Angela Berners-Wilson | |
---|---|
Rector the Quantock Towers Benefice | |
Church | Church of England |
Diocese | Diocese of Bath and Wells |
In office | 2016 to present |
Other post(s) | Chaplain to the University of Bath (2004–2016) |
Orders | |
Ordination | 1987 (deacon) 1994 (priest) |
Personal details | |
Born | Angela Veronica Isabel Berners-Wilson 1954 (age 67–68) |
Nationality | British |
Denomination | Anglicanism |
Alma mater | University of St Andrews Cranmer Hall, Durham |
Angela Veronica Isabel Berners-Wilson (born 1954) is a Church of England priest and chaplain. She is considered to be the first woman to be ordained as a priest in the Church of England. She was chaplain at the University of Bath from 2004 to 2016, and is now rector of a multi-church benefice.
Berners-Wilson was born in 1954. She studied divinity at the University of St Andrews, graduating with a Master of Theology (MTheol) degree in 1976. [1] Although its name suggests otherwise, the MTheol from St Andrews is an undergraduate degree. [2] In 1977, she entered Cranmer Hall, Durham, an Anglican theological college in the Open Evangelical tradition, to train for ministry. [1]
Berners-Wilson was made a deaconess in 1979. From 1979 to 1982, she was deaconess of Christ Church, Southgate in the Diocese of London. From 1982 to 1984, she served as deaconess at St Marylebone Parish Church, also in the diocese of London. Then began more than a decade as a university chaplain: at Thames Polytechnic from 1984 to 1991, and at the University of Bristol from 1991 to 1995. [1]
Berners-Wilson was ordained in the Church of England as a deacon in 1987; the first year the C of E ordained women to the diaconate. [1] She was ordained a priest on 12 March 1994. Due to her surname being alphabetically first in the list of the first 32 women ordained to the priesthood, she is considered the first woman to be ordained a priest in the C of E. [3] The officiating bishop speculated that it would be 10 years before the first woman was appointed as a bishop. [4] [ failed verification ]
Berners-Wilson was appointed chaplain to the University of Bath in May 2004. [5] In February 2009 she was appointed a prebendary of Wells Cathedral. [6] [7] Sponsored by the Diocese of Bath and Wells, the University of Bath and the United Society for the Propagation of the Gospel, she had a month's sabbatical in China in June 2008. [8] In 2016, she left the University of Bath, having been appointed rector of the Quantock Towers benefice. [1]
Her father was the rector of the rural parish of Frant in East Sussex. [9] [10] She married solicitor Andrew Sillett on 19 May 1984. [11]
Graham Douglas Leonard was an English Roman Catholic priest and former Anglican bishop. His principal ministry was as a bishop of the Church of England but, after his retirement as the Bishop of London, he became a Roman Catholic, becoming the most senior Anglican cleric to do so since the English Reformation. He was conditionally ordained to the priesthood in the Roman Catholic Church and was later appointed a monsignor by Pope John Paul II.
Nigel Simeon McCulloch, is an Anglican bishop. He is a retired Bishop of Manchester in the Church of England. He was appointed in August 2002, taking up duties later that year and was installed in February 2003. He retired on his 71st birthday.
The Anglican ministry is both the leadership and agency of Christian service in the Anglican Communion. "Ministry" commonly refers to the office of ordained clergy: the threefold order of bishops, priests and deacons. More accurately, Anglican ministry includes many laypeople who devote themselves to the ministry of the church, either individually or in lower/assisting offices such as lector, acolyte, sub-deacon, Eucharistic minister, cantor, musicians, parish secretary or assistant, warden, vestry member, etc. Ultimately, all baptized members of the church are considered to partake in the ministry of the Body of Christ.
Eric Waldram Kemp was a Church of England bishop. He was the Bishop of Chichester from 1974 to 2001. He was one of the leading Anglo-Catholics of his generation and one of the most influential figures in the Church of England in the last quarter of the twentieth century.
Duncan Montgomery Gray Jr. was the 7th Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Mississippi, a diocese of the Episcopal Church. Gray's father, Duncan M. Gray Sr., and his son, Duncan Montgomery Gray III, are respectively the fifth and ninth Bishops of the Diocese of Mississippi.
Brendan Kelly is a retired Irish prelate of the Roman Catholic Church who served as Bishop of Galway, Ireland. He was installed as Bishop of Galway on 11 February 2018 and retired on 11 February 2022.
Ruth Elizabeth Worsley, is a Church of England bishop. Since September 2015, she has been the Bishop of Taunton, a suffragan bishop of the Diocese of Bath and Wells. From 2013 to 2015, she was Archdeacon of Wiltshire.
Cherry Elizabeth Vann is a British Anglican bishop serving as Bishop of Monmouth in the Church in Wales. She previously served as Archdeacon of Rochdale from 2008 to 2020, having served all of her ordained ministry with the Church of England in the Diocese of Manchester.
The Philadelphia Eleven are eleven women who were the first women ordained as priests in the Episcopal Church on July 29, 1974, two years before General Convention affirmed and explicitly authorized the ordination of women to the priesthood.
Audrey Anne Elkington is a retired British Anglican priest. She served as the Archdeacon of Bodmin in the Diocese of Truro.
Rose Josephine Hudson-Wilkin, is a British Anglican bishop, who has been suffragan Bishop of Dover since 2019: she is the first black woman to become a Church of England bishop. She had served as Chaplain to the Speaker of the House of Commons from 2010 to 2019, and previously in the Church Army and then parish ministry.
Elizabeth Jane Holden Lane is a British Anglican bishop and Lord Spiritual. Since February 2019, she has served as Bishop of Derby in the Church of England, the diocesan bishop of the Diocese of Derby. From January 2015 to 2019, she was the Bishop of Stockport, a suffragan bishop in the Diocese of Chester. She was the first woman to be appointed as a bishop by the Church of England, after its general synod voted in July 2014 to allow women to become bishops. Her consecration took place on 26 January 2015 at York Minster.
John Bowen Coburn was bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts from 1976 to 1986.
Kathy Louise Jones is a Welsh Anglican priest and chaplain. From January 2016 to June 2021, she was Dean of Bangor making her one of the most senior priests in the Church in Wales. Previously, she was the Lead Chaplain of the Northumbria Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust in the Diocese of Newcastle, Church of England.
Joanna Susan Penberthy is a Welsh Anglican bishop. Since November 2016, she has served as the Bishop of St Davids in the Church in Wales. She was the first woman to become a bishop in the Church in Wales, when she was consecrated a bishop on 21 January 2017.
Marion Elizabeth Mingins, was a British Anglican priest and former social worker. A Canon Residentiary of St Edmundsbury Cathedral from 1993 to 2002, she became the first woman to become an Anglican Chaplain to the Queen when she was appointed in 1996.
Jeremy Patrick Sheehy is British Anglican priest and academic. Since 2006, he has served as Rector of St Peter's Church, Swinton and Pendlebury in the Diocese of Manchester. He was previously a parish priest in the Diocese of Birmingham and the Diocese of Chelmsford, Dean of Divinity at New College, Oxford (1984–1990), and Principal of St Stephen's House, Oxford (1996–2006).
John Wilson is an English prelate of the Roman Catholic Church, the Metropolitan Archbishop of Southwark. He had previously served as an Auxiliary bishop in the Archdiocese of Westminster (2016–2019).
Catherine Ann Sourbut Groves is a British Anglican priest. Since November 2020, she has served as Archdeacon of Lindisfarne in the Church of England's Diocese of Newcastle. She had previously worked in academia and administration at the University of Bath, and in parish ministry in the Diocese of Bath and Wells