Kevin Bond Allen | |
---|---|
Bishop of Cascadia | |
Church | Anglican Church in North America |
Diocese | Cascadia |
In office | 2011–2024 |
Predecessor | Richard Boyce (as vicar general) |
Successor | Jacob Worley |
Orders | |
Ordination | 1988 |
Consecration | September 30, 2011 by Robert Duncan |
Personal details | |
Born | 1954 |
Kevin Bond Allen (born 1954) is an American Anglican bishop. From 2011 to 2024, he was the first bishop of the Diocese of Cascadia in the Anglican Church in North America. Earlier in his career, as an Episcopal priest, he was a key figure in the Anglican realignment in the Pacific Northwest.
Allen was born in 1954 and raised in Silverdale, Washington. He graduated from the University of Washington and completed his graduate studies at Seattle University. He served as a youth leader during his college years and, determining a call to ministry in the Episcopal Church, he went on to complete an M.Div. after studies at both General Theological Seminary and Ridley Hall, Cambridge. [1]
Allen served as a lay missioner in a Church of England inner-city London parish serving low-income multi-racial communities. He also served as a missioner in Bangladesh with the United Society for the Propagation of the Gospel. Ordained in the Episcopal Church in 1988, over the next two decades Allen served as vicar of a Cambodian refugee church in Tacoma, an associate rector in Bellevue, as a rector in Puyallup, Washington, and as rector of the historic All Saints' Episcopal Church in Austin, Texas, [1] where he founded and chaired Senior Pastors of University Congregations [2] ). In 2002, Allen returned to Washington state as rector of St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Bellingham. [1] St. Paul's was the second-largest parish in the Diocese of Olympia. [3]
In late 2007, amid a broader realignment within North American Anglicanism over issues of doctrine and human sexuality, approximately 30 of the 1,400 members of St. Paul's left the church and planted St. Brendan's Anglican Church in Bellingham. [4] In early 2008, Allen stepped down as rector of St. Paul's and became rector of St. Brendan's, telling St. Paul's members that "During the last few years, our (national) Episcopal Church has continued to embrace a wide range of and often conflicting teachings regarding scriptural authority, the divinity of Christ, and affirming other religions at the price of evangelism. . . . Since I do not agree with their direction, my leadership as a rector would become a divisive issue rather than a reconciling blessing in future parish discussions about how we should participate with and support our diocese and national church." [4]
As rector of St. Brendan's, Allen became a leader among a group of disparate Anglican realignment congregations in Washington state, including St. Charles in Poulsbo and St. Stephen's in Oak Harbor, both of which had left the Episcopal Church, as well as Reformed Episcopal congregations and unaffiliated Anglican-tradition churches. [5] In 2009, the group of churches formed the Diocese of Cascadia, under Reformed Episcopal Church Bishop Richard Boyce as vicar general, and the diocese-in-formation was admitted to the newly formed Anglican Church in North America. [6]
In 2011, the diocese was fully recognized in the ACNA and Allen was elected and consecrated as its first diocesan bishop by ACNA Archbishop Robert Duncan. [1] Under his leadership, the diocese of the Diocese of Cascadia began with seven congregations and had grown by 2021 to 26 congregations, church plants and missions across Oregon, Washington, and Alaska. [1] [7]
In the ACNA, Allen serves on the Native American Ministry Task Force, as president of the board of Share Our Ministries Abroad (SOMA-USA), and provincial dean of College of Bishops affairs, in which capacity he is leading the ACNA 2030 task force. [1] [8] He was also a member of the ACNA Task Force on Holy Orders, which assessed the scriptural and theological foundations of the debate over women's ordination in the ACNA. [9]
In 2016, Allen joined fellow ACNA bishops Eric Menees, Mark Zimmerman, Keith Andrews, and Todd Hunter to streamline the ordination process in western U.S. ACNA dioceses, with a joint exam and a joint examining board that would allow clergy ordained under the standards to serve in any participating diocese. [10]
In 2019, Allen designated St. Charles Anglican Church's new building in Silverdale as Cascadia's diocesan cathedral. Episcopal offices are also housed at the cathedral. [11] In 2021, Allen hosted a triannual meeting of the ACNA Executive Committee at St. Charles. [8]
