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"missioner" Definitions
  1. MISSIONARY

188 Sentences With "missioner"

How to use missioner in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "missioner" and check conjugation/comparative form for "missioner". Mastering all the usages of "missioner" from sentence examples published by news publications.

His mother retired as the canon missioner of the Washington National Cathedral, where she coordinated community outreach and charity efforts.
Jogues settled down to the duties of a resident missioner at St. Mary's for some time.
Patrick Anderson (1575–1624) was a Scottish Jesuit, known as a missioner, college head, and author.
Thar was a missioner oncet who thought she'd got a holt of me all right, all right.
Novels by Nancy Waddel Woodrow, many of them focused on women characters in American West, included The Bird of Time (1907),Nancy Mann Waddel Woodrow, The Bird of Time (Phillips & Co. 1907). The New Missioner (1907),Nancy Mann Waddel Woodrow, The New Missioner (McClure & Co. 1907)."Nancy Mann Waddell Woodrow, The New Missioner (1907)" Buddies in the Saddle (September 27, 2012). The Silver Butterfly (1908, titled The Veiled Mariposa in serial form),Nancy Mann Waddel Woodrow, The Silver Butterfly (Grosset & Dunlap 1908).
Dame Diane Elizabeth Robertson (born 11 May 1953) is a New Zealand community leader. She was the Auckland City Missioner from 1998 until 2015.
After a curacy at All Saints, Poplar he was Vicar of St Martin, Hereford from 1962 to 197. He was Diocesan Missioner for Hereford from 1971 to 74.
John became a Jesuit, was the first missioner of the Society who settled in Lancashire, and the founder of the extensive Lancashire district; he died on 25 January 1652.
Chiu Kwok-chun (1884 – 17 April 1957) was a New Zealand journalist, political reformer, newspaper editor, baptist missioner and community leader. He was born in Guangdong Province, China on 1884.
Thus Montfort left Poitiers and for several years he travelled on foot, preaching missions from Brittany to Nantes. His reputation as a missioner grew, and he became known as "the good Father from Montfort".
From 1974 he was diocesan missioner for the Diocese of Salisbury, where he spent the next nine years serving the Christian mission in country parishes. During this time he developed an interest in information technology.
Crockfords (London, OUP, 1929) p 1429 After a curacy at Wakefield Cathedral he was Missioner of the Pembroke College, Cambridge Mission at Walworth. He held incumbencies in Suckley, Wolverley and Hartlebury before his archdeacon’s appointment.
He writes also on the numerous unique customs that a missioner must get used to. Walsh journeys through the cities of Langson, Hanoi, Haiphong, Hainan, and Manila in Indo-China (mostly Vietnam) and the Philippines.
John A. Deal, the first Episcopal missioner in Macon County, was responsible for founding Saint Agnes as well as Incarnation in Highlands. On June 4, 1987, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places.
Turnham has participated as a lay missioner to Venezuela and in various leadership capacities in Trinity United Methodist Church in Opelika. Joe was also the local Lee County Democratic Club President and the Lee County Democratic Party Chairman.
Sir Desmond John Britten (27 December 1937 – 13 February 2020) was a New Zealand restaurateur, radio broadcaster, television chef, cookbook writer and Anglican priest. He served as Wellington City Missioner for 17 years, and was knighted in 2012.
His diocesan responsibilities included appointments as the Archdeacon of the Karoo (2011-2012) and as Titular Rector of St Mary's, Barkly West, as well as his role as Canon Missioner for the diocese and as Vicar General (April 2012).
Returning to England in 1948 he was Vicar at All Saints, Gloucester until 1955 when he became Rector of Dursley. In 1961 he was appointed Canon Missioner for the Diocese of Gloucester, a post he held until his Archdeacon's appointment.
Poor Jack (1897), At the Rising of the Moon (1898), London's World Fair (1898), The Orange Girl (1899) and Martin Chuzzlewit (1900), A Lost Leader. Marriage à la Mode, The Missioner, Tea-Table Talk; Sybil, Or The Two Nations (1895).
It is also known by its Tribal fights during the 18th century, where Chief Mhlontlo was accused of killing the then Missioner Mr Hamilton Hope who helps in the foundation of the town Magistrate court. Mhlontlo was lately arrested in King Williams Town. Qumbu was the first place in the Eastern Transkei homeland to have a hospital named Nessie Knight in the nearby rural area of Sulenkama founded by the Missioner Mr Peterson. It lies on the north-east side of the Eastern Cape provincial border alongside the N2 route between Mthatha and Mt Frere, and the R396 between Tsolo and Maclear.
Afterwards he was a missioner in the residence of Drogheda. When that town was sacked by the Cromwellian forces, Father Bathe and his brother, a secular priest, were conducted by the soldiers to the market-place and deliberately shot on 16 August 1649.
In 2010 he also became Canon Missioner of Southwark Cathedral. He was co-chair of Southwark and London Housing Association (now Amicus Horizon) He was formerly Inter Faith Relations Advisor to the Archbishops' Council and secretary of the Churches' Commission on Inter-Faith Relations.
9 Two years later he was sent to Winchester to replace the Catholic missioner, the Rev. Mr. Nolan, who had died of a malignant fever while ministering to the hundreds of French Catholic prisoners of war then confined in the city gaol.Husenbeth, pp. 9f.
Crockfords, London, Church House, 1995, p258 After a curacy in New Milverton he was Vicar of St Mary, Leamington Priors (1997-2010) until his appointment as Archdeacon Missioner in 2010. He resigned the archdeaconry upon his induction as Priest-in-Charge of Patterdale on 19 June 2019.
The Mission was established in 1870. The first Missioner was Father Thomas William Fenn, D.D. who remained at Tewkesbury until his retirement in June 1905. The first St Joseph’s Church opened at the Mythe on St. Joseph's Day, 19 March 1870. Vicar General, Mgr Bonomi, performed the ceremony.
From 1969 to 1976 he was City Missioner for the Diocese of Christchurch then Director of the Community Mental Health Team. In 1982 he became Dean of Christchurch Cathedral. He was consecrated a bishop on 17 February 1984ACANZP Lectionary, 2009 (p. 96) and died on 27 October 2010.
From 1988 to 1993, he was priest in charge of St Wilfrid's Church, Chichester, and also assistant director of pastoral studies at Chichester Theological College. He was then diocesan missioner for the Diocese of Wakefield and finally, (before his ordination to the episcopate,) canon pastor at Peterborough Cathedral.
Graham Alan Cray (born 21 April 1947) is a retired British Anglican bishop. He was the Bishop of Maidstone in the Diocese of Canterbury from 2001 to 2009, and was the Archbishops' Missioner and Team Leader of Fresh Expressions from 2009 to 2014.Crockford's On-line Accessed 8 June 2008.
By 1883, Potter realized the Episcopal Church needed some way for "reaching sinners." Therefore, he decided to "import a successful English Missioner" for "a general revival in the Episcopal parishes of New York." During the Advent season of 1885, "the mission was held simultaneously in twenty-one parishes.", 183-184, 187.
By 1897 the congregation had grown enough to need more space, and the building was enlarged. This larger building was consecrated in Sept 1899. By 1911, demographics were changing in the neighborhood, and St. Joseph's was given by the diocesan Italian missioner, the Rev. D. A. Rocca for ministry to Italian immigrants.
Having studied for the Anglican ministry at Westcott House theological college in Cambridge, Stockwood was ordained deacon in 1936 and priest in 1937. He was a curate, then the vicar, of St Matthew's Church, Moorfields in Bristol for nineteen years. He was also missioner to Blundell's School in Tiverton, Devon.obituary at timesonline.co.
4, University of Toronto/Université Laval, 2003 Another group of Highlanders settled in 1790 and with them came Father Angus MacEachern to join his family who had emigrated earlier. MacEachern was fluent in English, French, and Gaelic. He traveled extensively throughout The Maritimes as a missioner. He built the original St. Dunstan's in 1816.
He was ordained deacon in 1888; and priest in 1889. After curacies at St Mary Bromley and All Hallows-by-the-Tower he was Winchester Diocesan Missioner from 1897 to 1904; Vicar of St Peter, Bournemouth from 1904 to 1920; and Master of St Cross Hospital, Winchester from 1928.Crockford's Clerical Directory1929-30 p.
Around 1902, Oblate missioner Albert Lacombe had persuaded some Basilian Fathers to establish a mission at Beaver Lake in Alberta. Impressed with their work, Langevin wrote the Basilian superior requesting priests for the Ukrainians of Winnipeg. Two Basilian priests arrived by the end of 1903. Langevin built for them St. Nicholas Church and rectory.
"René Ménard." The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 10. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1911. 14 January 2018 From 1651 to 1656 he was the superior at Trois-Rivières. Monet, J., “Ménard, René”, Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 1, University of Toronto/Université Laval, 2003– From 1656 to 1658 he was a missioner to the Cayuga, and later to the Oneida.
Stephen John Hance (born 16 April 1966) is a British Anglican priest. Since 2019, he has been National Lead for Evangelism and Witness for the Church of England. He was previously the Dean of Derby, and before that the Canon Missioner of Southwark Cathedral and Director of Mission and Evangelism for the Diocese of Southwark from 2013 to 2017.
From 1999 to 2013, he served as Vicar of the Church of the Ascension, Balham Hill. From 1999 to 2004, he was also Director of Post-Ordination Training for the Kingston Episcopal Area. In 2013, he joined Southwark Cathedral as Canon Missioner and was also appointed Director of Mission and Evangelism for the Diocese of Southwark.
He was ordained, some time before he left on the English Mission, in November 1587. He arrived at Gravesend on 9 March 1598. Tesimond worked for eight years as a missioner with Edward Oldcorne in Worcestershire and Warwickshire under the name "Father Greenway", primarily out of Hindlip Hall. He was professed as a Jesuit on 28 October 1603.
He was Curate of Lampeter and then of Oswestry. He held incumbencies at Llanuwchllyn, Llanfair Talhaiarn and Dolgellau. He was Diocesan Missioner for St David’s from 1893 until 1899 and Vicar of St David’s until 1903. He was then Rector of Jeffreston”The Clergy List” London, Kelly’s, 1913 until his accession to the Deanery in 1919.
Edwin eventually became a Christian, as did members of his court. When Edwin was killed in 633 at the Battle of Hatfield Chase, Æthelburh and her children returned to her brother's court in Kent, along with Paulinus. James the Deacon remained behind to serve as a missioner in the Kingdom of Lindsey, but Bernicia and Deira reverted to heathenism.
He succeeded as diocesan in November 1985 and remained in Lexington till his resignation in 1999 to become Diocesan Missioner of the Diocese of Texas. "People", Episcopal News Service, 7 May 1999. Retrieved on 29 May 2020. During his time in Lexington, women were allowed to be ordained to the priesthood and the cathedral status was transferred back to Christ Church.
Rémi Gaulin (30 June 1787 - 8 May 1857) was a Roman Catholic priest and bishop who spent time in the service of Bishop Joseph-Octave Plessis. Plessis ordained Gaulin in 1811 and appointed him curate to Alexander MacDonell in Upper Canada. In 1815 he became a missioner in Nova Scotia. In 1840 he succeeded Macdonnell as bishop of the Diocese of Kingston.
The Times Ecclesiastical Appointments Thursday, Jul 03, 1890; pg. 9; Issue 33054; col D He then served the Anglican Church in Canada before a lengthy spell as Missioner within the Diocese of Exeter. His final post (before his appointment to the episcopate) was at the united parish of St Michael and All Angels with All Saints , Paddington.The Times, Thursday, Jun 05, 1919; pg.
