[Magdalen] prayerr request
Roger Stokes
roger.stokes65 at btinternet.com
Thu Apr 16 23:07:19 UTC 2015
Never having been one of them I don't reallu know bit it could be any
one or more of them. The crucial thing is to have a higher profile, for
example a Diocesan Missioner or Bishop's Chaplain, than being a priest
in a typical parish.
Roger
On 16/04/2015 13:25, Lynn Ronkainen wrote:
> How is this Roger? Are these people somehow "connected" as we say here ( not necessarily in church circles) so that they are always intended for bigger things? Or personal zeal for higher office? Or something similar that takes their ministry in a different path to "higher leadership"?
> Lynn
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> On Apr 16, 2015, at 3:07 AM, Roger Stokes <roger.stokes65 at btinternet.com> wrote:
>
>> On 16/04/2015 02:20, Grace Cangialosi wrote:
>> Roger, if your bishops actually have no parish experience, what have they been doing as priests before becoming bishop? And how does that qualify them for the role···?
> Grace, I said a *typical* parish. The median Sunday attendance is under 50 per church, certainly not much more thsan that by benefice which may have more than one church in it. A proportion are larger, therir parish priests better known to the bishop and so more likely to be identified for possible preferment either directly or via a specialist ministry. If a bishop has had charge of a parish then it is almost certainly an eclectic one and/or some years before.
>
> I have just been checking our Glerical Directory to see if I can get some examples. ++Justin Welby had 7 years in a charge of a benefice, leaving there in 2002 to become a Residentiary Canin at Coventry Cathedra. ++Sentamu left his one incumbency ti head up a Missionary Society in 1996.
>
> The next three most important bishoprics in England are London (+Richard Chartres, other responsibilities while also Vicar of a parish in Werstminster), Winchester (+Timothy Dakin, missionary and then heading up another Missionary Society) and Durham (+Paul Butler, 10 years in charge of Walthamstow until 2004).
>
> My own diocesan, +Alan Smith, also has no experience in charge of a parish. Most (but not all) of them did serve a curacy in a parish for a few years before moving on to other responsibilities. When a bishop does venture out for a confirmation that is likely to be in one of a relatively few churches as it has to be booked over a year in advance so you need a parish where candidates can be guaranteed. Generally they will be there just for the service and so not get chance to see the parish. There are, or have been, a few exceptions who do proper visitations but they are unusual.
>
> Roger
>
>
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