The Diocese of Saskatoon is a diocese of the Ecclesiastical Province of the Northern Lights of the Anglican Church of Canada. Its territory is a band across the middle of the province of Saskatchewan.[2] It was separated from the Anglican Diocese of Saskatchewan in 1933. The motto of the diocese is Sursum Corda - Lift up your hearts, a phrase from the service of Holy Communion. The cathedral church is St. John the Evangelist, built in 1912. Many rural parishes are multi-point charges.
Diocese of Saskatoon | |
---|---|
Location | |
Ecclesiastical province | Northern Lights |
Archdeaconries | 3 Deaneries, Saskatoon, Eastern and Western |
Statistics | |
Parishes | 19 (2022)[1] |
Members | 1,500 (2022)[1] |
Information | |
Rite | Anglican |
Cathedral | Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist, Saskatoon |
Current leadership | |
Bishop | Vacant |
Website | |
Anglican Diocese of Saskatoon |
Bishops of Saskatoon
editPrevious bishops were bishops of Anglican Diocese of Saskatchewan, Bishop Hallam continued after 1933 as bishop of Saskatoon.
- 1931 William Hallam (Bishop of Saskatchewan until 1933 diocesan split)
- 1949 Wilfred Fuller
- 1950 Stanley Steer
- 1970 Douglas Ford
- 1981 Roland Wood
- 1993 Tom Morgan (also Metropolitan of Rupert's Land, 2000–2003)
- 2004 Rod Andrews
- 2010 David Irving
- 2018 Chris Harper
- 2023 vacant
Deans of Saskatoon
editThe Dean of Saskatoon is also Rector of St John's Cathedral.
Source: [1]
- 1943–1949: William Eastland Fuller (Bishop of Saskatoon, 1949)
- 1950–1955: Norman Douglas Larmouth
- 1956–1962: Shirley Arthur Ralph Wood
- 1962–1965: Elwood Harold Patterson
- 1966–1970: Douglas Albert Ford (Bishop of Saskatoon, 1970)
- 1971–1981: Roland Wood (Bishop of Saskatoon, 1981)
- 1982–1991: Robert J. Blackwell
- 1993–2000: John Allan Kirk
- 2001–2006: Susan Marie Charbonneau
- 2006–2011: Terry R. Wiebe
- 2012–2022: G. Scott Pittendrigh
References
edit- ^ a b Elliot, Neil (15 March 2024). "Dioceses of the ACC – by numbers". Numbers Matters. (Neil Elliot is the statistics officer for the Anglican Church of Canada.). Retrieved 17 March 2024.
- ^ Map showing diocese location Archived July 4, 2009, at the Wayback Machine