other issues.

The Episcopal Church's House of Bishops meeting in Texas announced that it had voted to "depose" from ordained ministry Bishops John-David Schofield of San Joaquin, California, and William Cox, a retired former bishop from Maryland who now lives in Oklahoma.

Both had previously affiliated with the conservative Anglican Church of the Southern Cone, based in South America.

It’s all here

Turmoil for Episcopals [sic]
Bishop who led Diocese of San Joaquin to secede stripped of his title
By Tony Sauro
San Joaquin (CA) Record
March 13, 2008

The Episcopal Diocese of San Joaquin, shaken by conflict and controversy, is about to undergo some rethinking and reorganization.

John-David Schofield was stripped of his role as bishop of the diocese, which stretches from Bakersfield to Lodi, by his national colleagues on Wednesday and barred from performing religious duties as part of the Episcopal Church in America.

Schofield, 69, who has refused to ordain women and gays, led the Diocese of San Joaquin to secede from the U.S. branch of the world's 77 million-member Anglican Church on Dec. 6. The Central California group joined the small Anglican Province of the Southern Cone in South America.

It’s all here

Episcopal House of Bishops deposes leader of Fresno diocese
By Don Mayhew
The Fresno Bee
03/12/08

The House of Bishops of the U.S. Episcopal Church elected Wednesday to depose John-David Schofield, the bishop of the Fresno-based Diocese of San Joaquin.

The move was anticipated after the diocese three months ago became the first to secede from the U.S. Episcopal Church since the Civil War.

Schofield, 69, led the secession movement and was banned by the church, the U.S. wing of the Anglican Church, from practicing his religious duties for 60 days, which ended Tuesday.

It’s all here

Central Valley Episcopal bishop stripped
Central Valley Business Times
March 12

John-David Schofield, who has led an effort to align thousands of Central Valley Episcopalians with a conservative South American diocese instead of the Episcopal Church of the U.S.A., has been stripped of his powers by the national church.

The move was expected.

The Episcopal House of Bishops voted Wednesday to consent to the deposition from the ordained ministry of Mr. Schofield, who had been bishop of the Diocese of San Joaquin, which stretches from Kern County in the south through San Joaquin County in the north.

It’s all here

Episcopal Church expels San Joaquin diocese bishop
By Rebecca Trounson
Los Angeles Times
March 13, 2008

Leaders of the Episcopal Church formally ousted the bishop of California's breakaway Diocese of San Joaquin on Wednesday, saying John-David Schofield had abandoned the communion of the church in a bitter, years-long struggle over homosexuality and the Bible.

In December, Schofield's Fresno-based diocese became the first in the nation to secede from the Episcopal Church over the issues, placing itself under the authority of a theologically conservative Anglican archbishop in South America.

The decision by the Episcopal Church's bishops to depose Schofield, made during a meeting in Texas, was the latest step in a long-playing conflict within the church and the global Anglican Communion over theology and the role of gays in religious life. The Episcopal Church is the U.S. branch of the communion but has been at odds with much of that fellowship since 2003, when the U.S. church consecrated a partnered gay priest as bishop of New Hampshire.

It’s all here

Episcopal Church Votes to Oust Bishop Who Seceded
By NEELA BANERJEE
The New York Times
March 13, 2008

The Episcopal Church moved to remove the bishop of the San Joaquin Diocese in California on Wednesday, in reaction to the diocese’s unprecedented decision late last year to secede from the church over theological issues.

The bishop, John-David Schofield, is the first bishop to face such action as a result of the disputes over the church’s stance on homosexuality.

At its semiannual meeting, in Texas, the church’s House of Bishops voted “to consent to the deposition from the ordained ministry” of Bishop Schofield.

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'For the Bible Tells Me So' builds bridges

Documentary opens at Red River Friday
By Victoria Shouldis
The Concord Monitor
March 13, 2008

Daniel Kerslake never expected to make a movie exploring the biblical take on homosexuality. He never expected to gain the trust and full cooperation of New Hampshire's Gene Robinson, the first openly gay person to be named Bishop in the Episcopal Church.

Then he attended a Michael Moore movie.

Kerslake's movie For The Bible Tells Me So, looks at interpretations in religious texts about homosexuality, offering literal quotes countered by more contextual interpretations. Throughout, Kerslake personalizes the struggle between conservative Christianity and gays and lesbians and their families.

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The bishop's take
By VICTORIA SHOULDIS
The Concord Monitor
March 13, 2008

At the time he was asked to participate in For the Bible Tells Me So, Gene Robinson had been elected but not yet consecrated as New Hampshire Bishop of the Anglican Church. His election resulted in endless coverage and debate about his being the first openly gay bishop, and he was ready to take a giant step out of the public eye to focus his energy on his new role.

But he found himself saying yes to filmmaker Daniel Kerslake anyway.