Parish web site After this he was Vice-Principal at Bishops College, Cheshunt and then a Chaplain in the RNVR until the end of World War II. Returning to Cheshunt he was its Vicar until 1957 and then Missioner Canon Stipendiary for the Diocese of Wakefield, a post he held until 1962. He was then Provost of Wakefield until 1971.
Despite this both places could not cope with the demand for accommodation and a public subscription was taken up to construct Royal Naval House in Grosvenor Street. Lord Carrington officially opened Royal Naval House in 1890. The land cost , the building , which was later extended, and the furnishings . Shearston resigned as Missioner to become Superintendent of Royal Naval House in September 1890.
Herbert Lovell Clarke (15 August 1881 - 4 April 1962) was Archdeacon of LeedsTelegraph on-line from 1940 until 1950. Clarke was born into an eminent ecclesiastical family: his father was the first Anglican Archbishop of Melbourne. He was educated at Magdalen College School, Oxford and St John's College, Cambridge.Janus He was Assistant Missioner at Lady Margaret Church, Walworth then a Curate at Wimbledon.
The Hampshire Advertiser (Southampton, England), Saturday, 28 January 1893; pg. 8; Issue 4866. 19th Century British Library Newspapers: Part II. After this he was a Canon Residentiary at Truro CathedralThe Times, Tuesday, 17 September 1895; pg. 10; Issue 34684; col G Ecclesiastical intelligence and Diocesan Missioner ECCLESIASTICAL APPOINTMENTS .The Standard (London, England), Friday, 20 September 1895; pg. 6; Issue 22221.
While the diocese is divided into archdeaconries and has archdeacons like other dioceses, Coventry diocese is unique in that the two do not correlate. In 2010, the post of Archdeacon of Warwick was replaced by that of Archdeacon Missioner (Morris Rodham was appointed) and statutory oversight over the archdeaconry of Warwick was delegated to the Archdeacon of Coventry (then Ian Watson). Following Watson's retirement in 2012, John Green was appointed as Acting Archdeacon of Coventry pending his installation into the new role of Archdeacon Pastor, which duly occurred on 9 December 2012.Coventry Diocese – A New Archdeacon for Coventry and Warwickshire These arrangements follow the Bishop's 2009 document Signposts for the Future, and the creation of the two posts of Archdeacon Missioner and Archdeacon Pastor are consistent with the suggested "transitional period" after which there will be only one archdeacon in the diocese.
Mobsby completed an MA in Pastoral Theology validated by Anglia Ruskin University and taught through the Cambridge University's Cambridge Theological Federation part-time whilst still working split between Occupational Therapy and working as a lay pioneer. At the end of training, he was released from the Southwark diocese to be involved in forming a new missional and fresh expression of church at the Church of England church called St Matthew's Westminster in the Diocese of London. He was ordained by the Bishop of London to serve a training title with St Matthew's, Westminster and the Moot Community. In the second year of his curacy and work with Moot, Mobsby met with the new Archbishop's Missioner the then Revd Steven Croft now Bp of Oxford, where he was formally invited to become an Associate Missioner of the new Fresh Expressions initiative.
San Juan Cathedral in the city of Jinotega The Indian city of Jinotega existed before the Spanish arrived. It is unknown when the first Spanish settled in Jinotega. It had to be after the year 1581, because the Spanish Census of 1581 shows it was still an Indian town. Even in 1703 when missioner Fray Margil de Jesus visited Jinotega there were no permanent Spanish settlers there.
Bushyager was ordained in the Church of England as a deacon in 2005 and as a priest in 2006. From 2014 to 2020, she was Vicar of St Paul's Church, Dorking in the Diocese of Guildford. She previously served in parish ministry in the Dioceses of Southwell and Nottingham and of Oxford, as a school chaplain, and as a missioner in the Diocese of London.
Unlike his earlier fiery denunciation of clerics and denominations, he now was able to work alongside them, although he still did not accept them as fellow-believers in the "Jesus Way".Roberts 1990, p. 233. Cooney had circumnavigated the globe 3 times in his missions by the early 1950s."Third World Trip For Missioner, 88", The Advertiser (Adelaide, South Australia), 2 June 1954, p. 12.
Loane was born in Southsea in 1863. Her elder sister Martha became a nurse and by 1897 the first article was appearing in the Nursing Notes. Over the next 14 years, more articles appeared in Nursing Notes and then she moved on to the Evening News and The Spectator. Using their joint expertise she wrote nursing textbooks including The District Nurse as Health Missioner.
In August 1904, the priest Fidel Maíz proposed to raise a monument in homage of Amancio González. The Town Council of Emboscada agreed and raised in the Church’s square a wall with an effigy on bronze that prays: “In memory of Priest Amancio González y Escobar, illustrious missioner, great Paraguayan. Forever father of Emboscada”. A renowned artery of neighborhood Vista Alegre, in Asunción was named after him.
Nevertheless, the judge directed the jury to find the defendant guilty and Fr Filcock was sentenced to the gallows for high treason. During his time as a missioner he had known Anne Line, a convert to the Catholic faith and widow whose husband had died in exile after being caught attending Mass. She had managed a variety of safe-houses for priests and lay faithful.
In 2016, McConnell became increasingly active at Presbyterian-affiliated Pittsburgh Theological Seminary (PTS). He was named a member of the board of directors and was a presenter during inaugural festivities of school president David Esterline. In October 2016, the Rev. Canon Dr. Cathy Brall, then canon missioner for the Diocese of Pittsburgh and former provost of Trinity Cathedral, was named PTS's director of field education.
After a curacy in St John's Wood he was Assistant Missioner at Rajshahi, Bangladesh then Chaplain at his old college.Crockfords (London, Church House, 1995) He was Selection Secretary for the ACCM from 1978 to 1985; Team Rector of Grantham from 1986 to 1996;Grantham Matters Archdeacon of Surrey from 1996Church news. The Times (London, England), Thursday, December 21, 1995; pg. 20; Issue 65456 to 2005;Church News.
Carter was ordained a deacon in 1878 and a priest in Truro in 1879; he was curate of St Paul's Truro (1878–80). He served as prebendary of the Collegiate Church of Endellion (1880-4), canon missioner of Truro Cathedral (1884–95), Select Preacher at Cambridge (1888), Six Preacher and Tait Missioner at Canterbury Cathedral (1895–1900), and was an honorary canon of Canterbury Cathedral (1896–1900). In early 1900 he was offered the position of dean and rector of Grahamstown, South Africa, and accepted the office, travelling to the country in August that year. He stayed in South Africa until 1911, when he returned to become Rector of Hadleigh, Suffolk (1911–27) and dean of Bocking (1911–27), also serving as Rural Dean of Hadleigh, Suffolk (1912–24), Proctor in Convocation (1922-9) and honorary canon of St Edmondsbury and Ipswich (1922–35).
Following this he was Manchester Diocesan Missioner, then Rural Dean of Liverpool and after that Brighton. He was then elected Bishop of Glasgow and Galloway in 1938."Scottish Episcopal Clergy, 1689-2000" Bertie, D.M: Edinburgh T & T Clark Eight years later he became Primus of Scotland, a post he held until his retirement in 1952. An Honorary Chaplain to the King,The Times, Tuesday, 21 Jul 1936; pg.
He was ordained deacon by Bishop John Williams in 1876, after which he became assistant at All Saints' Church in Worcester, Massachusetts. He was ordained priest on December 19, 1877 by Bishop Benjamin Henry Paddock after which he became missioner at Grace Church in South Boston. In 1880 he became assistant priest at Saint Thomas' Church. New York City, while in 1887 he became Archdeacon of New York.
Barry Dugmore (born 1961) is an Anglican priest who has served as Archdeacon Missioner in the Diocese of Coventry since October 2019. Dugmore trained through the Southern Theological Education and Training Scheme and was ordained in 2002. His first post was a curacy in Cowplain. He was the incumbent at Tiverton from 2007 to 2015; and Mission Enabler for the Diocese of Exeter from 2015 until his appointment as an archdeacon.
On October 12, 2007, while he was serving as Archbishop's Missioner in the Diocese of Quebec, Drainville was elected coadjutor bishop of the diocese at a special electoral synod. He was ordained to the episcopate on January 18, 2008. He became diocesan bishop on the retirement of Archbishop Bruce Stavert, in 2009. On May 5, 2016, Bruce Myers was consecrated as bishop and became coadjutor bishop and automatic successor to Drainville.
In 1967 he began two years as an Urban Missioner for the Conference work in Metropolitan Detroit. When the United Methodist Church established a General Commission on Religion and Race in 1968, Rev. White became its first General Secretary, serving in that capacity until 1984. The North Central Jurisdictional Conference of the U.M. Church elected him Bishop in 1984 and assigned him to the Illinois Area, which he served 1984-1992.
Jelley was raised in Brighton and studied theology and religious studies at the University of Leeds, before being ordained as a deacon in Bradford in 1997. Previously, she served as Director of Mission, Discipleship and Ministry in the Diocese of Durham and Canon Missioner of Durham Cathedral since 2015. Before joining Durham, she ministered in the Dioceses of Bradford, Guildford and Chichester, and in Uganda with the Church Mission Society.
Granbery entered the Methodist ministry and served as assistant preacher and missioner in Washington, Richmond, and Petersburg. He was a chaplain on the campus of the University of Virginia from 1859 to 1861. During the American Civil War of 1861–1865, Granberry served as a chaplain in the Confederate States Army.Stephen Cushman, Bloody Promenade: Reflections on a Civil War Battle, Charlottesville, Virginia: University of Virginia Press, 1999, p.
He was Assistant Curate, Queensbury, 1966–68; Associate Director of Training, Southwark, 1969–73; Assistant Curate, Limpsfield with Titsey, 1969–77; Vice- Principal, Southwark Ordination Course, 1970–72; Assistant Missioner, Diocese of Southwark, 1973–77; Canon Residentiary, Newcastle Cathedral, 1977–84; Diocesan Missioner, Diocese of Newcastle, 1977–84; Bishop of Kingston 1984–1992 (an area bishop from 1991); William Leech Professorial Fellow in Applied Christian Theology, University of Durham, 1992–1997; Honorary assistant bishop in the dioceses of Durham and of Newcastle, 1992–97; Visitor General, Community of Sisters of the Church, 1991–2001, a Member of the Doctrine Commission, 1991–2003, and President of the Modern Churchpeople's Union, 1990–96 and of the Society for Study of Theology, 2003–04; Bishop to HM Prisons, 2001–2007 and from January 2008 became the President of the National Council for Independent Monitoring Boards for prisons. He was appointed Bishop of Worcester in 1997.
William Everingham (1856 - 1919) was Archdeacon of Suffolk from 1917 until his deathDeath Of Archdeacon Everingham The Times (London, England), Tuesday, Sep 16, 1919; pg. 7; Issue 42206 He studied for the priesthood at Lincoln Theological College and was ordained Deacon in 1879; and Priest in 1880.Crockford's Clerical Directory 1898 p412: London, Horace Cox, 1898 After a curacy in Diss he served as a Chaplain to the Forces in Singapore, Hong Kong and Malacca. He was Missioner of the Diocese of Salisbury from 1890 to 1900; and Chaplain to the Bishop of Bristol from 1900 until 1904 when he became that diocese's Missioner, a post he held until his appointment as Archdeacon.‘EVERINGHAM, Ven. William’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2016; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014 ; online edn, April 2014 accessed 15 Jan 2017 He died on 14 September 1919; and his wife Clara in 1932.Deaths.
