Tag: House of Bishops

  • Bishops visit Episcopal mission sites in Dominican Republic

    Bishops visit Episcopal mission sites in Dominican Republic

    [Episcopal News Service — Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic] Episcopal bishops and their spouses spent the second day of their fall gathering visiting different missions operated by the Santo Domingo-based Diocese of the Dominican Republic. This included its cathedral and nearby schools.

    The missions visited by the 82 bishops and 38 spouses on September 11, 2025, are among the Province IX diocese’s 67 congregations serving 5,000 Episcopalians and the local communities.

    Iglesia Episcopal San Andrés

    “We feel highly rejoiced with the bishops’ visit here in the Dominican Republic,” the Rev. P. Obispo Encarnación, vicar of Iglesia Episcopal San Andrés in Santo Domingo, told Episcopal News Service.

    San Andrés is connected to the Colegio Episcopal San Andrés, an early childhood and elementary school. The bishops who visited San Andrés were greeted by students dancing in school uniforms and Dominican folk dresses. While they toured the school, students in one classroom sang “The Star-Spangled Banner” and welcomed them in Spanish and English. Outside, more students assembled for a special dance performance for the bishops. Some students gave presentations on what they’re learning in school, such as Dominican history and music.

    Lexington Bishop Mark Van Koevering says hello to students at the Colegio Episcopal San Andrés Sept. 11 in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. The students greeted visiting bishops with song and dance. Photo: Shireen Korkzan/Episcopal News Service
    Lexington Bishop Mark Van Koevering says hello to students at the Colegio Episcopal San Andrés Sept. 11 in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. The students greeted visiting bishops with song and dance. Photo: Shireen Korkzan/Episcopal News Service

    Catedral Episcopal de la Epifanía

    Also in Santo Domingo, the capital, some bishops visited the Catedral Episcopal de la Epifanía – Cathedral of the Epiphany. They were greeted with live clarinet, violin and organ performances. Chicago Bishop Paula Clark and Arkansas Bishop John Harmon told ENS that they were impressed by the cathedral’s community outreach despite its small size.

    “[The congregation is] meeting the needs of the people according to the Gospel,” Clark said.

    Harmon said he was surprised to learn that Epiphany had a woman dean “long before” any Episcopal seminary in the United States had a woman dean.

    “It shows that they have been committed to theological education for a very long time in the Caribbean despite limited resources,” he said. “they’re doing great work – doing a lot with a little.”

    Iglesia Episcopal San Esteban

    In San Pedro de Marcorís, some bishops visited the Iglesia Episcopal San Esteban. It also has an elementary school and the Clínica Esperanza y Caridad, a medical center.

    The Rt. Rev. Austin Rios, the San Francisco-based Diocese of California’s first Latino bishop, told ENS that visiting San Esteban reminded him of his experience with ministries when he lived in Rome, Italy. For 12 years he was the rector of St. Paul’s Within-the-Walls Episcopal Church. He said San Esteban’s ministry “feels very similar” to the ministerial work being done in Italy. 

    “I felt a lot of resonance … I am so thankful to see the joy and also the resilience that comes with doing this kind of ministry and seeing how it’s affecting people’s lives,” Rios said. “The great people we encountered at St. Esteban and in the Dominican Republic have been incredibly hospitable. It’s a wonderful gift to be here with the rest of the House of Bishops.”

    Students at the Colegio Episcopal San Andrés in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, greet visiting bishops Sept. 11 with posters, live musical performances and presentations. Photo: Shireen Korkzan/Episcopal News Service
    Students at the Colegio Episcopal San Andrés in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, greet visiting bishops Sept. 11 with posters, live musical performances and presentations. Photo: Shireen Korkzan/Episcopal News Service

    Iglesia Episcopal San José

    In Boca Chica, a popular beach town for tourists, students at Colegio Episcopal San José also greeted visiting bishops with live musical performances. The elementary Iglesia Episcopal San José school is part of the Iglesia Episcopal San José. The church also operates a retirement home for the community.

    While touring the San José church, retirement home and school, the bishops listened to a priest preach about diversity in the global church and being “united in we all share the same blood in Jesus Christ.”

    Minnesota Bishop Craig Loya described his experience visiting San José to ENS as “nourishing.”

