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Diocese of Massachusetts

Diœcesis Massachusettensis
Location
CountryUnited States
Ecclesiastical provinceProvince I
Deaneries12
Statistics
Congregations162 (2022)
Members47,642 (2022)
Information
DenominationEpiscopal Church
EstablishedSeptember 8, 1784
CathedralSt Paul's Cathedral
LanguageEnglish, American Sign Language, Dinka, Spanish
Current leadership
BishopAlan M. Gates
Map
Location of the Diocese of Massachusetts
Location of the Diocese of Massachusetts
Website
diomass.org

The Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts is one of the nine original dioceses of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America.

History[edit]

Massachusetts was founded by Puritans who did not accept such aspects of the Church of England as bishops and the Book of Common Prayer. The first Anglican parish in the Massachusetts Bay Colony was King's Chapel in Boston, founded in 1688, 58 years after the city. After the American Revolution, King's Chapel became the first Unitarian congregation in North America. The oldest remaining parishes in the diocese are Christ Church in Quincy, founded in 1704, St. Paul's in Newburyport, founded as Queen Anne's Chapel in 1711, St. Michael's Church in Marblehead, founded in 1714, Christ Church in Boston (Old North Church), founded in 1723, and St. Andrew's Church in South Scituate (now Hanover), founded in 1727.

The diocese was organized in 1784, five years before the Episcopal Church itself. The first bishop (for New England and New York) was Samuel Seabury who was consecrated by the bishops of the Scottish Episcopal Church in 1784.

Today, it is one of the largest dioceses in the ECUSA in terms of membership. It encompasses the eastern part of Massachusetts, specifically, the nine counties east and southeast of Worcester County.

The diocese was the first in the Anglican Communion to consecrate a woman as a bishop. Barbara Harris became bishop suffragan of the diocese in 1989. It became the first diocese in the Episcopal Church to install an African American as diocesan bishop when John Melville Burgess was consecrated as the 12th bishop in 1970.[1]

The current diocesan bishop is Alan M. Gates. He was consecrated bishop in 2014 and succeeded M. Thomas Shaw upon the latter's retirement in September 2014. The current bishop suffragan is Gayle E. Harris, consecrated in January 2003.[2]

Historically, the diocese has been considered Low Church; however, there are a number of Anglo-Catholic parishes, the most notable of which is the Church of the Advent in Boston. Its best-known Low Church parish is Trinity Church in Boston's Copley Square. However, Trinity and most other parishes in the diocese have become 'higher' in the last 25 years with the introduction of Mass vestments such as the chasuble. Earlier distinctions between Low and High Church have largely disappeared across every diocese.

The diocesan offices are located at 138 Tremont Street, adjacent to the Cathedral Church of St. Paul.

The diocese had 87,000 members in 2013 and had fallen to 82,450 by 2014.[3]

Diocesan Bishops[edit]

  1. Edward Bass (1797-1803)
  2. Samuel Parker (1804)
  3. Alexander Viets Griswold (1811-1843)
  4. Manton Eastburn (1843-1872)
  5. Benjamin Henry Paddock (1873-1891)
  6. Phillips Brooks (1891-1893)
  7. William Lawrence (1893-1927)
  8. Charles Lewis Slattery (1927-1930)
  9. Henry Knox Sherrill (1930-1947)
  10. Norman Burdett Nash (1947-1956)
  11. Anson Phelps Stokes (1956-1970)
  12. John Burgess (1970-1975)
  13. John Bowen Coburn (1976-1986)
  14. David Johnson (1986-1995)
  15. M. Thomas Shaw (1995-2014)
  16. Alan McIntosh Gates (2014–present)

Suffragan Bishops[edit]

  1. Samuel G. Babcock (1913-1938)
  2. Raymond A. Heron (1938-1954)
  3. Frederic C. Lawrence (1956-1968)
  4. John M. Burgess (1962-1969)
  5. Morris F. Arnold (1972-1982)
  6. Barbara C. Harris (1989-2003)
  7. Roy F. Cederholm Jr. (2001-2011)
  8. Gayle E. Harris (2003–2023)
  9. Carol J. Gallagher (2023–present)

References[edit]

  1. ^ "History of the Diocese". Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts. Archived from the original on 21 April 2015. Retrieved 12 February 2013.
  2. ^ "Our Bishops". Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts. Retrieved 12 February 2013.
  3. ^ "Episcopal Church membership report" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-09-06. Retrieved 2015-08-03.

External links[edit]

42°21′20.90″N 71°03′44.64″W / 42.3558056°N 71.0624000°W / 42.3558056; -71.0624000

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