By the 1940s, the group had expanded into other Yoruba towns and cities and an emerging issue of coordinating the expansion arose. Mustafa Ekemode was called on to be the chief missioner with a salary paid by the society. He was the society's first salaried member. In the early 1940s, the group gradually withdrew from meetings and prayers at the Lagos Central Mosque, and started its own Friday prayers near its own school.
Walter Jenks was an eminent Anglican priest in the first half of the 20th century. He was born in Lambeth on 26 May 1864, educated at King's College London and ordained in 1888."The Clergy List, Clerical Guide and Ecclesiastical Directory" London, Hamilton & Co 1889 He held curacies at North Molton and Chipping Barnet. After this he was Assistant Missioner for the Diocese of St Albans and then Priest in charge of St Margaret's, Aberlour.
Mort du Père Buteux - 10 mai 1652 Jacques Buteux was born 11 April 1600 in Abbeville, Picardy, the son of a tanner. On 2 October 1620 he entered the Society of Jesus at Rouen. From 1622 to 1625 he studied philosophy at the Collège in La Flèche, where the revered Acadian missioner Father Énemond Massé was in residence prior to his second trip to New France. Buteux was ordained priest in 1633.
Why can't I just be your little suburban housewife?' While volunteering in the Cleveland Diocese Youth Ministry with the poor, she decided to join the Diocesan Mission Project in El Salvador. She was accepted into and completed the lay-missionary training course at Maryknoll in New York State. Donovan traveled to El Salvador in July 1977, where she worked as a lay missioner in La Libertad, along with Dorothy Kazel, an Ursuline nun.
In 1889, Royal Naval House was erected and Shearston resigned as Missioner to become Superintendent of Royal Naval House in September 1890. Mrs Shearston acted as housekeeper. The men, grateful for their warm welcome, soon referred to the premises as 'Johnny's', by which they were known until closed in 1970. The place is important in demonstrating aesthetic characteristics and/or a high degree of creative or technical achievement in New South Wales.
21 April 2019 Shortly after, Æthelfrith was killed in battle against Edwin, who with the support of Rædwald of East Anglia claimed the throne. Edwin married the Christian Æthelburh of Kent, daughter of Æthelberht, and sister of King Eadbald of Kent. A condition of their marriage was that she be allowed to continue the practice of her religion. When Æthelburh traveled north to Edwin's court, she was accompanied by the missioner Paulinus of York.
Anderson was a native of Elgin or Moray, his mother being a sister of John Lesley. After a basic education at Elgin grammar school, and a course of classical study at the University of Edinburgh, he entered the Society of Jesus at Rome in 1597. In time Anderson acquired a reputation as linguist, mathematician, philosopher, and divine. Sent to Scotland as a missioner, he arrived via London where he was in November 1609.
Coming to England he held incumbencies at Holmfirth from 1933–1942 and Brighouse before an eight-year period as Canon Missioner for the Diocese of Wakefield. In 1955 he became Suffragan Bishop of Dunwich, a post he held until retirement in 1967.Commonwealth miscellanea He was probably the first Bishop in England for some generations not to have attended university. He died on 16 July 1984The Times, Friday, 20 July 1984; p.
Personal recollection - I was babtised by McCulloch at St Thomas' Church Ellesmere Port June 1971 He was chaplain to Christ's College, Cambridge from 1970 to 1973 and was also the Director of Studies in Theology there until 1975. He also served as Diocesan Missioner in the Diocese of Norwich from 1973 to 1978. He was appointed Archdeacon of Sarum and rector of the city-centre church of St Thomas’s in the Diocese of Salisbury in 1978.
Robert Moody was elected as the bishop coadjutor on September 19, 1987 at St. Paul’s Cathedral on the first ballot. Upon the retirement of McAllister he became our fourth diocesan Bishop. He was committed to mission by pursuing an active ministry among the Native Americans with the appointment of an Indian missioner and the development of a center for Indian ministry in Watonga Oklahoma. On April 19, 1995 the Murrah building was destroyed by a bombing.
Inside Phong Nha cave, many Champa style ceramics, earthware vases with lotus-shaped ruby-colored, slight pink mouth."Cái nôi" văn hóa và lịch sử Phong Nha - Kẻ Bàng In 1899, a French missioner, Léopold Cadière surveyed the customs and culture of the local inhabitants living along the Son River. In the letter to École française d'Extrême-Orient, he stated that: "What remains here proves to be valuable for history. To keep it is to help science".
Ford was ordained in the Church of England as a deacon in 1979 and as a priest in 1980. He began his career with a curacy at Christ Church, Forest Hill after which he was Vicar of St Augustine's Lee and then domestic chaplain to the Bishop of Horsham. From 1994 to 2000, he served as diocesan missioner for the Diocese of Chichester. From 2000 to 2005, he was a residentiary canon and precentor of Chichester Cathedral.
The Rev G.F Gillett was appointed as the first Missioner. The church became a centre for a number of clubs and societies meeting a variety of practical and spiritual needs. In 1905 Kennedy-Cox, who had achieved success as a playwright with several plays on the London stage, resumed his volunteer work at the mission. In 1907 he decided to commit himself fully to the venture, gave up his theatrical career became a full-time mission staff member.
For some time he was prefect of studies in the English College. He was raised to the rank of a professed father of the Society of Jesus on 30 September 1618. During 1626 he was a missioner in the Suffolk district. He was apprehended in 1629, and was committed to the Clink prison in Southwark, but at the instance of queen Henrietta Maria's mother, Marie de' Medici, he was released and banished in January 1632 (ODNB).
Susan BellAnglican Samizdat has been Bishop of Niagara in the Anglican Church of Canada since 2018.Niagara Anglican Bell is from Hamilton, Ontario and was educated at McMaster University and the University of Toronto. She was the Chaplain at Wycliffe College, Toronto from 1997 to 1999;on the staff of St Martin in the Fields, Toronto from 1999 to 2018. She was also Canon Missioner for the Diocese of Toronto from 2013 until her election to the episcopate.
After university he turned to the Ministry. Denney was licensed to preach by the Presbytery of Greenock on 16 May 1883 and was appointed Missioner to the Hill Street Mission of St. John's (Free Church), Glasgow. In 1886, he was called to be pastor of the East Free Church, Broughty Ferry, where he succeeded his friend and mentor Professor Bruce. At Broughty Ferry Denney was a popular preacher who preached the Gospel to the common people.
Thomas George Vernon Inman (1904–1989) was an eminent National Church Institutions Database of Manuscripts and Archives Anglican bishop in the third quarter of the 20th century.Crockfords(London, Church House 1975) He was educated at Selwyn College, Cambridge “Who was Who” 1897-1990 London, A & C Black, 1991 and ordained in 1931. He was Assistant Missioner at the Wellington College Mission, Walworth before emigrating to South Africa. He then held curacies at Estcourt and St Paul, Durban.
F A Dalrymple-Hamilton personal research for new biography. Following his licensing in 1857 he became a missioner first in Carstairs Junction/Village and later in Craigsmill, near Blairgowrie, thereafter a Probationer Minister in Gilcomston Free Church under the ministry of Dr MacGilvary for a period of six months.J. Strahan, Andrew Bruce Davidson, London 1917, p. 72. In 1858, Davidson became Hebrew tutor in New College, with the express purpose of teaching the Hebrew language to the first class.
Morris Rodham (born 1959) is an Anglican priest who served as Archdeacon Missioner (Archdeacon of Warwick) in the Diocese of Coventry 2010–2019.Coventry Cathedral Morris Rodham was educated at Durham University, graduating with a degree in Classics as a member of Hatfield College in 1982. He later studied for a PGCE at St John's College, Durham, graduating in 1985. He further studied at Trinity College, Bristol; was ordained Deacon in 1993; and Priest in 1994.
William Orchard was received into the Roman Catholic Church in Rome on 2 June 1932, followed by many of his congregants. He subsequently wrote an account of his conversion, From Faith to Faith, in 1933. He was ordained as a Roman Catholic priest in 1935 and became an itinerant preacher, apologist for the Catholic faith, missioner and writer both in Britain and America. Tired by his many travels, he became in 1943 the chaplain to a community of Cistercian nuns in Brownshill, Gloucestershire.
Taylor Smith was ordained in the Church of England as a deacon in 1885 and as a priest in 1886.The Clergy List, Clerical Guide and Ecclesiastical Directory. London, Hamilton & Co, 1889 From 1885 to 1890, he served his curacy at St Paul's Church, Penge in the Diocese of Rochester.Who was Who 1897-1990 London, A & C Black, 1991 . He then moved to colonial Sierra Leone, and served as Sub- Dean of St. George's Cathedral, Freetown, and Diocesan Missioner from 1890 to 1897.
J.John has been recognized by several industry leaders because of his 30+ years working around the world. In 1998, J.John received a Lambeth MA from Archbishop George Carey, in recognition of Church Growth and Evangelism. J.John was appointed an Honorary Canon of Coventry Cathedral on 22 February 2003.J John hopes to pack 'em in again at Coventry Telegraph; published 5 November 2003; retrieved 23 June 2015 On 4 March 2012 J.John was ordained Presbyter and Canon Missioner by Bishop David Carr OSL.
Allen grew up in Kitsap County, Washington, where he graduated from Central Kitsap High School. He pursued undergraduate and graduate studies at Pacific Lutheran University, Seattle University, General Theological Seminary, and Ridley Hall. He has served as a lay missioner in London, pastor of an Episcopal parish in Cambodia, university pastor, and a missionary to Bangladesh through the United Society for the Propagation of the Gospel. Prior to 2008, he was rector of St. Paul's Episcopal Church, Bellingham, in the Diocese of Olympia.
For several years he preached in missions from Brittany to Nantes. As his reputation as a missioner grew, he became known as "the good Father from Montfort". At Pontchateau he attracted hundreds of people to help him in the construction of a huge Calvary. However, on the very eve of its blessing, the Bishop, having heard it was to be destroyed on the orders of the King of France under the influence of members of the Jansenist school, forbade its benediction.
Maria McAuley (1847 – September 19, 1919) is an American missioner who, along with her husband Jerry, founded the McAuley Water Street Mission in New York City. Self-described as "river thief" and "fallen woman", respectively, Jerry and Maria McAuley's Mission became America's first rescue mission, and is now known as the New York City Rescue Mission. The McAuleys' Mission became the first of over 300 rescue missions in the United States. All together these rescue missions form the Association of Gospel Rescue Missions.
He was ordained a deacon in 1977 and a priest in 1978 by Bishop Robert S. Kerr of the Diocese of Vermont. A proponent of Total Ministry, he served from 1985 to 1989 as canon missioner for cluster ministries in the Oklahoma, then served for 10 years as ministry development coordinator in Northern Michigan before being elected bishop in 1999. He was married and had three grown children. Kelsey's chief consecrator to the office of bishop was Presiding Bishop Frank Griswold.
In 1998, Robertson was appointed the Auckland City Missioner, having previously been a teacher , counsellor and involved in youth work and a manager of a social services agency . She was the first woman and first non-cleric to hold the role. In September 2015 she announced that she would step down from that post at the end of 2015. Robertson is chair of the Data Futures Partnership, chair of the Goodman Fielder Cares Foundation and a member of the Vulnerable Children's Board.