In 2022, Allen announced he would retire as bishop. An episcopal election was held in fall 2023, and Jacob Worley was consecrated and seated as Allen's successor in early 2024. [12]
As bishop, Allen has served in several roles contributing to Anglican and ecumenical relationships. He was appointed to head the companion relationship between the ACNA and the GAFCON-affiliated Church of the Province of Myanmar. [1] He was the first ACNA bishop invited to attend an OCA All America Council meeting in 2011 [1] and as a result was appointed co-chair of the ecumenical dialogue between the ACNA and the Orthodox Church in America. [13] He also co-led the 2015 meeting in Moscow of ACNA Archbishop Foley Beach and Patriarch Kirill of the Russian Orthodox Church. [14]
Allen is married to Stefanie Allen, a former faculty member of the English Department at Tacoma Community College, and later high school teacher and administrator. They have one son (a bi-vocational Anglican priest) and daughter-in-law who serve a parish in the Diocese of Cascadia. [1]
The Anglican realignment is a movement among some Anglicans to align themselves under new or alternative oversight within or outside the Anglican Communion. This movement is primarily active in parts of the Episcopal Church in the United States and the Anglican Church of Canada. Two of the major events that contributed to the movement were the 2002 decision of the Diocese of New Westminster in Canada to authorise a rite of blessing for same-sex unions, and the nomination of two openly gay priests in 2003 to become bishops. Jeffrey John, an openly gay priest with a long-time partner, was appointed to be the next Bishop of Reading in the Church of England and the General Convention of the Episcopal Church ratified the election of Gene Robinson, an openly gay non-celibate man, as Bishop of New Hampshire. Jeffrey John ultimately declined the appointment due to pressure.
The Diocese of the Mid-Atlantic is an Anglican Church in North America diocese, encompassing Virginia, Maryland, Washington, D.C., and northeastern North Carolina, with 38 congregations, including several church plantings. The diocese was originally organized in 2006 as the Anglican District of Virginia when a group of Virginian congregations withdrew from the Episcopal Church. It achieved diocesan status on June 21, 2011.
The Anglican Church in North America (ACNA) is a Christian denomination in the Anglican tradition in the United States and Canada. It also includes ten congregations in Mexico, two mission churches in Guatemala, and a missionary diocese in Cuba. Headquartered in Ambridge, Pennsylvania, the church reported more than 1,000 congregations and more than 128,000 members in 2023. The first archbishop of the ACNA was Robert Duncan, who was succeeded by Foley Beach in 2014. In June 2024, the College of Bishops elected Steve Wood as the third archbishop of the ACNA. Authority was transferred to him during the closing Eucharist at the ACNA Assembly 2024 conference in Latrobe, Pennsylvania.
The Diocese of Cascadia is a founding diocese of the Anglican Church in North America (ACNA), created in June 2009. It encompasses 25 congregations. The name Cascadia was chosen because the Cascade Range is a prominent geographical feature of the region.
The Anglican Diocese of the Great Lakes is a diocese of the Anglican Church in North America since June 2010. It has 42 congregations in the American states of Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia. It was previously the Anglican District of the Great Lakes of the Convocation of Anglicans in North America, since August 2008, which was a founding diocese of the Anglican Church in North America in June 2009.
The Anglican Diocese in New England is a diocese of the Anglican Church in North America (ACNA). The diocese, based in Amesbury, Massachusetts, comprises 30 congregations in 6 American states, Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont. The state with most congregations is Massachusetts, with 14.
Stephen Dwain "Steve" Wood is an American Anglican bishop. He is currently serving as the first bishop of the Diocese of the Carolinas, a diocese of the Anglican Church in North America (ACNA), as well as rector of St. Andrew's Anglican Church in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina. Since June 2024, he has also been the third archbishop of the ACNA.
John A. M. Guernsey is a retired American bishop in the Anglican Church in North America (ACNA). Previously an Episcopal priest, he was consecrated as a bishop of the Church of Uganda in September 2007 as part of the Anglican realignment, and transferred to the newly formed ACNA in 2009. From 2011 to 2023, Guernsey was the first bishop of ACNA's Diocese of the Mid-Atlantic.
