William Cliff (bishop)

William Grant Cliff is Bishop of the Anglican Diocese of Brandon, in Canada. Born in 1966, in Sarnia, Ontario and raised in nearby Wyoming, Ontario.

Bishop Cliff

Ordination Details

Ordained Deacon on May 14, 1992 by Bishop Robert Townshend of the Diocese of Huron

Ordained Priest on November 30, 1992 by Archbishop Percy O'Driscoll of the Diocese of Huron

Consecrated Bishop on March 1, 2016 by Archbishop Gregory Kerr-Wilson assisted by The Primate of Canada, and the Bishops of Edmonton, Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Qu'Appelle, Rupert's Land, Niagara, Huron, the retired Bishop of the Diocese of Brandon, and the Lutheran Bishop of the Manitoba and Northern Synod of the ELCIC.

Cliff was elected Bishop in 2015, and consecrated after moving to Brandon in 2016.[1]

Cliff, a singer, who played trumpet as a youth, but switched to voice as a student at the University of Western Ontario,[2] has performed at charity fundraising events as a member of a vocal trio of three Anglican priests since the 1990s, the "Three Cantors." The group includes Dean Peter Wall and Archdeacon David Pickett.[1][2]

Cliff, who was raised in the Pentecostal Church, where the music "grabs you by the soul and shakes you," has said that he discovered his vocation through music when one of his music professors took him to a cathedral. He joined the choir and not long afterward spoke to the dean of the cathedral about attending a seminary. Cliff earned his master of divinity degree in 1992.[2]

Cliff attended his local primary school, Wyoming Public, before skipping Grade 8 and attending Lambton Central Collegiate and Vocational Institute in Petrolia from 1979 to 1984. Following this, he attended the University of Western Ontario Faculty of Music from 1984 to 1988. Following this, he attended King's at Western for a B.A. in Religious Studies before attending Huron University College from 1989-1992. He served as Curate to The REv. Terry Dance at Trinity Church in Simcoe, Ontario (1992-1995) before moving to his first parish as Rector in Grey County at Trinity Church, Durham and St. James' Church in Hanover, Ontario (1995-1998) and then to St. John the Evangelist Strathroy with St. Ann's Adelaide (1998-2002).

In 2002, Cliff was appointed Rector of the Collegiate Chapel of St. John the Evangelist, Huron University College, Chaplain to Huron University College, and Anglican Chaplain to the University of Western Ontario. He served here for over 13 years with a vibrant outreach to undergraduate students and a busy worship life at Huron's Chapel. A regular speaker across Canada on issues facing young people and their faith he has been published in journals and periodicals especially on the topic of the needs of youth and intentional Bible study and discipleship.

From 1997 to 2004 Cliff served as a commissioner of the Human Rights Commission of Ontario under Chief Commissioner Keith Norton. He was appointed a Canon of the Cathedral Chapter of St. Paul's Cathedral, London, Ontario in 2003 and named Canon Precentor of the Diocese of Huron in 2009. While in the Diocese of Huron he served as a liturgical Master of Ceremonies from 1995 until his election and departure to Brandon in 2016. In that time, he also compiled and published a volume for use in the Diocese of Huron called "Eucharistic Canons of the Anglican Communion" (2013)[3] to better assist the liturgy and prayer in the Diocese of Huron. Cliff also earned an M.A. in historical theology while working at Huron with a Thesis on the Chapel Royal and influences of Elizabeth I on politics in her day.[4] Along with the other singers of the Three Cantors and Mr. Angus Sinclair their accompanist, Cliff was awarded a Doctor of Divinity degree (honoris causa) while still at Huron in 2013. He was also awarded the Queen's Diamond Jubilee Medal for services to higher education in 2013.

Since being elected to the See of Brandon in 2015, Cliff left the Diocese of Huron and was consecrated on March 1 (St. David's Day) at St. Mattew's Cathedral, in Brandon. He continues to serve the Diocese of Brandon as well as the National Church as Secretary to the House of Bishops, Member of the Communications and Information Committee and as a Pension Trustee for the General Synod Pension Plan.

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gollark: ?tag create dft The DFT is the most important discrete transform, used to perform Fourier analysis in many practical applications.[1] In digital signal processing, the function is any quantity or signal that varies over time, such as the pressure of a sound wave, a radio signal, or daily temperature readings, sampled over a finite time interval (often defined by a window function[2]). In image processing, the samples can be the values of pixels along a row or column of a raster image. The DFT is also used to efficiently solve partial differential equations, and to perform other operations such as convolutions or multiplying large integers.
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References

  1. Forget, Andre (2 November 2015). "Brandon chooses Huron College rector as new bishop". Anglican Journal. Retrieved 8 April 2019.
  2. Freibauer, Caroline (30 January 1999). "Soul Strains: Three Anglican priests sing for charity". Brantford Expositor. ProQuest 345761619.
  3. 125 copies published and bound by the Diocese of Huron for use in Diocesan Churches
  4. The social, political and theological implications of the prayers of Elizabeth I: access, display and association. Cliff, William Grant. c2009
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