Mark Allin Hodson (29 December 190723 January 1985) was an Anglican bishop in the latter half of the 20th century.Obituary-The Right Rev Mark Hodson The Times Friday, Feb 01, 1985; pg. 14; Issue 62051; col G Educated at University College London and ordained in 1931, he began his career with a curacy at St Dunstan, Stepney Church Web Site after which he was Missioner at St Nicholas Perivale then Rector of Poplar. In 1955 he was appointed Bishop suffragan of Taunton.
Bruno was elected Bishop Coadjutor of the Diocese of Los Angeles on November 13, 1999. Within Episcopal Church polity, a bishop coadjutor is elected to succeed a diocesan bishop at such time as the latter chooses to retire. From 1990 to 1993, Bruno served the Diocese of Los Angeles as its missioner for stewardship and development. He was an elected deputy to the national church's 2000 General Convention, having assisted in the convention's operations and security services for several years.
St. Mary's was the diocesan seminary for the Diocese of Birmingham, but in fact functioned as a general seminary serving a number of dioceses. It was the practice of the Diocese of Westminster to send seminarians to St. Mary's. Arendzen was ordained in 1895. He served as a diocesan missioner. Church of The Sacred Heart, St Ives From 1900 to 1903 he served as parish priest for Sacred Heart Church, St Ives, while matriculated at Christ's College, Cambridge, taking his BA in 1901.
Arthur William Blaxall was born in Britain on 15 May 1891. He served in World War I as a medical orderly, worked as a missioner to the deaf in Birmingham and went to South Africa in 1923, together with his wife Florence. He founded the Ezenzeleni workshop for the blind at Roodepoort in 1939. In 1954, he founded the Arthur Blaxall School for the Blind, but it was forced to change its name when he was exiled for his opposition to the National Party government in 1964.
In 1970 Chadwick returned to Lesotho, where as Diocesan Missioner he was to build an ecumenical conference and training centre in Maseru, with the aim of building racial equality and reconciliation. After six years running the centre, the leadership skills he had demonstrated there saw him selected in 1976 as the next Bishop of Kimberley and Kuruman in South Africa. He was enthroned in St Cyprian's Cathedral, Kimberley in a service complete with fanfares from Salvation Army trumpeters. Chadwick was soon involved in a schools boycott.
The Church of the Incarnation built in 1896 is a historic Carpenter Gothic Episcopal church building located at 111 North 5th Street in Highlands, Macon County, North Carolina. The Rev. John A. Deal, the first Episcopal missioner in Macon County, was responsible for founding the Church of the Incarnation as well Saint Agnes Episcopal Church in Franklin, the county seat. Its first building, a Victorian Gothic Revival wood frame building, was built in 1896; it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1996.
He went to England as a missioner and, in 1587, was imprisoned in the Tower of London. In 1593, he was confined with other Catholics in Wisbech Castle. He clashed with Father William Weston, who found him disobedient, setting off the "Wisbech Stirs". When examined at the Tower for treasonable practices, Edward Squire, an emissary from some English priests in Spain, affirmed that he had come with a letter (which he threw into the sea off Plymouth) from Father Henry Walpole to Bagshaw at Wisbech.
Edward John HoltNPG details MBE (29 September 1867 – 6 November 1948) was Dean of Trinidad from 1914 to 1947.Mother Church TT Holt was born into an ecclesiastical family in Grantham he was the elder son of the Rev. T. E. Holt, Diocesan Missioner for Winchester - ‘HOLT, Very Rev. Edward John’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2007; online edn, Oxford University Press, Dec 2012 ; online edn, Oct 2012 accessed 21 Feb 2014 and educated at St Augustine's College, Canterbury.
Unfortunately for the Missioner, the soldiers arrived without provisions of food, and proceeded to consume the little reserve of food they had in the fortress. The same happened every time the Governor made an official visit; he always arrived with his entire committee and made use of all the resources of the place, including horses and food. The priest could find the positive side of this “official visits”. On December 1788, he received some hope when was informed of the royal approval that congratulated his labor.
He was ordained after a period of study at Ripon College Cuddesdon in 1874. He began his career with a curacy at Christ Church, Bootle, after which he was Missioner for the Diocese of Winchester,“Who was Who”1897-1990 London, A & C Black, 1991 and then Vicar of Bingley. Following this he was Archdeacon of Craven and then Suffragan Bishop of RichmondThe Times, Tuesday, 30 September 1913; p. 3; Issue 40330; col B Ecclesiastical Intelligence New Bishop of Richmond until his death on 19 March 1921.
Always thinking of the needs of those in isolated communities, in September 1910 Flynn published The Bushman's Companion which was distributed free throughout inland Australia. He took up the opportunity to succeed E. E. Baldwin as the Smith of Dunesk Missioner at Beltana, a tiny settlement 500 kilometres north of Adelaide. He was ordained in Adelaide for this work in January 1911. The missioners visited the station properties in a wide radius of Beltana, and their practical and spiritual service was valued in the isolated localities.
He was ordained Deacon and Priest in the Diocese of Connecticut in 1980. A 1975 cum laude graduate of Western Connecticut State University, Bishop Ely received his Master of Divinity degree in 1980 from the University of the South in Sewanee, Tennessee. The University of the South awarded Bishop Ely an honorary Doctorate in 2003. Prior to being elected to lead the Episcopal Diocese of Vermont, Bishop Ely served as Missioner of the Greater Hartford (Connecticut) Regional Ministry for 10 years and was key to its formation.
Lawley with his trademark umbrella (c.1877) In 1877, aged 17, Lawley was converted at a meeting of The Christian Mission in Bradford, and soon became the Mission's fortieth evangelist. The young Lawley wanted to wear a dress that would declare to all that he belonged to God, so he obtained a missioner-frock coat, black necktie, a wide brimmed hat, and an umbrella which he used to wave in processions. Lawley's first command was the Spennymoor Christian Mission Station which opened on 28 April 1878.
In 1621 he had returned from exile, and was exercising his spiritual functions in London. After serving as a missioner in the Oxford district, he was appointed socius to the master of novices at Watten in 1633, and subsequently confessor at Liège and Ghent. At one period he was penitentiary at St. Peter's, Rome. He was chaplain at Wardour Castle during its siege by Sir Edward Hungerford in 1643, took an active part in its gallant defence by Lady Blanche Arundel, and was employed in treating with the enemy for terms of honourable capitulation.
David Brierley (12 December 1953; 1 August 2009) was Archdeacon of Sudbury from 2006 to 2009. Brierley was educated at the University of Bristol and ordained in 1978. After a curacy in Rochdale he held incumbencies in Eccles and Great Harwood.'BRIERLEY, Ven. David James’, Who's Who 2013, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2013; online edn, Oxford University Press, Dec 2012 ; online edn, Nov 2012 accessed 17 September 2020 He was Canon Residentiary at Bradford Cathedral from 2002 to 2004 and then Diocesan Missioner until ghis appointment as Archdeacon.
He was made a Canon in 1911. In 1918 he succeeded Bishop Wilson as Archdeacon of Adelaide, the first native South Australian to hold that position. ;St Peter's Mission In 1908 St Peter's College followed the lead of similar public schools in England in establishing an outreach mission at St Mary Magdalene Church, Moore Street, city to benefit people in one of the poorer districts of Adelaide, and Hornabrook was appointed missioner. Hornabrook had a considerable influence on the architecture and fitting-out of the mission church, decidedly in the Anglo-Catholic mould.
He remained as a member of the order and of the Roman Catholic Church till 1969, when he joined the Anglican Church of Canada at St Matthew's Church in Ottawa in September 1969. On April 17, 1971, he married Marie Elizabeth Hamlin, a former nun of the Anglican Order of St Anne. Eventually they adopted and raised three children. In 1971, Dyer was invited by Bishop John Burgess of Massachusetts to serve as a missioner to the clergy of his diocese and on June 15, 1971, he was received as an Episcopal priest.
He studied for ordination at St Stephen's House, Oxford, and never married. He was made deacon in 1906 and ordained priest in 1908, serving his curacy at All Saints', Cheltenham. Between 1911 and 1915 he was Assistant Missioner to the Gloucester Diocesan Mission before serving Leckhampton as curate-in-charge (1915–1921); during the latter he was also a temporary chaplainReference in National archives (1918–1920). He had been interviewed by the Chaplain-General in July 1918, was described as 'Dark, keen... good' and sent to France to work in a Casualty Clearing Station.
Annals of the Catholic Hierarchy in England and Scotland, J. M. Stark, 1883, p. 219 Walsh continued his studies at Old Hall Green. Stapleton was appointed vicar apostolic of the Midland district on 29 May 1800, and took up residence at Longbirch, near Wolverhampton. He brought Walsh, then a deacon, to serve as secretary. Walsh was ordained priest on 19 September 1801, and continued under Stapleton's successor, Bishop John Milner, as chaplain and missioner at Longbirch until October, 1804, when he was sent to Sedgley Park School as chaplain.
St Joseph's Māori Girls' College was founded in 1867 by the Sisters of Our Lady of the Missions. The college commenced on the property which is now Sacred Heart College, Napier when the Sisters and the Māori Missioner, Fr Reigner SM, started a little boarding school for Māori girls at first called St Joseph's Providence, which opened on 10 October 1867 with twenty pupils. The first principal was Sister Mary St John. The college usually had an enrollment of up to 60 pupils each year into the twentieth century.
Less than two years later Benson's diary entry on Walpole's subsequent social career reveals his thoughts on his protégé's progress: With Benson's help, Walpole had come to terms with the loss of his faith. Somerset Walpole, himself the son of an Anglican priest, hoped that his eldest son would follow him into the ministry. Walpole was too concerned for his father's feelings to tell him he was no longer a believer, and on graduation from Cambridge in 1906 he took a post as a lay missioner at the Mersey Mission to Seamen in Liverpool.
In addition to teaching, he was also a noted preacher. In 1655 he was sent to Lindau as superior and missioner, but after five years returned to Dillingen where he was chancellor until his death, which followed a sudden stroke of apoplexy at table. It is said that his reputation for learning and ability was so widespread that many secular and spiritual princes, bishops, and prelates of Germany asked his advice in the most important matters. His works, of which twenty are known, are chiefly on theological subjects.
A native of Ormskirk, Lancashire, was educated at Douay College, and at the English seminary of St. Gregory in Paris. When the seminary was dissolved he went to the college of St. Omer, of which his great- uncle William Wilkinson was for some time president. Fletcher was one of the professors at St. Omer throughout the imprisonment of the members of the college, at Arras and Dourlens, after the French Revolution. On their release in 1795 Fletcher accompanied them to England, and was successively missioner at Hexham, Blackburn, and Weston Underwood.
James Leo Schuster (1912–2006) was the long-serving 6th bishop of St John's in what was then known as Kaffraria and is now Mthatha.The Times, Thursday, Oct 18, 1956; pg. 2; Issue 53665; col A "New Bishop of St John's" Educated at Lancing College and Keble College, Oxford,Who was Who 1897-1990 London, A & C Black, 1991 he was ordained in 1937. Assistant missioner at Rotherhithe until 1938, he was subsequently chaplain at St Stephen's House, Oxford, and then served in the Second World War as a chaplain to the Forces.