"Well, as I've learned, I'm not going to be out of the limelight - that's not the way life is going to be for me," said Robinson earlier this week from Florida, where he is attending a conference. "More importantly, though, Daniel struck me as genuine and authentic in his presentation. A voice in my head told me to trust him, and I did. And that voice was right."

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March 11, 2008

AbC's "non-offer" rejected

Gay bishop criticises Williams for Lambeth snub
Riazat Butt
The Guardian (UK)
March 11 2008

The gay American bishop whose ordination caused ructions in the Anglican church has criticised the Archbishop of Canterbury for his failure to unite the communion.

Gene Robinson, the Bishop of New Hampshire, made the remarks after declining to attend the Lambeth conference, the 10-yearly gathering of the world's bishops, because his invitation was a "non-offer".

He told a spring gathering of the US Episcopal Church House of Bishops: "It has been a very difficult 48 hours sitting here and hearing your plans for Lambeth.

"In my most difficult moments it feels as if, instead of leaving the 99 sheep in search of the one, my chief pastor and shepherd, the Archbishop of Canterbury, has cut me out of the herd."

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Gay Bishop Out of Anglican Summit
By RACHEL ZOLL
The Associated Press

NEW YORK (AP) — The first openly gay Episcopal bishop announced he will have no official role in a meeting this summer of world Anglican leaders, saying restrictions that organizers wanted to place on his involvement had caused him "considerable pain."

New Hampshire Bishop V. Gene Robinson had been told last year that he could not fully participate in the once-a-decade gathering in England, called the Lambeth Conference, as the world Anglican Communion sat on the brink of schism over his 2003 election.

Still, Episcopal leaders had been negotiating with the Anglican Communion Office to allow him to join the event in some capacity. The Episcopal Church is the Anglican body in the U.S.

At a Texas meeting Monday night of the Episcopal House of Bishops, Robinson said that the final offer to include him was in effect a "non-offer," and he had declined it.

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Gay bishop won't attend conference
V. Gene Robinson said he would not have been allowed to actively participate in the global gathering of Anglicans in London.
By Rebecca Trounson
Los Angeles Times
March 11, 2008

The Episcopal Church's only openly gay bishop, V. Gene Robinson of New Hampshire, said Monday that he would not attend a global gathering of Anglicans in London this summer, telling fellow Episcopal leaders he had declined an offer that he said would not have allowed him to play any meaningful role at that meeting.

Robinson, who is attending a retreat this week in Texas with other Episcopal bishops, told the group he had decided not to attend the Lambeth Conference, after negotiations for him to participate or be granted official observer status had failed. His remarks were released by the Episcopal Church late Monday.

The Lambeth Conference is a once-a-decade gathering of leaders of the Anglican Communion, the world's third- largest Christian denomination. It is hosted by the archbishop of Canterbury, currently the Most Rev. Rowan Williams.

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Gay priest not welcome at world meeting

By Michael Conlon
Reuters
March 11, 2008

LEADERS of the US Episcopal Church were told that the gay man they elevated to bishop will not be allowed to attend a top, once-a-decade worldwide Anglican Church meeting this year.

"It feels as if, instead of leaving the 99 sheep in search of the one, my chief pastor and shepherd, the Archbishop of Canterbury (Rowan Williams), has cut me out of the herd," said Bishop Gene Robinson of New Hampshire, after receiving the definitive word that he will be excluded from the Anglican Communion's Lambeth Conference in England.

It was the US church's consecration of Bishop Robinson in 2003 as the first bishop known to be in an openly gay relationship in more than four centuries of Anglican Church history that jolted the 77 million-member global church, already divided over biblical interpretation, the ordination of women and the blessing of same-sex unions.

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Gay bishop excluded from world church meeting
Malaysia Sun
11th March, 2008 

Leaders of the US Episcopal Church have been told that a gay man who was once elevated to bishop will be unable to attend the worldwide Anglican church meeting this summer.

According to Bishop Gene Robinson of New Hampshire, he has been told by his superiors in the Anglican Communion that he will be asked to stay away from the Lambeth Conference in England.

It is believed the Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, made the decision after the US branch of the Anglican church negotiated the issue in an effort to have Bishop Robinson attend the conference.

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March 09, 2008

A 'messy, but beautiful' process for Episcopalians

Six travel to churches across the state in bids to become 14th bishop of Maryland
By Stephanie Desmon
Baltimore (MD) Sun
March 9, 2008

In the middle of campaign season, about 250 Episcopalians gathered for some electioneering of their own yesterday morning as they came out to meet, greet and grill the six men and women who hope to be the diocese's next bishop.

The process of picking the new leader of the Diocese of Maryland - which encompasses the central and western regions of the state - is an unusually democratic one, with clergy and delegates from each of the diocese's 117 churches coming together to make their choice at a convention later this month.