The Diocese of Churches for the Sake of Others (C4SO) is a non-geographical diocese of the Anglican Church in North America. Formed as a diocese in 2013, C4SO originated as the West Coast church planting initiative in the Anglican Mission in the Americas but today has member churches across the United States. Founded by Todd Hunter, who was a leader in the North American Pentecostal movement before he became Anglican, the C4SO diocese embodies charismatic and "post-evangelical" streams within the Anglican tradition. By attendance and membership, the diocese is one of the largest in the ACNA.
James Lafayette Hobby Jr. is a former American bishop of the Anglican Church in North America. He was elected the second bishop of the Anglican Diocese of Pittsburgh on 23 April 2016 and enthroned on 10 September 2016. He is married to Shari, also an Anglican priest, and they have three daughters.
Holy Cross Cathedral is an evangelical Anglican church in Loganville, Georgia. Founded in 2004 as part of the Anglican realignment, it serves today as the cathedral parish for the Anglican Diocese of the South and the diocesan seat of the Primate of the Anglican Church in North America, Foley Beach.
St. Charles Anglican Cathedral is the cathedral of the Anglican Church in North America's Diocese of Cascadia. Founded in Poulsbo, Washington, in 1966, the congregation left the Episcopal Church as part of the Anglican realignment and eventually moved to its current location near Bremerton, Washington, in central Kitsap County. The cathedral's patron is Charles Lwanga, one of the Ugandan martyrs.
Richard Walter Lipka is an American Anglican bishop. Lipka served as a Roman Catholic and Episcopal priest before being consecrated in the Charismatic Episcopal Church. He has served since 2021 as bishop ordinary of the Missionary Diocese of All Saints, an Anglo-Catholic diocese in the Anglican Church in North America. He is a significant figure in the Episcopal charismatic renewal movement and the Anglican realignment.
John Mark Zimmerman is an American Anglican bishop. He was the first diocesan bishop of the Anglican Diocese of the Southwest, which has jurisdiction in west Texas, New Mexico and Mexico in the Anglican Church in North America.
Milton Keith Andrews is an American Anglican bishop. He is currently serving as the second bishop of the Diocese of Western Anglicans in the Anglican Church in North America. Ordained in the Episcopal Church, he was the rector of a congregation that split during the Anglican realignment.
David C. Bryan is an American bishop of the Anglican Church in North America. Consecrated in 2013 to serve in PEARUSA, the Anglican Church of Rwanda's missionary district in North America, Bryan has since 2016 been bishop suffragan and area bishop for South Carolina in the Diocese of the Carolinas.
Thaddeus Rockwell Barnum is an American bishop of the Anglican Church in North America. Consecrated in 2001 to serve in the Anglican Mission in the Americas, Barnum is now assisting bishop in the Diocese of the Carolinas. He was a key figure in and chronicler of the Anglican realignment in the United States.
Terrell Lyles Glenn Jr. is an American bishop of the Anglican Church in North America. He is a former Episcopal priest who played an active role in the Anglican realignment in the United States. Consecrated in 2008 to serve as a bishop in the Anglican Mission in the Americas, Glenn is now an assisting bishop overseeing North Carolina congregations in the Diocese of the Carolinas.
Thomas William "T. J." Johnston Jr. is an American lawyer and bishop of the Anglican Church in North America. As the first Episcopal priest whose orders were transferred to the Anglican Church of Rwanda in the 1990s, Johnston was a key figure in the Anglican realignment in the United States. Consecrated as a bishop in 2001 to serve in the Anglican Mission in the Americas, Johnston later became a church planter in South Carolina.
Jacob Christopher Worley is an American Anglican bishop. Since 2024, he has been the second diocesan bishop of the Diocese of Cascadia in the Anglican Church in North America. He has also served as a priest in the Episcopal Church, the Anglican Mission in America, the Church of Ireland, and the Anglican Church of Canada, where he was elected bishop of Caledonia in 2017, only to have his election controversially blocked by other bishops in the province.