Episcopal Diocese of Texas

Last updated
Diocese of Texas

Diœcesis Texensis
Episcopal Diocese of Texas.png
Location
Country United States
TerritoryCentral and southeastern Texas
Ecclesiastical province VII
Headquarters1225 Texas Ave, Houston, TX 77002
Statistics
Area49,489 sq mi (128,180 km2)
Congregations153 (2021)
Members73,617 (2021)
Information
Denomination Episcopal Church
EstablishedJanuary 1, 1849
Cathedral Christ Church Cathedral, Houston
Current leadership
Bishop C. Andrew Doyle
Suffragans Jeff W. Fisher
Kathryn McCrossen Ryan
Hector Monterroso
Map
ECUSA Texas.png
Diocese of Texas after 2022 expansion
Website
epicenter.org

The Episcopal Diocese of Texas is one of the dioceses of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America. The diocese consists of all Episcopal congregations in the southeastern quartile of Texas, including the cities of Austin, Beaumont, Galveston, Houston (the see city), Waco and, as of July 2022, Fort Worth and other cities within the former diocese in North Texas.

Contents

The 166 congregations in the Diocese of Texas have ministries, locally and abroad. They include: homeless and feeding ministries, clinics, after school programs for at risk youth, ministry to seniors, ESL and citizenship classes and much more. Two new churches, St. Julian of Norwich (Austin) and St. Mary Magdalene (Manor) were planted in 2010.

Institutions of the diocese include; St. Vincent's House, a social service agency, in Galveston; St. David's Hospital, a healthcare system, in Austin; El Buen Samaritano, an agency to help working poor in Austin; COTS/LOTS, Community of the Streets, outreach to homeless men and women in midtown Houston; Episcopal High School, Houston; St. Andrew's Episcopal School, Austin; and the Seminary of the Southwest in Austin.

The diocese traces its foundation to Christ Church in Matagorda in 1838, when it became the first foreign missionary field of the Episcopal Church (as part of the Republic of Texas). Together with Christ Church, Houston (1839) and Trinity Church, Galveston (1841) it formed the Episcopal Church of Texas, the Episcopal presence in the Republic of Texas. It formally became a diocese of the Episcopal Church in 1849. The diocese expanded to include the territory of the Episcopal Church in North Texas in 2022. [1]

Christ Church became the cathedral of the diocese in 1949. The current bishop is C. Andrew Doyle (born 1966). He succeeded Don Wimberly as diocesan on June 7, 2009, upon Wimberly's retirement.

Previous bishops

Missionary Bishops of Texas include: Leonidas Polk and George Washington Freeman (until Texas was admitted to the Union in 1845). The diocese organized in 1849 and elected Alexander Gregg its first bishop in 1859. He served until 1893 when his coadjutor (elected to succeed), George Herbert Kinsolving, became Bishop of Texas. Kinsolving's coadjutor, Clinton Simon Quin, succeeded him 35 years later in 1928.

John Hines served as bishop coadjutor under Quin for ten years and became diocesan in 1955. Nine years later, in 1964, Hines was elected Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church where he served for a decade. James Milton Richardson was consecrated the fifth Bishop of Texas on February 10, 1965, and served as diocesan until his death in 1980. The sixth Bishop of Texas, Maurice M. Benitez, was elected in 1980. In June 1993 Claude E. Payne was elected the fourth bishop coadjutor of the Diocese of Texas and became the seventh Bishop of Texas February 10, 1995. Don Wimberly became the eighth bishop of Texas in June, 2003, retiring at the mandatory age of 72 on June 6, 2009. Doyle, elected in May, 2008, was consecrated at St. Martins, Houston, on November 22, 2008, and invested and seated on June 7, 2009.

Additionally, Texas has had nine bishops suffragan and six assistant bishops since becoming a diocese: F. Percy Goddard, James P. Clements, and Roger Howard Cilley; Scott Field Bailey; Gordon T. Charlton; William E. Sterling Sr., Leopoldo J. Alard, and Rayford B. High Jr. served as bishops suffragan. Dena Harrison served as bishop suffragan for the central region of the diocese; she was the thirteenth woman consecrated to the episcopate in the Episcopal Church and the first in a diocese in the South. She was succeeded by Kathryn "Kai" Ryan in 2019. Jeff W. Fisher was elected bishop suffragan for the east Texas region of the diocese on June 2, 2012, following the retirement of Rayford High in 2011. Anselmo Carral, William J. Cox, Don Wimberly, James B. Brown, Ted Daniels and John Buchanan have served as assistant bishops.