    House of Bishops meeting in the Dominican Republic

    This September 10-15, 2025, meeting is one of two annual in-person House of Bishops gatherings. The fall meetings occur during non-General Convention years and, as is the case this year, usually include bishops’ spouses. The fall 2025 meeting is also notably the Most Rev. Sean Rowe’s second House of Bishops as presiding bishop.

    “I think one of the advantages and the gifts of convening the House of Bishops in [the Dominican Republic] is it’s a way of reminding us all that we really do have this global, diverse church, and that is really part of our great gift as a church,” Loya said. “We’re grateful to be here.”

    The House of Bishops gathering is underway through September 15, 2025. The bishops will continue business and affinity group meetings and discussions, plenaries and other listening sessions. On September 13, the Diocese of the Dominican Republic will host a special Eucharist. Dominican Republic Bishop Moisés Quezada Mota will celebrate with Presiding Bishop Sean Rowe preaching. The local Episcopalians and bishops will engage in fellowship following the worship service.

    Encarnación said the bishops interacting with local Episcopalians while in the Dominican Republic will further increase global unity in The Episcopal Church. “For us here in the Dominican Republic, this is very important because we feel supported by all the bishops worldwide.”


    -Shireen Korkzan is a reporter and assistant editor for Episcopal News Service. She can be reached at skorkzan@episcopalchurch.org.

  • Presiding Bishop Michael Curry’s opening remarks to House of Bishops

    Presiding Bishop Michael Curry’s opening remarks to House of Bishops

    The following is a transcript of the opening remarks of Presiding Bishop Michael Curry to the House of Bishops, meeting virtually from September 19 through September 22, 2023.

    St. Paul usually began his letters with words similar to these addressed originally to the church at Rome: “First, I thank my God through Jesus Christ for all of you…” So in that spirit, allow me to offer a few words of thanksgiving. 

    For Brian Cole, Ednice Baerga, and all the members of our Planning Committee, for our chaplains, interpreters, and all the members of the staff and the General Convention Office. Thank you!

    I also give thanks for you, this community of bishops and spouses. Thank you for your patience, your well wishes, your texted jokes, and above all for your prayers for me and my family. I am thankful that the issues with my heart are being managed and monitored, and that issues with this internal bleeding from this tumor on my right adrenal gland will get addressed with tomorrow’s surgery. I’m going to be fine, come what may, I’m going to be fine because we have a God, and God is real. So, God willing, I fully expect, with a short recovery time, to be back full time. In all things, to God be the glory!

    Lastly, I want to thank Mike Klusmeyer, who a year ago held off his retirement to help us out serving as canon to the presiding bishop for Mission Within The Episcopal Church. He would like to retire by Nov. 1, and he does so with my deep gratitude. So, thank you, Mike; thank you, Marsha. And may God bless and keep you both on your retirement journey.

    I know how important this role is for our ministry as bishops and for the work of this House. While this canon will only serve likely through the end of my tenure, I am mindful that this will be during a General Convention year and the transition to the 28th presiding bishop. I have therefore commissioned a small task group to:

    • Identify a pool of potential persons to be considered for this position.
    • Narrow that field.
    • Contact persons to assess both their interest and availability.
    • Present two or three names for me to consider.

    Members of this task group are Andy Doyle, who has agreed to serve as the convenor; Jennifer Baskerville-Burrows, Mary Kostel, Mark Stevenson, and Ruth Woodliff-Stanley. They have agreed to begin their work with this announcement. Thank you to each one; thank you.

    Several months ago, the Planning Committee designed our time around the theme, “The Vocation of Bishop Now.” That word “now” is important. Now, in this present moment. Now, in these days in which we live. Now, in the cultures where serve. Now, “for such a time as this,” as Queen Esther says in the Bible. This is not an easy time to be a follower of Jesus. It’s not an easy time to live by love. It’s not an easy time to be a bishop. It’s not an easy time to be the church. It’s not an easy time to be a leader in any endeavor; and frankly, it’s not an easy time just to be human.

    The timely theme of “The Vocation of Bishop Now” invites us to wrestle with some issues that are before us:

    • First, thoughtful engagement with clergy discipline—for bishops, priests, and deacons—upholding both the values of Title IV and the value of seeking and speaking “the truth in love,” holding each other accountable for our sins of omission or commission, and striving with all that we can muster by God’s grace toward becoming God’s beloved community on Earth as it is in heaven.
    • Second, our context demands that we must help the church to face and engage the reality of decline—lovingly, wisely, strategically, and courageously. It demands that at the same time we must support and encourage healthy and vibrant ongoing and emerging communities of faith, and it demands that we are called to be “prisoners of hope,” as the Bible says, sentries of new possibilities, messengers of good news, and apostles and midwives of resurrection.