Shortly afterwards, on 24 April 1576, he left for the English mission in the company of another priest, Cuthbert Mayne. While Mayne headed for his native South West England, Payne resided for the most part with Anne, widow of Sir William Petre, and daughter of Sir William Browne, sometime Lord Mayor of the City of London, at Ingatestone, Essex, in whose house was a "priest hole",Camm OSB, Bede, Lives of the English Martyrs, p.429, Longmans, Green & Co., London, 1914 but also in London. The missioner passed as a steward of Lady Petre.
Thomas Joseph Savage was an Anglican bishop in the third quarter of the 20th century. Born on 5 February 1900, and educated at Highgate and Peterhouse,“Who was Who” 1897-2007 London, A & C Black, 2007 he was ordained in 1927.Crockford's Clerical Directory 1940-41 Oxford, OUP, 1941 Following a curacy at St John’s, Waterloo RoadChurch details he worked at the South African Church Railway Mission and was then a Toc H padre. After a spell as rector of Springs, Transvaal he was vicar of Leominster then Tait Missioner for the Diocese of Canterbury.
He was banished from the kingdom in March 1620–1 by virtue of a warrant from the lords. On endeavouring to return from exile in July 1623 he was seized at the port of Dover, but was eventually released on bail with the loss of his "books, pictures, and other impertinences". Everard's name appeared in John Gee's list of priests and Jesuits of the London area in 1624, and also in a catalogue seized at Clerkenwell, the London residence of the order, in 1628. He was then a missioner in Suffolk.
Ruth Hurditch was born in Marylebone in 1875, the sixth child of an evangelical missioner, C. Russell Hurditch. She helped her father organize mass meetings in Exeter Hall. In 1900 – despite a Cockney accent which led to some opposition from the Ladies' Consultative Committee – she travelled to Toro, Uganda to work for the Church Missionary Society. In On the Borders of Pygmy Land (1904), Fisher described the women of Toro "before the advent of Christianity", in terms which are clearly freighted with gender, class and imperial expectations: In 1902, she married the Rev.
10; Issue 32889; col A After a curacy at St Bartholomew's, SydenhamPhoto of church he was Wilberforce Missioner in South London "The Clergy List, Clerical Guide and Ecclesiastical Directory" London, John Phillips, 1900 then Vicar of St Paul's, Lorrimore Square; and later became Archdeacon of Worcester before his elevation to the Episcopate. He was consecrated a bishop by Randall Davidson, Archbishop of Canterbury, on the Feast of the Conversion of St Paul 1921 (25 January) at Westminster Abbey. He died on 28 March 1938.The Times, Tuesday, Mar 29, 1938; pg.
The museum in Santiago has 3 spaces where there is the Passion and Death of Jesus Christ and La Piedad, which is one of the most noted sculptures in the museum. There are also many paintings in exhibition. The Benedictine monastery "Tupasy María" is a place of meditation, it was founded in 1984. The inhabitants of this city preserve the old traditions and in January it is celebrated the "Fiesta de la Tradicion Misionera" (Missioner Traditional Festivity), when artists and horse breaker from Paraguay, Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay, show their abilities in breaking-in and horseracing.
Born in Wairoa, Hawke's Bay, he entered the Methodist Ministry in 1923 and concentrated on social work. He was Auckland Methodist City Missioner for six years. After broadcasting from Radio Station 1ZR - run by the firm of Lewis Eady - he established the Friendly Road Broadcasting Station 1ZB in 1933, associated with the Friendly Road church (Aunt Daisy broadcast on these stations, and they supported the Labour Party). Shortly before the 1935 election on Sunday 24 November, an address by Uncle Scrim which was expected to urge listeners to vote Labour was jammed by the Post Office.
In October 1818, Ngqika mobilised his warriors and sent for help from the British Cape Colony. Ngqika and his men sought advice from Ntsikana, the royal diviner and spiritual counsellor, in his quest to destroy the Ndlambe Great Place. Ntsikana first offered his visionary services to Ndlambe, who then rejected them since he was already served by Nxele, prompting Ntsikana to find his spiritual home under the trusteeship of Ngqika. As with the other charismatic millenarian prophet Nxele, who was in service to Ndlambe, Ntsikana came under the influence of the missioner, Johannes van der Kemp, stationed at Bethelsdorp near Port Elizabeth.
Rodham and Green remained, legally, collated to the Archdeaconries of Warwick and of Coventry.National Archdeacons' Forum — Archdeacons’ News — #26, July 2017 (Accessed 9 September 2017) Green retired at the end of August 2017, and Clive Hogger joined him as Acting Archdeacon for July and August, then remained Acting Archdeacon after Green's retirement.Diocese of Coventry — Appointment of Acting Archdeacon (Accessed 9 September 2017) Sue Field was collated Archdeacon Pastor and Archdeacon of Coventry on 18 March 2018;Diocese of Coventry — Hundreds welcome our new Archdeacon Pastor (Accessed 25 March 2018) Barry Dugmore was collated Archdeacon Missioner and Archdeacon of Warwick on 6 October 2019.
In 1930 they founded the Brotherhood of St Laurence. Its four original members pledged to remain unmarried while part of the brotherhood, to live frugally and to practise an active community life. He was appointed as missioner to St Mary's Mission within the parish of St Peter's Eastern Hill in Melbourne - both he and Guy Cox licensed as curates in the same parish (1933) Tucker moved in 1949 to Carrum Downs where he soon embarked on his new project, Food for Peace. He encouraged residents at the settlement to contribute from their pensions to send a shipment of rice to India.
Further, before leaving Ireland, the bishop had organized a support group of Catholic mothers to provide assistance to the missions, of which Martin's own mother had become the president. They agreed that a religious congregation was needed to meet the needs of the mission. Upon her return to Calabar, Martin made a 30-day retreat. In April 1922 the bishop traveled there and held two weeks of consultations with Martin, Roynane and another missioner, during which the Rule and Constitutions of a new congregation were hammered out, with the understanding that Martin would be the foundress.
Bowers in 1916 Memorial in King's Lynn Minster John Phillips Allcot Bowers (15 May 1854 – 6 January 1926) was Bishop of Thetford in the Church of England in 1903–1926.“Who was Who” 1897-1990 London, A & C Black, 1991 John Bowers was born in Portsea, Portsmouth, Hampshire and educated at Magdalen School and St John's College, Cambridge. His first post after ordination was as a Curate at Coggeshall. From 1882 to 1903 he was Domestic Chaplain to the Bishop of Gloucester and went on to be Diocesan Missioner and a Residentiary Canon at Gloucester Cathedral (1890–1902).
In Ethiopia, the quest for modern medicine beyond traditional practice started during Emperor Lebnedingil’s reign in the 15th century, when the emperor appealed to the Portuguese king for physicians and surgeons to cure illnesses. Later in 1866, western medicine was introduced by Swedish missioner doctors and Nurses. The first Ethiopian hospital was established in 1897, the Ministry of Health in 1948 and the first medical school in the country opened in 1964. It was only during Emperor Menelik’s time (1889-1913) that the first foreign-trained Ethiopian medical doctor, Hakim Workneh Eshete, began practicing medicine in Addis Ababa.
He was an M.C.C. cricketer and in 1968 he had brief appearances for the Leicestershire 2nd XI cricket club in the Second XI Championship. and played for Hunstanton and Leicestershire Golf Clubs. He began his career with curacies at St Paul's, Margate and St Andrew, Plymouth. After this he was Chaplain of Kelly College, Tavistock then Vicar of Holy Apostles, Leicester.Debrett's People of Today: Ed Ellis,P (1992, London, Debrett's) p 2101 From 1972 to 1978 he was a Canon of Coventry Cathedral and Coventry Diocesan Missioner when he became Provost of Leicester Cathedral,The Times, Thursday, 9 February 1978; pg.
Francis James Saunders Davies (30 December 1937 - 30 March 2018) was the Anglican Bishop of Bangor from 2000 until 2004.Announces resignation Davies was educated at the University College of North Wales and Selwyn College, Cambridge.Crockford's Clerical Directory2008/2009 (100th edition), Church House Publishing () Ordained in 1964,Who's Who2008: London, A & C Black, 2008 he began his ministry as a curate at Holyhead before being appointed a minor canon of Bangor Cathedral. From 1969 to 1975 he was Rector at Llanllyfni, Canon Missioner of Bangor until 1979 then Vicar of Gorseinon and rural dean from 1983.
Steven John Lindsey Croft (born 29 May 1957) is a Church of England bishop and theologian specialising in mission. He is the Bishop of Oxford since the confirmation of his election on 6 July 2016.Diocese of Oxford — Legal ceremony brings Bishop Steven a step closer & Diocese of Oxford — Letter from Bishop Steven (Both accessed 8 July 2016) He was the Bishop of Sheffield from 2008 until 2016; previously he was Archbishops’ Missioner and Team Leader of Fresh Expressions, a joint Church of England and Methodist initiative. He falls within the open evangelical tradition of Anglicanism.
His higher studies were probably made in Spain. In 1614, he filled the office of minister in the English college of St. Alban at Valladolid ; he held the same office in the college at St. Omer in 1621 ; and he was professed of the four vows 12 May 1622. From 1622 until 1632, he was a missioner in the London district, and he was one of the Jesuits arrested at the Clerkenwell residence, by the officers of the privy council in March 1628. In 1632, he was in confinement in the New Prison, London, and was released in December 1633.
According to Willibald's Life of Saint Boniface, about 723, the missioner cut down the sacred Donar's Oak and used the lumber to build a church dedicated to St. Peter.Willibald. Life of Saint Boniface, (George W. Robinson, trans.) (1916). Harvard University Press Around 744, Saint Sturm established the monastery of Fulda on the ruins of a 6th-century Merovingian royal camp, destroyed 50 years earlier by the Saxons, at a ford on the Fulda River. Following Bede, it was for a long time thought that the name of the Christian holyday of Easter derived from the Anglo-Saxon goddess "Eostre".
Wilfrid may have been blown off course on his trip from England to the continent, and ended up in Frisia; or he may have intended to journey via Frisia to avoid Neustria, whose Mayor of the Palace, Ebroin, disliked Wilfrid. While Wilfrid was at Aldgisl's court, Ebroin offered a bushel of gold coins in return for Wilfrid, alive or dead. Aldgisl's hospitality to Wilfrid was in defiance of Frankish domination. The first missioner was Wihtberht who went to Frisia about 680 and labored for two years with the permission of Aldgisl; but being unsuccessful, Wihtberht returned to England.
He began his career with a curacy at Gedling after which he was: Priest in charge of St Francis Clifton, Nottingham; Vicar of Leamington Hastings; Diocesan Missioner for the Diocese of Coventry then finally, before his appointment to the Episcopate, a Canon Residentiary at Windsor. His first wife died in 1974 and seven years later became the first Bishop to marry a divorced woman.The Times, Wednesday, 10 Jun 1981; pg. 5; Issue 60950; col G Bishop and divorcee marry He was consecrated a bishop on 31 March 1977, by Donald Coggan, Archbishop of Canterbury at Westminster Abbey.
Frost was born in Northumberland, England, in 1887 and from the ages of 13 to 24 was a coal-miner in England and then Australia. He came to New Zealand in 1911, and worked in the Millerton mines before becoming a Methodist minister. He enlisted in the army during World War I he was a soldier in the 1st Otago Tunneling Corps, then became a Chaplain-Captain before being wounded in action in 1918. He was for 14 years a Methodist minister and City Missioner in Auckland initially, but then stationed at Stratford, Dunedin, Edendale, Lyttelton and Tauranga.
