Ed Condry

Edward Francis Condry (born 25 April 1953) is a retired bishop of the Church of England. He was the suffragan Bishop of Ramsbury in the Diocese of Salisbury, 2012–2018, and Canon Treasurer of Canterbury Cathedral, 2002–2012.


Ed Condry
Bishop of Ramsbury
ChurchChurch of England
DioceseDiocese of Salisbury
In office2012  2018
PredecessorStephen Conway
SuccessorAndrew Rumsey
Other postsCanon Treasurer at Canterbury Cathedral (2002–2012)
Orders
Ordination1982 (deacon); 1983 (priest)
Consecration21 September 2012
Personal details
Born (1953-04-25) 25 April 1953
DenominationAnglican
SpouseSarah Long (m. 1977)
Children4
Alma materUniversity of East Anglia
Exeter College, Oxford

Early life and family

Ed Condry was born to Roy and Muriel Condry and attended Latymer Upper School in Hammersmith, London. He read for his BA at the University of East Anglia and for his BLitt at Exeter College, Oxford, graduating in 1974 and 1977 respectively. He then went on to study for his doctorate (a DPhil) from Oxford University and was awarded his doctorate in 1980 before training for the priesthood. Condry has since received an MBA through the Open University in 2002. He married Sarah Long (a school teacher) in 1977, and they now have four adult children: two sons, Felix and Jerome, and two daughters, Hannah and Frances. His son Jerome was married in Canterbury Cathedral in 2019.

Ordained ministry

Condry studied for the priesthood at Lincoln Theological College, being awarded his Diploma in Theology (DipTh; accredited by the University of Nottingham) in 1981. He was made a deacon at Petertide 1982 (27 June)[1] and ordained a priest the Petertide following (26 June 1983), both times by Douglas Feaver, Bishop of Peterborough, at Peterborough Cathedral.[2] He then served his three-year title post as assistant curate at Weston Favell, one year into which he was ordained a priest. His first incumbency was as vicar at Bloxham with Milcombe and South Newington, Oxfordshire, from 1985 until he became rector at the Rugby Team Ministry in 1993.

In 2002, Condry was appointed Canon Treasurer at Canterbury Cathedral.

Episcopal ministry

10 Downing Street announced on 19 June 2012 that Condry had been nominated suffragan Bishop of Ramsbury in the Diocese of Salisbury. He was consecrated as a bishop at Westminster Abbey on 21 September and welcomed (enthroned/installed) at Salisbury Cathedral on 23 September. In January 2018, it was announced that he would retire effective 30 April 2018.[3]

After retirement, he became honorary assistant bishop in the Diocese of Peterborough.[4]

gollark: It's apparently big enough that you would need something like 20 high-end compute GPUs, so... quite a lot of raspberry pis.
gollark: The trouble with this is that scaling it up like this requires ridiculous amounts of computing resources, and now it's so big that individuals probably can't even tractably run it.
gollark: It can add somewhat larger numbers!
gollark: https://slatestarcodex.com/2020/06/10/the-obligatory-gpt-3-post/
gollark: Apparently there's a GPT-3 now, and it's basically just a bigger GPT-2 which is somewhat more effective.

References

  1. "Petertide ordinations". Church Times (#6229). 2 July 1982. p. 4. ISSN 0009-658X. Retrieved 24 May 2019 via UK Press Online archives.
  2. "Petertide ordinations". Church Times (#6281). 1 July 1983. p. 4. ISSN 0009-658X. Retrieved 24 May 2019 via UK Press Online archives.
  3. Diocese of Salisbury — Bishop of Ramsbury Announces Retirement (Accessed 18 January 2018)
  4. "Bishop's Letter No 23; 26 July 2018" (PDF). Peterborough-diocese.org.uk. Retrieved 5 November 2019.

Sources

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