Episcopal Diocese of Alabama
The Episcopal Diocese of Alabama[1] is located in Province IV of the Episcopal Church and serves the state of Alabama with the exception of the extreme southern region, including Mobile, which forms part of the Diocese of the Central Gulf Coast.
Diocese of Alabama | |
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Diocesan Seal of the Diocese of Alabama | |
Location | |
Country | United States |
Territory | Northern and central Alabama |
Ecclesiastical province | Province IV |
Statistics | |
Parishes | 92 |
Members | 32,160 (2018) |
Information | |
Denomination | Episcopal Church |
Cathedral | Cathedral Church of the Advent |
Current leadership | |
Bishop | John McKee Sloan |
Map | |
Website | |
Currently, the Right Reverend John McKee "Kee" Sloan serves as diocesan bishop. Sloan was elected by the diocese to serve as its 11th bishop on July 16, 2011, and was installed into that office on January 7, 2012, having previously served from 2008 to 2012 as bishop suffragan.[2] The Cathedral Church of the Advent in Birmingham serves as its cathedral. The Bishops' Offices are located at Carpenter House in Birmingham alongside the Church of the Advent, a pre-existing parish that the diocese designated as its cathedral in 1982.
On January 18, 2020, the Reverend Dr. Glenda Curry, rector of All Saints’ Church in Homewood, Alabama, was elected bishop coadjutor. She was consecrated on June 27, 2020. Upon Sloan’s retirement, she will be installed as diocesan bishop on January 9, 2021.[3]
The diocese currently includes 92 parishes, including college campus ministries and Camp McDowell, the diocesan camp and conference center, located in Nauvoo, Alabama.
The total membership of the diocese is estimated at over 30,000 persons. Alabama is the only diocese in the Episcopal Church where there are no mission congregations; that is, all churches are expected to be self-supporting and self-governing parishes, with diocesan subsidies reserved for new church starts only. The policy was instituted by Bishop Furman C. Stough in the 1970s.
Like most of its southern neighbors, the diocese's churchmanship heritage is predominantly of the low variety, reflecting the influence of the founders' origins in places like Virginia and South Carolina. In colonial times, those southern colonies were bastions of evangelical, even Calvinist sentiment among the Anglican clergy and gentry. And like the ECUSA in general, the diocese's members are mostly affluent professionals and businesspeople, often among the wealthiest residents of their respective communities, some of whom have maintained Episcopalian affiliation for several generations. However, these people have largely co-existed peacefully with more liberal parishioners who look upon the Episcopal Church as an alternative to fundamentalist options within Southern Protestantism. The Anglican realignment movement among conservatives in protest against the consecration of the openly gay bishop Gene Robinson in the 2000s had only a minor impact in Alabama - two congregations in Montgomery experienced significant rifts.
List of bishops
Bishops of Alabama | |||
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From | Until | Incumbent | Notes |
1844 | 1861 | Nicholas Hamner Cobbs | Died in office. |
1861 | 1900 | Richard Hooker Wilmer | Elected and consecrated in the Confederate Episcopal Church. Died in office. |
1900 | 1902 | Robert Woodward Barnwell | (December 27, 1849, Beaufort, SC – July 24, 1902, Selma, AL) |
1902 | 1928 | Charles Minnigerode Beckwith | Charles Minnigerode Beckwith (June 3, 1851, Prince George County, VA – April 18, 1928) |
1928 | 1938 | William G. McDowell | William George McDowell, Junior (August 2, 1882, Lexington, VA – 1938) |
1938 | 1968 | Charles Colcock Jones Carpenter | |
1968 | 1970 | George Mosley Murray | Translated to Central Gulf Coast and became its first diocesan bishop. |
1971 | 1988 | Bill Stough | Furman Charles Stough (July 11, 1928, Montgomery, AL – 2004) |
1988 | 1998 | Robert O. Miller | Robert Oran Miller (February 14, 1935, Wynnville, AL – June 29, 2009, Birmingham, AL) |
1999 | 2012 | Henry Nutt Parsley, Jr. | |
2012 | present | Kee Sloan | |
Suffragan and assistant bishops | |||
From | Until | Incumbent | Notes |
1891 | 1900 | Henry Melville Jackson, assistant bishop | Henry Melville Jackson, Senior (July 28, 1840, Louisburg, VA – May 4, 1900, Eufaula, AL)[4] |
1949 | 1953 | Randolph R. Claiborne, Jr., suffragan bishop | Translated to Atlanta. |
? | ? | William Dimmick, assistant bishop | William Arthur Dimmick; previously Bishop of Northern Michigan then assistant bishop of Minnesota. |
1999 | 2002 | Onell Soto, assistant bishop | Previously Bishop of Venezuela then assistant bishop of Atlanta. |
2002 | 2006 | Marc Handley Andrus, suffragan bishop | Translated to California. |
2007 | 2012 | John McKee Sloan, suffragan bishop | Invested as diocesan bishop. |
2012 | 2016 | Santosh Marray, assistant bishop | Former assistant bishop of The Diocese of East Carolina, translated to Easton.[5] |
Churches
The Diocese of Alabama comprises 92 parishes, including the Campus Ministries that serve the various colleges and universities in Alabama. Christ Episcopal Church (Tuscaloosa, Alabama) is the oldest parish in continuous existence in the diocese, founded in 1828. The oldest parish in the state of Alabama is Christ Church Cathedral (Mobile, Alabama), but it is located in the Diocese of the Central Gulf Coast.
References
- Diocese of Alabama Website
- "John McKee Sloan Elected 11th Bishop". Archived from the original on July 17, 2012. Retrieved July 23, 2011.
- "Alabama elects Glenda Curry bishop coadjutor". Episcopal News Service. January 20, 2020. Retrieved February 9, 2020.
- Monument in Barbour County
- "The Recognition and the Investiture of The Rt. Rev. Santosh Marray as the XI Bishop of Easton – Updated". The Episcopal Diocese of Easton. August 29, 2016. Retrieved February 23, 2017.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Episcopal Diocese of Alabama. |