From 1985–1991, he served as Director of Youth Ministry in the Episcopal Diocese of Connecticut and was Executive Director of Camp Washington. From 1980 to 1985 he served as Assistant Missioner of the Middlesex Area Cluster Ministry in Connecticut. Current professional associations include the Vermont Ecumenical Council, Vermont Interfaith Action, Cristosal Foundation Board of Directors (supporting Human Rights work in El Salvador) and The Episcopal Church Task Force on the Study of Marriage. Ministry areas of special interest and expertise include ministry development, regional ministry, environmental justice, youth ministry, camp and conference center ministry, and youth suicide prevention.
Geoffrey Osborne Marshall (born 5 January 1948 in Rossett) is the former Dean of Brecon.‘Marshall, Very Rev. Geoffrey Osbourne’, Who's Who 2013, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2013; online edn, Oxford University Press, Dec 2012 ; online edn, Nov 2012 accessed 14 Oct 2013 Marshall was educated at Repton School and Durham University; and was ordained after a period of study at the College of the Resurrection, Mirfield.Crockford's Clerical Directory 1975-76 London: Oxford University Press, 1976 After curacies in Waltham Cross and Welwyn Garden City he held incumbencies in Derbyshire before becoming the Canon Missioner at Derby Cathedral.
In 1983, White entered Cranmer Hall, an Anglican theological college attached to St John's College, Durham. She became a deaconess in 1986. She was ordained deacon in 1987 and priest in 1994. She was a non-stipendiary minister in Chester le Street from 1986 to 1989; the Diocese of Durham's Adviser in Local Mission from 1989 to 1993; Director of Pastoral Studies at Cranmer Hall from 1993 to 1998; Director of Ordinands from 1998 to 2000; its Springboard Missioner from 2000 to 2004; and Adult Education Officer for the Diocese of Peterborough from 2005 to 2010.
More recent stones tend to be in the style of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. At the bottom of the slope towards Ordnance Road is a small section dedicated to children’s graves, while also interred in the Cemetery are some civilians who worked with or for the Army, including the Christian missioner Mrs Louisa Daniell and her daughter Miss Daniell. In the centre is the Cross of Sacrifice, identical to those in all cemeteries cared for by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Buried here are almost 23,000 personnel with the burials divided into sections for different religious denominations.
But he soon felt a strong inclination to join the Jesuits despite his father's opposition. His father sent him a long and vehement letter but his son answered it with great affection to induce his father to acquiesce to the will of God. He entered the Jesuit novitiate on 1 July 1670 and in 1671 after his probation was sent with an experienced missioner to get his first lessons in the art of preaching in the neighborhood of Otranto. From 1671 until 1674 he was labouring in towns and villages but was granted permission to complete his theological studies before being sent to reside at Gesù Nuovo in 1675.
Ge C 5037, Manuscript (ink on paper), 55 x 130 cm. Upon arriving in Lima in 1692, he created a larger version of this map to submit to the printer. Difficulties in reproducing this map prevented it from being printed, and a slightly altered version was finally published at Quito in 1707, under the title "The Great River Marañón or Amazonas with the Mission of the Society of Jesus, geographically described by Samuel Fritz, settled missioner on said river." This version is 126 by 46 cm and includes in the legend a detailed description of fauna and flora and indigenous ethnicity on the Amazon.
Ordained deacon in 1863 and priest the following year, he served successively the curacies of St James, Wednesbury (1863-5), of Sedgeley (1865-7), and of Christ Church, Wolverhampton (1867-70). In these places he sought to bring the teaching of the tractarian movement home to the working classes and rapidly made a reputation as a mission preacher. Nominated rector of Kirby Misperton, Yorkshire, in 1870, he took an active part in the parochial mission movement. In 1883 he was appointed 'canon-missioner' of Durham by J. B. Lightfoot, bishop of the diocese, and for twenty-eight years carried on fruitful mission work among the Durham miners.
He confirmed Henri- François Gravé de La Rive at Quebec, Pierre Garreau at Trois-Rivières, and Étienne Montgolfier at Montreal,Pelletier, Jean-Guy. “Mariauchau d’Esgly, Louis-Philippe”, Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 4, University of Toronto/Université Laval, 2003 while he oversaw things from Saint- Pierre-d'Orléans. In his first pastoral letter he alludes to the appointment of a coadjutor, a precaution justified by age, infirmity, and the necessity of securing a successor. Bishop Jean-François Hubert, who was a missioner at Notre-Dame-de l’Assomption near Detroit at the time, was nominated coadjutor that same year, but the approval of the British Government was withheld till 1786.
The Maryknoll Fathers renamed the school 'St Louis Industrial School' and equipped it with a printing press. The students became expert in this line and seven years later when the Paris Foreign Missions Society started their celebrated polyglot press at Nazareth in Pokfulam, they took into their employ many of these boys. When Brother Albert Staubli arrived, he added manual training to its curriculum in the way of carpentry. The American Maryknoller, Fr James Edward Walsh, who was one of the first four American missioners to arrive in China and the last Western missioner to be released by the Communist China in 1970, spent some time at the school too.
After studying and training at St Stephen's House, Oxford, Matthews was ordained deacon in 1927, and priest in 1928. From 1927 to 1935 he served as curate of St Dyfrig's church, Cardiff, before becoming the first Warden of St Teilo's Hall of Residence at Cardiff University, also serving as Llandaff Diocesan Missioner from 1936 to 1940. From 1940 to 1953 he served as vicar of St Saviour's church, Roath, Cardiff - combining this with the post of chaplain to HM Prison Cardiff from 1940 to 1945. In 1946 he was also appointed as a canon of Llandaff Cathedral, and he became Chancellor of the diocese in 1952.
He was made a deacon on Trinity Sunday 1955 (5 June) and ordained a priest the following Trinity Sunday (27 May 1956) – both times by Bertram Simpson, Bishop of Southwark, at Southwark Cathedral. He was then, successively, the chaplain of Ardingly College, Secretary of the Advisory Council for Church Ministry, Canon Missioner for the Diocese of GuildfordCrockfords Online- accessed 2 December 2008. and Rector of St Peter's Hascombe before his consecration to the episcopate on 24 January 1974 by Michael Ramsey, Archbishop of Canterbury, at Westminster Abbey. From October that year until 1980, he also served as Archdeacon of Wilts in the same diocese.
The Dean at this time was John Robinson, later to become a controversial Bishop of Woolwich, who had a special concern for church reform. Skelton shared in devising one of the early new ways of celebrating the Eucharist, and also in the re-ordering of the College chapel to make this possible. But his primary responsibility was pastoral work among the undergraduates, and he exercised this more widely in the Cambridge pastorate. Also at Cambridge then, as vicar of Great St Mary's, the university church, was Mervyn Stockwood, who remembered Skelton as the most handsome boy at Blundell's School when he visited the school as its Missioner.
Chaco derives from chacú, the Quechua word used to name a hunting territory or the hunting technique used by the people of the Inca Empire. Annually, large groups of up to thirty thousand hunters would enter the territory, forming columns and circling their prey. Jesuit missioner Pedro Lozano wrote in his book Chorographic Description of the Great Chaco Gualamba, published in Cordoba, Spain in 1733: "Its etymology indicates the multitude of nations that inhabit that region. When they go hunting, the Indians gather from many parts the vicuñas and guanacos; that crowd is called chacu in the Quechua language, which is common in Peru, and that Spaniards have corrupted into Chaco".
He was in HMS Yarmouth at the Battle of Jutland, but being cypher officer, he was below and his main recollection of the battle was the incredible noise. In early 1918 he came chaplain with the 22nd Northumberland Fusiliers when they were overrun in the German March offensive and in the interests of protecting his men he was taken into captivityPrisoners of War 1914 – 18 at the detention camp in Karlsruhe. From 1918 to 1922 he was Oxford Diocesan Missioner. In 1922 he was awarded an honorary DD by the University of Cambridge. On 25 July 1922 he was consecrated first bishop of Johannesburg.
In his teens he attended a night school, but irregularly, and did not study seriously until he was 20, when he began to attend evening classes and to study arithmetic, writing, grammar, composition and elocution. When the Lancashire Cotton Famine devastated the local economy in 1862, Duckworth had a wife and child to support. Having considered emigration to the United States, he escaped unemployment with a job in the warehouse of a wool merchant, and later described this as the turning point in his career. He later he became town missioner in Heywood, but his health collapsed and he had to relinquish the job.
Al Arab International Daily Newspaper, London November 20, 1998 Adelabu founded the African Muslim portal EsinIslam.com and IslamAfrica.com, both of which are administered and directed by his wife as the director and editor-in-chief, with management by volunteers from the students and followers of Adelabu, especially at Awqaf Africa and its Islamic College in London. Da’wah activities of the African academic include serving as an Imam Khatib previously as Kuwaiti Cultural Attaché London, working as Islamic columnist for the Libyan Arabic daily newspaper Al-Arab International in London,Al-Arab Daily Newspaper, London February 12, 1999 and serving as Imam and Chief Missioner previously for the Islamic Youth League of Nigeria, Abuja.
Further, before leaving Ireland, the bishop had organized a support group of Catholic mothers to provide assistance to the missions, of which Martin's own mother had become the president. They agreed that a religious congregation was needed to meet the needs of the mission. Upon her return to Calabar, Martin made a 30-day- long retreat following the Spiritual Exercises of Ignatius of Loyola, in an effort to clarify where she was being led. In April 1922 the bishop traveled there and held two weeks of consultations with Martin, Roynane and another missioner, during which the Rule and Constitutions of a new congregation were hammered out, with the understanding that Martin would be the foundress.
The vicars had no place or vote in chapter and, though irremovable except for offences, were the servants of their absent canons whose stalls they occupied and whose duties they performed. Outside of Britain they were often called demi-prebendaries and they formed the bachcrur of the French churches. As time went on the vicars were themselves often incorporated as a kind of lesser chapter, or college, under the supervision of the dean and chapter. In contemporary cathedral chapters, the most common roles besides dean include precentor, pastor, sub- dean/vice-dean, chancellor, archdeacon, treasurer and missioner, although there is also a wide variety of roles which each occur only once or twice.
David Crawley in June 1986 while rector of St. Paul'sDavid Perry Crawley was Archbishop of Kootenay and Metropolitan of British Columbia and Yukon from 1994 to 2004.Who's Who 2008: London, A & C Black, 2008 He was born in 1937,and married in 1959 the son of the Rev. Canon George Antony Crawley and Lucy Lillian Ball, and educated at the University of Manitoba and the University of Kent at Canterbury. He was ordained in 1961 Crockford's Clerical Directory1975-76 Lambeth, Church House, 1975 and was the incumbent at St Thomas', Sherwood Park until 1966. He was Canon Missioner at All Saints Cathedral, Edmonton from 1967 until 1970 and Rector of St Matthew's, Winnipeg from 1971 until 1977.
Roger Frederick Sainsbury (born 2 October 1936)”Debrett's People of Today 1992” (London, Debrett's) ) is a retired Anglican bishop. He was the second area Bishop of Barking (the seventh Bishop of Barking) in the Church of England from 1991 to 2002.Resignation details Sainsbury was educated at Jesus College, Cambridge”Who's Who 1992 “(London, A & C Black ) before beginning his ordained ministry as a curate at Christ Church, Spitalfields. Friends of CCS He was then "missioner" at Shrewsbury House, Liverpool,Organisation website Warden of the Mayflower Family Centre, Canning Town;East of London FHS Vicar of Walsall;“Crockford's clerical directory, 1995” (Lambeth, Church House ) and finally, before being ordained to the episcopate, the Archdeacon of West Ham.