B. Hopkins, a lay delegate from Holy Trinity Church in Churchville, called the open selection process "a virtue of our church."

"It makes it messy, but beautiful," she said.

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March 08, 2008

One sided

Break-away bishop gets on with business as Episcopalians meet
BY LOUIS MEDINA
Bakersfield (CA) Californian
Mar 7 2008

Despite having his duties “inhibited” by the Episcopal Church, everything is business as usual for San Joaquin diocesan bishop the Rev. John-David Schofield, who led a diocesan secession on Dec. 8. In fact, Fresno-based Schofield came to Bakersfield twice last month to ordain two priests: the Rev. Don Cleave at All Saints Anglican Church on Feb. 23, and the Rev. Jack Faucett at St. Luke’s Anglican Church on Feb. 29, according to All Saints rector, the Rev. John Riebe, and St. Luke’s rector, the Rev. Jack Estes.

“I think it’s important for us to acknowledge that these ordinations are taking place and that Bishop Schofield is going on with his duties as an Anglican bishop,” Estes said. “The presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church has no jurisdiction over him.”

Schofield has submitted himself to a different authority within the worldwide Anglican Communion, of which the U.S. Episcopal Church is a part, said the Rev. Van McCalister, spokesman for the now Anglican Diocese of San Joaquin.

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Episcopal bishops meeting in Navasota

Retreat is in advance of Lambeth Conference in England
By RICHARD VARA
Houston (TX) Chronicle
March 7, 2008

The Episcopal House of Bishops is holding a spiritual retreat and short business session at Camp Allen in Navasota, the final meeting of U.S. church leaders before the worldwide Lambeth Conference in England this summer.

The once-a-decade meeting of Anglican bishops and archbishops is set for July 21-Aug. 3 at the University of Kent in Lambeth, England. Although a voluntary association of 38 independent provinces, Lambeth is known for setting worldwide policy and doctrine for the 80 million-member communion.

The communion and the U.S. denomination have been embroiled in a bitter division since 2003 when the American church authorized the consecration of an openly homosexual bishop.

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March 03, 2008

More on +Moore

A Bishop Unveiled God’s Secrets While Keeping His Own
By PAUL VITELLO
The New York Times
March 3, 2008

As is customary during Lent, the sermon at St. John the Divine Cathedral on Sunday touched on the themes of seen and unseen truths, knowing and not knowing what is before one’s very eyes.

It was not intended as a veiled reference to the disclosure this week that Paul Moore Jr., the late, revered Episcopal bishop who became a national figure of liberal Christian activism from the cathedral’s pulpit in the 1970s and ’80s, had lived a secret gay life.

“I’m an old English major, and I can overlay meanings on anything, but in this case it was just the Sunday sermon,” said the Rev. James A. Kowalski, who delivered the words.

In an elegiac article in the March 3 issue of The New Yorker magazine titled “The Bishop’s Daughter,” the poet Honor Moore describes her father, Bishop Moore, who died in 2003 at 83, as alternately passionate and elusive, capable of deep “religious emotion,” yet just beyond her emotional reach. It was only after he died, she said, that she fully realized that he had had gay relationships during his two marriages, the first of which produced his nine children.

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March 01, 2008

+Bennison trial set

Church sets trial date for suspended bishop
By David O'Reilly
Philadelphia (PA) Inquirer
Mar. 1, 2008

The Episcopal Church USA has set a June 9 trial date for Bishop Charles E. Bennison, the suspended head of its Diocese of Pennsylvania, on charges that he concealed his brother's sexual abuse of a minor decades ago.

Bennison, 64, was pastor of a California parish in the early 1970s when he hired his brother, John Bennison, as its youth minister. John Bennison soon began a sexual relationship with a 14-year-old girl that lasted several years.

Last year, the girl's family complained that Charles Bennison knew of the abuse but did not act to prevent it, and failed to inform his superiors when John Bennison sought ordination. John Bennison resigned from the priesthood in 2006 after a Los Angeles TV station reported the abuse.

In November 2006, Charles Bennison apologized to the victim, her family and the diocese for his inaction.

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Shocking pink

BISHOP'S SECRET LIFE EXPOSED
Page Six
New York Post

February 28, 2008 -- MANY Episcopalians are reeling from the news in this week's New Yorker that the late Bishop Paul Moore - the 6-foot-5 patrician whose political activism drove many parishioners from the church - was a closeted homosexual who had a gay lover for the last 30 years of his life. While the Episcopal Church has embraced gays and ordained lesbian priests, Moore's secret life came as a shock.

Moore - who made the cover of Newsweek in 1972, when he took over the Archdiocese of New York - died in May 2003. His daughter, Honor Moore, the eldest of nine children he had with his first wife, Jenny McKean, writes that six months after his death, "the telephone rang. [The caller] had a confident voice. Andrew Verver (as I'll call him) was the only person in my father's will whose name was unfamiliar."