Bishops of Texas

No.NameYears
I Alexander Gregg 1859-1893
II George Herbert Kinsolving 1893-1928
III Clinton S. Quin 1928-1955
IV John Elbridge Hines 1955-1964
V J. Milton Richardson 1965-1980
VI Maurice M. Benitez 1980-1995
VII Claude E. Payne 1995-2003
VIII Don A. Wimberly 2003-2009
IX C. Andrew Doyle 2009–present

Suffragan Bishops of Texas

No.NameYears
I Frederick Percy Goddard 1955-1972
II James Parker Clements 1956-1960
III Scott Bailey 1964-1975
IV Roger Howard Cilley 1976-1985
V Gordon T. Charlton Jr. 1982-1989
VI William E. Sterling 1989-1999
VII Leopoldo J. Alard 1995-2003
VIII Rayford B. High Jr. 2003-2012
IX Dena Harrison 2006–2019
X Jeff W. Fisher 2012–present
XI Kathryn McCrossen Ryan 2019–present

Schools

See also

Related Research Articles

A suffragan bishop is a type of bishop in some Christian denominations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Galveston–Houston</span> Latin Catholic ecclesiastical jurisdiction in Texas, USA

The Archdiocese of Galveston–Houston is a Latin Church ecclesiastical jurisdiction—an archdiocese—of the Catholic Church in the United States. The archdiocese covers a portion of Southeast Texas, and is the metropolitan see of the ecclesiastical province covering east-Texas. The archdiocese was erected in 2004, having been a diocese since 1959 and the "Diocese of Galveston" since 1847. It is the second metropolitan see in Texas after the Archdiocese of San Antonio.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Diocese of Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island</span> Diocese of the Anglican Church in Canada

The Diocese of Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island is a diocese of the Ecclesiastical Province of Canada of the Anglican Church of Canada. It encompasses the provinces of Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island and has two cathedrals: All Saints' in Halifax and St. Peter's in Charlottetown. Its de facto see city is Halifax, and its roughly 24 400 Anglicans distributed in 239 congregations are served by approximately 153 clergy and 330 lay readers according to the last available data. According to the 2001 census, 120,315 Nova Scotians identified themselves as Anglicans, while 6525 Prince Edward Islanders did the same.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Episcopal Diocese of Oklahoma</span> Diocese of the Episcopal Church in the United States

The Episcopal Diocese of Oklahoma dates back to 1837 as a Missionary District of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America. The General Convention of the Episcopal Church recognized the Diocese of Oklahoma in 1937. The diocese consists of all Episcopal congregations in the state of Oklahoma. The ninth Bishop and sixth diocesan Bishop is Poulson C. Reed, consecrated in 2020.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nicolaus Aloysius Gallagher</span> American prelate

Nicolaus Aloysius Gallagher was an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as bishop of the Diocese of Galveston in Texas from 1892 until his death in 1918.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Scott Bailey (bishop)</span> American Episcopalian bishop

Scott Field Bailey was the 6th diocesan bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of West Texas in the Episcopal Church.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">George Herbert Kinsolving</span> Bishop of Texas (1849–1928)

George Herbert Kinsolving was an American religious leader who was the second bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Texas, serving from 1893 to 1928.

Don Adger Wimberly was chancellor of the University of the South in Sewanee from 1997 to 2003. He also served as Bishop of Lexington and then Bishop of Texas in The Episcopal Church.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Edward Campion Acheson</span> English bishop

Edward Campion Acheson was sixth bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Connecticut, serving as suffragan from 1915 to 1926; and coadjutor from 1926 to 1928. He was diocesan bishop from 1928 to 1934.

Andrew Donnan Smith was a suffragan bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Connecticut from 1996 to 1999, and diocesan bishop from 1999 to 2010.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lyman Ogilby</span> American bishop and priest

Lyman Cunningham Ogilby was an Episcopal priest who became a missionary bishop in the Philippines, coadjutor bishop in the Episcopal Diocese of South Dakota and later the Episcopal Diocese of Pennsylvania, where he succeeded Bishop Robert L. DeWitt and became the 13th diocesan bishop until his retirement.

Rayford B. High Jr. is a bishop of the Episcopal Church. He served as suffragan bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Texas and then as provisional bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Fort Worth from November, 2012 through June, 2015. He currently serves as an assisting bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of West Texas.

Charles James Kinsolving III was an Episcopal prelate who served as Bishop of New Mexico and Southwest Texas from 1956 to 1972.

Clinton Simon Quin was bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Texas from 1928 to 1955, having been consecrated coadjutor on October 31, 1918.

David Mitchell Reed is the current diocesan bishop, and formerly suffragan bishop, of the Episcopal Diocese of West Texas.

William Elwood Sterling was an American Episcopalian bishop who served as the 6th suffragan bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Texas from September 1989 to February 1999.

William Matthew Merrick Thomas was an American missionary bishop of the diocese which eventually became the Anglican Episcopal Church of Brazil.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Claude E. Payne</span> American Episcopal bishop

Claude Edward Payne was the seventh Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Texas in The Episcopal Church between 1995 and 2003.

Eugene Cecil Seaman was an American prelate of the Episcopal Church who was missionary bishop of the Missionary District of Northwest Texas, serving from 1924 to 1945.

References

  1. "Genera Convention Approves North Texas-Texas Reunion as One of Its Final Actions in Baltimore". Episcopal News Service. 11 July 2022. Retrieved 11 July 2022.