The Kaitaia Mission Station was established between 1833 and 1834 after a series of visits by Church Missionary Society (CMS) representatives including Samuel Marsden, and at different times, Joseph Matthews and William Gilbert Puckey. Puckey and Matthews had married two sisters, Matilda and Mary Ann Davis respectively, (daughters of Richard Davis, a lay missioner based at Waimate). They formed a tight band, initially living together in raupo huts, and then in houses they built. As Puckey and the sisters were fluent in Maori, (Puckey having arrived in New Zealand in 1819 with his father, William Puckey, and the Davis family in 1823), they spoke Maori when together, to help Joseph pick up the language.
Mercer was born in Bradford, Yorkshire, the son of a minister, and educated at Rossall School and Lincoln College, Oxford. Ordained by the Bishop of Durham in 1880, his first post was as a curate at Tanfield, Durham, followed by a year at Penshaw. He was then Chaplain/Missioner at his old school before two Manchester incumbencies at Angel Meadow and Gorton.St Michael, Manchester (1889-97); St James, Gorton (1897-1902) Who was Who 1987-1990: London, A & C Black, 1991 Nearly all his work during his early years was in poor, working-class parishes, and he took a great interest in social work, including work to improve living conditions in Manchester.
He was made a deacon at Petertide 1987 (27 June) and ordained a priest the Petertide following (3 July 1988) — both times by Michael Baughen, Bishop of Chester, at Chester Cathedral; he began his ministerial career with a title post as assistant curate at St George's Heaviley, Stockport (1987–1991); he was then Vicar of Acton and Worleston, Church Minshull and Wettenhall, Cheshire (1991–1997). He moved to Somerset in 1997 to serve as Team Rector for the Langport Team Ministry (Aller, Drayton, High Ham with Low Ham, Huish Episcopi, Long Sutton, Muchelney, and Pitney); then from 2002 until his appointment to the episcopate he was Diocesan Missioner for the Diocese of Exeter and a Canon Residentiary at Exeter Cathedral.
Frederick Herbert Du Vernet (1860 – 22 October 1924)"Who was Who" 1897-2007 London, A & C Black, 2007 The Times, Thursday, Oct 23, 1924; pg. 13; Issue 43790; col A Death Of A Canadian Archbishop was the second Bishop of Caledonia and inaugural Metropolitan of British ColumbiaMetropolitans of British Columbia (taking the title Archbishop of Caledonia whilst Metropolitan.) Du Vernet was educated at Wycliffe College, Toronto and ordained in 1883. After a curacy at St James the Apostle, MontrealChurch web-site he was Diocesan Missioner for the Diocese of Montreal then Professor of Practical Theology at his old college until 1895. From then until"The Clergy List" London, John Phillips, 1900 1904 he was Rector of St John, Toronto when he was appointed to the episcopate.
Ralph Emmerson (7 July 1913 - 31 December 2007) was Bishop of Knaresborough from 1972 to 1979. Born in Leeds, West Yorkshire on 7 July 1913 he was educated at Leeds Grammar School and King's College London.Who's Who 1992 London, A & C Black, 1991 He worked initially in the Youth Employment Department of Leeds Educational Authority"Debrett's People of Today": Ed Ellis,P (1992, London, Debtrett's) p 1621 before studying for ordination at Westcott House, Cambridge. An urban priest and keen cricketer amongst many appointments he was Vicar of Headingley,Emmerson Obituary in 1966 he was appointed Canon Missioner for the Diocese of Ripon.Crockfords,(London, Church House 1995) In 1972 he was promoted again to be Suffragan Bishop of KnaresboroughThe Times, Thursday, 16 March 1972; p.
While he was a missioner at York he was selected by the Holy See for the London vicariate, in opposition to efforts made by the ‘catholic committee’ to have Charles Berington translated from the Midland to the London district. The appointment caused controversy, and Berington addressed a printed letter to the London clergy, resigning every pretension to the London vicariate. Opposition to Douglass was withdrawn, and he succeeded James Talbot as vicar-apostolic of the London district. His briefs to the titular see of Centurio were dated 25 September 1790, and he was consecrated 19 December the same year, in St. Mary's Church, Lulworth Castle, Dorset, by William Gibson, titular bishop of Acanthus, and Vicar Apostolic of the Northern District.
Michael David Doe (born 24 December 1947) is the Preacher of Gray's Inn and a former Bishop of Swindon. Doe grew up on the Highfield Council Estate in Pennington, Hants, and attended Brockenhurst Grammar School. He went on to Durham University (Bachelor of Arts {BA(Hons)}).Who's Who2008: London, A & C Black After studying at Ripon Hall, Oxford, he was ordained priest in 1973.Crockford's Clerical Directory2008/2009 Lambeth, Church House Publishing He was a curate on the St Helier Estate in South London, after which he was Youth Secretary of the British Council of Churches. He moved to Oxford in 1981 to be Priest Missioner in the Blackbird Leys Ecumenical Partnership, and also served as Rural Dean of Cowley from 1987-1989.
After the war, Studdert Kennedy was given charge of St Edmund, King and Martyr in Lombard Street, London. Having been converted to Christian socialism and pacifism during the war, he wrote Lies (1919), Democracy and the Dog-Collar (1921) (featuring such chapters as "The Church Is Not a Movement but a Mob", "Capitalism is Nothing But Greed, Grab, and Profit-Mongering" and "So-Called Religious Education Worse than Useless"), Food for the Fed Up (1921), The Wicket Gate (1923), and The Word and the Work (1925). He moved to work for the Industrial Christian Fellowship, for whom he went on speaking tours of Britain. His appointment as missioner for ICF released him from routine clerical duties to become an outspoken advocate for the working classes.
John Taylor Hughes (12 April 190821 July 2001) was an Anglican bishop in the 20th century. Hughes was educated firstly in UxbridgeWho's Who (UK), 1971 A & C Black p736 and subsequently at Bede College, University of Durham. He was deaconed at Michaelmas 1931 (26 September) in Auckland Castle and priested in Advent the next year (18 December 1932) at Durham Cathedral — both times by Hensley Henson, Bishop of Durham; and was successively an assistant chaplain and tutor at his former college, a curate at Shildon and a vicar at West Hartlepool.Crockford's clerical directory (Lambeth Palace, Church House) 1982 Returning to his home city in 1948, Hughes became the warden of Southwark Diocesan Retreat House and a missioner of Southwark Cathedral.
From 1920 until 1926 he was Resident Chaplain to the Archbishop of Canterbury, followed by a curacy in Newcastle upon Tyne.Latterly as vicar - “Who was Who” (Ibid) After two years as Chaplain at Peterhouse, Cambridge de Candole served in a variety of posts within the Diocese of Chichester between 1937In which year he married Frances Cornwall, daughter of the Archdeacon of Cheltenham and 1949.Liturgical Missioner appointed to Chichester cited in The Times, Friday, 26 January 1940; p. 11; Issue 48523; col D Ecclesiastical NewsPrebendary of Bracklesham announced The Times, Wednesday, 17 January 1945; p. 7; Issue 50043; col C Ecclesiastical News He took charge of Wiston Church, Sussex in 1939-40, while the rector was absent on Army service and was Vicar of Henfield from 1940 -49.
In 2008, Dobbs was appointed archdeacon and canon missioner in the Convocation of Anglicans in North America, where he contributed to clergy development, worked to help North American Anglicans understand and the challenges posed by the rise of Islam in Africa, and develop a West African-American clergy and lay mission partnership. To continue this work, he was elected a bishop by CANA and the Church of Nigeria in spring of 2011, and consecrated by Nicholas Okoh in Lagos on September 25, 2011. Dobbs has been active in opposing and publicizing the Boko Haram attacks on Christians in northern Nigeria and calling for international prayer and action. In August 2012, Okoh visited Washington, D.C., and through Dobbs' connections met with policymakers and officials to promote action against the Muslim militants in the north.
In the United Methodist Church in the United States, similar to the Anglican office, a certified lay minister is a certified lay servant, certified lay missioner (or equivalent as defined by his or her central conference), who is called and equipped to conduct public worship, care for the congregation, assist in program leadership, develop new and existing faith communities, preach the Word, lead small groups, or establish community outreach ministries as part of a ministry team with the supervision and support of an ordained minister. The role of certified lay minister is intended for missional leadership in churches or other ministry settings as part of a team ministry under the supervision of clergy, and they are assigned to a local church by the district superintendent, unlike clergy who are appointed by a bishop.
According to the teachings he propagated, he was born from a poor family in the island of Cabilan in the town of Dinagat, Ruben claims he started his mission as a transient healer-missioner assuming different names and personalities and travelled mostly in the Visayas area and in many parts of northern Mindanao at the age of 8. He claimed he can commune with spirit guides, which allowed him to master Arabic, Aramaic, Hebrew, and Sanskrit languages from which he able to read the akashic records and interpret the ancient mysteries. However, he has never demonstrated his linguistic capabilities by talking to native speakers of the languages he says he knows. His cult's beliefs revolve around a new sort of wisdom which is a fusion of the Akasha (akashic), Buddhism, Christianism, Hinduism, and Judaism.
In 2004 the church building was closed but despite the closure of the church building, the congregation persisted to remain on the site and with the help of priest missioner - Fr Nigel Asbridge, moved back into the church in September 2010. The work to repair St John's Church is now completed and Peter Wheatley, Bishop of Edmonton came to rededicate the Church in July 2012. The east end of the nave and chancel, Lady Chapel, vestry and Sunday School room has been restored to their former glory, whilst the west end has been converted to provide new facilities for the Hanlon Centre. In July 2012 as well as the rededication of the church and the opening of St Matthew's School Annex, HRH Prince Andrew came to formally open the new Hanlon Centre and St Matthew's School.
Maginn returned to Ireland in 1882, he wanted to identify a potential springboard to establish a national association and he joined the Deaf and Dumb Correspondence Association, which was led by some influential deaf people of that time. The first attempt to establish an association, the Deaf-Mute Association was formed on 1 February 1888 to 'further the cause of the deaf and dumb' but it was short-lived. There were 239 members were recruited into its membership but, due to insufficient numbers, the association closed in 1889. Despite the closure of the association, Francis Maginn and James Paul, a missioner and founder of the National Deaf and Dumb Society, were funded to attend the event marking 100 years anniversary of the death of a French educator and "Father of the Deaf" Charles-Michel de l'Épée.
Arthur Wallis was born the son of ‘Captain’ Reginald and Mary Wallis. He attended Monkton Combe School, near Bath, Somerset, before going on to Sandhurst and wartime service in the Royal Tank Regiment. He was wounded at the Anzio Bridgehead, an event that led him to question the compatibility of his army service with his sense of calling to Christian ministry. After the war, Wallis married Eileen Hemingway in 1946, and the couple had one son; Jonathan. From a Plymouth Brethren background, Wallis came into the experience of the “baptism with the Holy Spirit” in 1951, within a few weeks of his lifelong friend, the former Southampton City Missioner, Oscar Penhearow. Following in his father's footsteps, Wallis then embarked on an itinerant preaching and teaching ministry, with a particular emphasis on revival, prayer, the work of the Holy Spirit, and the ‘restoration’ of the church.