It’s all here … and we’ve heard of “yellow” journalism, but you have to visit this site to believe gossip’s recent extreme makeover…but wear sunglasses.

February 25, 2008

A voice from the South

Bishop, 73, fights global oppression
By Gary Stern
The Journal News
February 25, 2008

Bishop George Ninan tends to divide people into two groups: those who have political freedom and economic opportunity and those who have had their God-given rights taken away.

Since he's an Anglican bishop from South India, one might think he would see people as Christian or Hindu or Muslim. Or that he might see those from South India as being distinct from other Indians or even other Asians.

But Ninan's world view has been shaped by speaking out on behalf of oppressed people of many faiths and cultures - and by being threatened by several governments.

"In a just society, people are not only created equal, but have equal rights to resources," he said.

After a career fighting injustice across Asia, the 73-year-old Ninan is spending his "retirement" in Rockland County, serving as priest-in-charge for two congregations that meet at All Saints Episcopal Church in Valley Cottage.

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Revelation

Confessions
Honor Moore
The New Yorker
March 3, 2008

This week in the magazine, in an excerpt from her book “The Bishop’s Daughter,” Honor Moore writes about her father, the Episcopal bishop Paul Moore, his faith, and his secret. Here Moore talks about her father’s public service and private life.

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February 18, 2008

Calm after the storm

Bishop sees unity among area Episcopal churches
Saturday, February 16, 2008
By KRISTEN CAMPBELL
Religion Editor

Since the election of an openly gay bishop in 2003 and a female presiding bishop in 2006, reports of dissension and division within the Episcopal Church and its parent body, the Anglican Communion, has been prevalent.

Such unrest isn't unfamiliar to Episcopalians along the Gulf Coast.

Several years ago, parishioners of a handful of congregations in the Pensacola, Fla.-based Episcopal Diocese of the Central Gulf Coast -- including what's now Christ Church Cathedral in Mobile -- left the Episcopal Church. In 2006, Daphne's Church of the Apostles, started as an Episcopal mission congregation, dissolved its ties to the area diocese.

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Bell tolls for Bishop

In trouble: The Murray Bridge Anglican Church is at the centre of a $750,000 controversy.
Prue Semler
Murray Bridge (Australia)
15 February 2008

DISCONTENT among parishioners of the Anglican Church in the Murraylands has escalated, with a call for the immediate resignation of Bishop Ross Davies.

Parishioners have formed a group, Voice of the Laity, and are questioning where $750,000, that was recently found in a fund for Bishop Davies, has come from and what it is for.

Voice of the Laity accessed the The Murray Diocese’s 2006 balance statement, which showed its See Fund had grown by $163,000 since 2005.

Anglican warden Lee Lyons said the parishioners wanted answers from the church about the money.

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February 08, 2008

Heavenly surprise

Christians Wrong About Heaven, Says Bishop
TIME
Feb. 07, 2008

N.T. "Tom" Wright is one of the most formidable figures in the world of Christian thought. As Bishop of Durham, he is the fourth most senior cleric in the Church of England and a major player in the strife-riven global Anglican Communion; as a much-read theologian and Biblical scholar he has taught at Cambridge and is a hero to conservative Christians worldwide for his 2003 book The Resurrection of the Son of God, which argued forcefully for a literal interpretation of that event.

It therefore comes as a something of a shock that Wright doesn't believe in heaven — at least, not in the way that millions of Christians understand the term. In his new book, Surprised by Hope (HarperOne), Wright quotes a children's book by California first lady Maria Shriver called What's Heaven, which describes it as "a beautiful place where you can sit on soft clouds and talk... If you're good throughout your life, then you get to go [there]... When your life is finished here on earth, God sends angels down to take you heaven to be with him." That, says Wright is a good example of "what not to say." The Biblical truth, he continues, "is very, very different."

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February 03, 2008

No outcasts

Episcopalian bishop chosen
Rochester (NY) Democrat and Chronicle

(February 3, 2008) — GENEVA — A New Jersey priest who has served the lower-caste untouchables in India was elected Saturday as bishop of Rochester’s Episcopalians.

The Rev. Prince Singh will be installed in May and plans to work within the eight-county diocese to help those who, like India’s untouchables, are invisible and overlooked in society.

“There are invisible people in all parts of the world and we create them,” Singh, 45, said from his home in Oakland, N.J.

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February 02, 2008

Maryland adds two

Episcopal search for new bishop adds 2 names
Baltimore (MD) Sun
February 2, 2008

Two local candidates have joined four others from a national search to choose the 14th bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Maryland.

The. Rev. Mark Gatza, 52, and the Rev. Lura M. Kaval, 45, w