Bergen Anglican Church

Bergen Anglican Church is a congregation of the Church of England in the Anglican Chaplaincy in Norway in the city of Bergen, Norway.[1] Emerging in the late 1950s and institutionalised in 1962 the congregation was a spiritual home for British expatriates and especially the Second World War "War Brides" from Scotland. The congregation has grown to become broadly international in character providing worship in the English language. Since its emergence the congregation's strong core lay ministry and leadership was supplemented periodically by visiting or designated Anglican priests from St Edmund's Anglican Church in Oslo,[2] and beginning in the 1990s was served by Peter Hogarth who served as the Assistant Chaplain for Western Norway, who was arrested for possession of child abuse images some years after the end of his responsibility for Bergen (https://www.churchtimes.co.uk/articles/2019/6-september/news/world/prison-for-norway-cleric-over-child-abuse-images ). Mpole Samuel Masemola was installed as the congregation's first resident priest January 2013, and left in July 2015.[3] Normal worship services were first held at the Engensenteret Chapel, Baneveien 1, near Nøstet, and now at the historic Mariakirken i Bergen or St Mary's Church, Bergen. Within the scope of the Porvoo Communion the congregation enjoys close cooperation with the Bergen Cathedral parish of the Church of Norway. As a congregation within the Anglican Chaplaincy in Norway the Bergen Anglican Church is a part of the Archdeaconry of Germany and Northern Europe in the Diocese of Gibraltar in Europe, which is part of the province of Canterbury in the Church of England. The diocesan bishop is Robert Innes [4] and David Hamid is Suffragan Bishop in Europe.

Lay Assistants[2]

  • 1962–1993: R. Short
  • 1962–1974: E. Minde
  • 1966–1967: A. Thompson
  • 1967–1969: W. Alcock
  • 1967–1969: R. Drake
  • 1973–1976: O. C. Bakkefjord

Lay Readers

  • 2007–present: Iris Evans Bjørnø

Church Warden

  • 2011-2012: Thomas Smitherman
  • 2014–present: Eirik Duerr

Assistant Chaplains

gollark: It's *quantum*. Is that too hard to understand?
gollark: Technically, my non-electronic cactus (in my room) is actually an analog quantum computer perfectly simulating a cactus.
gollark: It's quantum, it's not very hard.
gollark: Clearly you just don't understand quantum.
gollark: It is QUANTUM.

See also

References

  1. "Church Locations - Diocese in Europe". europe.anglican.org.
  2. T.K. Derry A History Of St. Edmund's Church Oslo - 1884-1974 (Oslo:1975)
  3. "New Anglican Priest in Bergen". eurobishop.blogspot.no.
  4. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2014-05-12. Retrieved 2014-05-10.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

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