    This is not easy. The times are not easy. But this is hard and holy work, and we can only do it together—as bishops, clergy and lay people, as the baptized people of God. We cannot, however, do this by ourselves, no matter how smart, how matter how capable, no matter who we are; we cannot do this by ourselves alone. We need God, we need Jesus, we need the Holy Spirit of the living God who, Jesus said, “will lead [us] in all truth.” Simply put, we need God, and we need each other.

    In the 18th chapter of Matthew when Jesus was teaching about the hard and holy work of becoming beloved community, he pointed to this truth when he said, “Wherever two or three are gathered together in my name, there I am in the midst of them.” We need God, and we need each other.

    I would dare say that Jesus was pointing to this when over and over again the four Gospels—hear that: the four Gospels, over and over again—record Jesus declaring in a variety of ways that the love of God and love for each other is God’s way of life, God’s dream for his human family, God’s vision for God’s entire creation. We need God, and we need each other. “You shall love the Lord your God and your neighbor as yourself.”

    And I suspect that our baptismal covenant may well be getting at this when we promise to follow Jesus in God’s way of love and life with these simple words: “I will, with God’s help.” We need God, and we need each other.

    Archbishop Tutu frequently quoted St. Augustine of Hippo who is reputed to have said: “By God’s self, God won’t. By ourselves, we can’t. But together with God, we can!”

    So God love you, God bless you, and you have a blessed meeting. And I’ll be seeing you on the other side of surgery. Amen.

    (From the Office of Public Affairs.)

    Surgery update on Presiding Bishop Michael Curry

    Episcopal Church Presiding Bishop Michael Curry underwent a scheduled on September 20, 2023, to remove his right adrenal gland and an attached mass, which was identified as the source of two prior instances of internal bleeding.

    He is now out of surgery and resting, and he will be in the intensive care unit of the hospital for about 24 hours. More information will be shared as it becomes available.

    Please continue to uphold Bishop Curry, his family, and his whole medical team in your prayers.

    (From the Office of Public Affairs.)

    Presiding Bishop Michael Curry in choir dress

    Presiding Bishop Michael Curry

    Being a Christian is not essentially about joining a church or being a nice person, but about following in the footsteps of Jesus, taking his teachings seriously, letting his Spirit take the lead in our lives, and in so doing helping to change the world from our nightmare into God’s dream. ―Michael Curry, Crazy Christians: A Call to Follow Jesus

    The Most Rev. Michael Bruce Curry is Presiding Bishop and Primate of The Episcopal Church. He is the Chief Pastor and serves as President and Chief Executive Officer, and as Chair of the Executive Council of the Episcopal Church.

    Presiding Bishop Curry was installed as the 27th Presiding Bishop and Primate of The Episcopal Church on November 1, 2015. He was elected to a nine-year term and confirmed at the 78th General Convention of The Episcopal Church in Salt Lake City, Utah, on June 27, 2015.

    Read Presiding Bishop Curry’s biography and find out about the Jesus Movement.

    The Episcopal Church of the Redeemer: Worshiping God, living in community, reaching out to the world.

    Church of the Redeemer

    Church of the Redeemer: Worshiping God, living in community, and reaching out to the world around us. We are an Episcopal Church serving north King County and south Snohomish County, Washington. As you travel your road, go with friends walking the way of Jesus at Redeemer.

    Church of the Redeemer is at 6220 Northeast 181st Street in Kenmore, Washington. The campus is a short distance north of Bothell Way, near the Burke-Gilman Trail. The entrance looks like a gravel driveway. The campus is larger on the inside than it is on the outside. And we managed to hide a large building on the side of a hill that is not easily seen from the street.

    The Episcopal Church welcomes you.

Funeral for the Rev. Canon John Fergueson, Saturday, March 2, 2026, at 10:00 am in Church of the Redeemer. Additional parking available at The Vine Church across 181st Street from Redeemer.

The 6th Sunday of Easter (Year A), May 10, 2026. Services at 8:00 am (no music) and 10:30 (music). Xristos Kuxwoo-digoot! Xegaa-kux Kuxwoo-digoot!

Episcopal Church of the Redeemer
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