The Venerable Robert Langley (born 25 October 1937) was Archdeacon of Lindisfarne from 2001 until 2007.Crockford’s On-lIne Accessed 3 April 2013 @ 16:56 GMT Born on 25 October 1937‘LANGLEY, Ven. Robert’, Who's Who 2013, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2013; online edn, Oxford University Press, Dec 2012 ; online edn, Nov 2012 accessed 3 April 2013 he was educated at Worksop College and St Catherine's College, Oxford and ordained in 1964. He was a curate at Aston cum Aughton, Sheffield from 1963 to 1968; secretary of the Christian Education Movement from 1968 to 1974; principal of Ian Ramsay College, Brasted from 1974 to 1977; head of the St Albans Diocese Ministerial Training Scheme from 1977 to 85; canon missioner for the Newcastle Diocese from 1985 to 1998; and then director of Ministry and Training in the same diocese until his appointment as an archdeacon.
After ordination as a deacon at Petertide 1981 (on 28 June in Bradford Cathedral) and as a priest the Petertide following (27 June 1982 at Christ Church, Skipton) — both times by Geoffrey Paul, Bishop of Bradford, he began his career as assistant curate at St Lawrence and St Paul Pudsey. In 1982 he was ordained a priest at Christ Church, Skipton. In 1984 he took up the post as chaplain of the Lee Abbey Community near Lynton in North Devon where he had particular responsibility for mission and the creative arts. In 1989 he was appointed as the Diocesan Missioner and Executive Secretary of the Board for Mission and Unity for the Diocese of LichfieldDebrett's People of Today London, Debrett's, 2008 and finally in 1997 (before his ordination as a bishop)Crockford's Clerical Directory 2008/2009 (100th edition), Church House Publishing () Archdeacon of Stoke.
After his ordination in 1926, Henry Gerecke remained in St. Louis where he became the pastor of Christ Lutheran Church, the same church in which he had been ordained. Gerecke remained ministering to his parish as the Great Depression began to bite in the 1930s but by 1935 he felt called to missionary work and left Christ Lutheran Church in 1935 to pursue a very different kind of Christian ministry. Rev. Gerecke joined the St. Louis Lutheran City Mission and became both its executive missioner and pastor of the Good Shepherd Lutheran Church in the North of the city which was owned by City Mission. While working there, Gerecke founded a new arm of City Mission, known as Lutheran Mission Industries which established two charity shops and provided work for the unemployed during the difficult times of the Great Depression and simultaneously provided affordable second-hand goods to those in need.
Upon his election, Hardwick confirmed that his goals included moving forward with the Mission Action Plan, particularly developing children and youth ministries and urban and reserve First Nations ministries; improving communication strategies; equipping the faithful for ministry, including parishes which did not have a parish priest; and developing a sustainable financial plan. He noted that when he moved to Canada in 2001, he had been warned that the diocese was on the verge of bankruptcy, but was now in much better shape. In an interview after his election, he was asked what he would bring to the episcopacy. He described himself as a “missioner, an innovator, an encourager of collaborative ministry, a prayerful team player and a man passionate about Christian stewardship.” He added that others have said he is a good pastor, a good listener, a good preacher and someone who is unflappable and has a sense of humour.
Dennis Gascoyne Hawker (8 February 192131 January 2003) was the eighth Bishop of Grantham.Daily Telegraph Obituary Educated at Addey and Stanhope School and Queens' College, Cambridge,“Who was Who” 1897–2007 London, A & C Black, 2007 Hawker served in the Royal Marines during the Second World War before he was made a deacon on Trinity Sunday 1950 (4 June) and ordained a priest the next Trinity Sunday (20 May 1951) — both times by Geoffrey Fisher, Archbishop of Canterbury at Canterbury Cathedral. His first post was as a curate at St Mary and St Eanswythe's Church, Folkestone,Details of church after which he was Vicar of St Mark, South Norwood.Crockford's Clerical Directory 1975–76 London: Oxford University Press, 1976 From 1960 he was St Hugh’s Missioner for the Diocese of Lincoln and later became Vicar of St Mary and St James, Great Grimsby before appointment to the Episcopate.
David William Thomas was the Archdeacon of Cardigan from 1936Ecclesiastical News The Times (London, England), Monday, Sep 14, 1936; pg. 15; Issue 47479 until 1944. Williams was educated at St David's College, Lampeter, and Jesus College, Oxford; and ordained in 1896.Crockford's Clerical Directory 1929-30 London, OUP p 1276 After curacies in Stella and Swansea he held incumbencies in Clydach and Llangyfelach. After a curacy at Llanelly he was Assistant Missioner in the Diocese of St Davids from 1903 to 1908 ; a Minor Canon of St David’s Cathedral and Senior Diocesan Inspector of Schools in the Diocese of St David's from 1908 to 1912; Vicar of Llandybie from 1912 to 1928; Vicar of Lampeter from 1928 to 1946; and Vicar of Skenfrith from 1946 to 1948.‘THOMAS, Venerable David William’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2008; online edn, Oxford University Press, Dec 2012 ; online edn, Nov 2012 accessed 7 Aug 2013 He died on 5 March 1951.
Ivor Gordon Davies (21 July 1917 – 27 June 1992) was an Anglican priest who was the Archdeacon of LewishamNational Archives between 1972 and 1985. Educated at the University of Wales,“Who was Who” 1897-2007 London, A & C Black , 2007 where he took a Second in Greats in 1939; and at the University of London (Bachelor of Divinity, 1951), Davies prepared for ordination at St Stephen's House, Oxford, being ordained deacon in 1941 and priest in 1942 for the Diocese of Llandaff. Following a three-year period as Curate at St Paul, Grangetown, Cardiff, he served between 1944-47 as a chaplain to the forces before returning to parish work as Curate of St John the Baptist, Felixstowe between 1947-49. Appointed Perpetual Curate (a title effectively identical to vicar) of St Thomas’, Ipswich in that year, he subsequently became a Residentiary Canon at Southwark Cathedral in 1957; serving as Diocesan Canon Missioner until his appointment as Archdeacon of Lewisham.
1947 also saw the beginning of Allan's involvement with first radio and later television religious broadcasting via the Scottish service of the BBC which began with his ‘Family Prayers’ series and lasted eighteen years. The then organiser for the BBC's Religious Broadcasting in Scotland, Ronald Falconer, considered Allan's ‘Way to Live’ series a highlight of the period, recording that audience research gave one episode an "Appreciation Index several points above any other Scottish broadcast that week, religious or secular". Tom Allan was a key planner, contributor and missioner to the 1950 and 1952 ‘Radio Missions,' which Falconer thought unique to Scotland, being Christian mission promoted by radio programmes broadcast by a national network. Local churches were invited to set up listening groups and discuss, assess and act on the content of the broadcasts - Falconer also wrote that while only a small minority did more than simply listen in, North Kelvinside provided model cooperation.
Life in the early years of the mission was described as follows: > "In those days the Mission consisted of a few dilapidated slum dwellings > where the helpers lived and worked, and a tin roofed chapel in charge of a > clergyman known as the missioner. Each night the local lads would come in, > and after some frolicing turn out the gaslight and have a free for all, > breaking the furniture in the process; gradually, however, they came to > respect the Mission and the voluntary staff and accept them as friends, and > besides cards, draughts and other games in the small cramped rooms, were > taught carpentry and boot repairing, though more often than not their boots > were beyond repair. An employment bureau was started which kept contact with > local employers, and jumble clothing was distributed as fast as it could be > collected". The development of the Mission was interrupted by the advent of war in 1914.
In April, 1609, the flock which he had gathered around him was too numerous for his chapel and required a church; and the labour of the ministry had become so crushing that he entreated the provincial to send him a companion. At that point a storm fell on him from an unexpected place. Fernandes, the missioner already mentioned, may have felt no mean jealousy, when seeing Nobili succeed so happily where he had been so powerless; but certainly he proved unable to understand or to appreciate the method of his colleague; probably, also, as he had lived perforce apart from the circles among which the latter was working, he was never well informed of his doings. However, that may be, Fernandes directed to the superiors of the Jesuits in India and at Rome a lengthy report, in which he charged Nobili with simulation, in declining the name of Prangui; with connivance at idolatry, in allowing his neophytes to observe customs, such as wearing the insignia of castes; lastly, with schismatical proceeding, in dividing the Christians into separate congregations.
Nott's accommodation huts were considered to be too basic by post-war standards, and so a new village was built to the west of the road to replace them. Work was made easier by the arrival of a steam navvy in May 1920, and another in January 1921, both of which worked on the bed of the reservoir. Near to Christmas 1921, Priestley, who was now 67, was given a closed Ford car to replace the open model which was not suitable for the cold and wet weather, although it did not arrive until 2 March 1922. In December 1921, the Corporation also decided they would run a school train to enable children from Llwyn-on to get to Cefn yard in the morning and back in the afternoon. A missioner from the Navvy Mission Society took up residence in February 1922, arriving from the Blaen-y-Cwm reservoir at Beaufort, where work had recently finished. Construction of the valve shaft began in July 1921, using stone imported from the Forest of Dean.
Michael John Fox (born 28 April 1942) is a retired Church of England priest and was an Archdeacon in the Diocese of Chelmsford, serving from 1993 until 2007.‘FOX, Ven. Michael John’, Who's Who 2014, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2014; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014 ; online edn, Nov 2014 Fox was educated at Barking Abbey Grammar School; Hull University; and the College of the Resurrection, Mirfield. He was ordained deacon in 1966, and priest in 1967. After Curacies at St Elizabeth, Becontree and Holy Trinity, South Woodford he was Vicar of the Church of the Ascension, Victoria Dock and Missioner at Felsted School from 1972 to 1976. He was the incumbent at All Saints, Chelmsford from 1976 to 1988; Rural Dean of Chelmsford from 1982 to 1988; Rector of St James, Colchester from 1988 to 1993; an Honorary Canon of Chelmsford Cathedral from 1991; Archdeacon of Harlow from 1993 to 1996;Church news The Times (London, England), Saturday, February 24, 1996; pg.
The Ven. Francis Harry House OBE MA was Archdeacon of Macclesfield from 1967 to 1978. Born into an ecclesiastical family on 9 August 1908,His father was Canon William Joseph House, DD sometime Rector of Copford ‘House, Ven. Francis Harry’, Who's Who 2012, A & C Black, 2012; online edn, Oxford University Press, Dec 2011 ; online edn, Nov 2011 accessed 16 July 2012 he was educated at St George's School, Harpenden and Wadham College, Oxford and ordained after a period of study at Ripon College Cuddesdon in 1937. He was successively: Assistant Missioner at the Pembroke College, Cambridge Mission at Walworth; Travelling Secretary of the World's Student Christian Federation at Geneva from 1938 to 1940.; Curate of Leeds Parish Church from 1940 to 1942;Crockford's Clerical Directory1947-48 Oxford, OUP,1947 Overseas Assistant of the BBC Religious Broadcasting Department in London from 1942 to 1944; representative of World Student Relief in Greece from 1944 to 1946; Secretary of the Youth Department World Council of Churches in Geneva and the World Conference of Christian Youth, Oslo in 1946 and 1947 respectively;Head of Religious Broadcasting at the BBC in London from 1947 to 1955; Associate General Secretary of the World Council of Churches in Geneva from 1955 to 1962; and Vicar of St Giles, Pontefract Church web site before his years as an Archdeacon.

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