Church of Bangladesh Diocese of Kushtia

(Redirected from Bishop of Kushtia)

The Church of Bangladesh Diocese of Kushtia is one of three dioceses of the Church of Bangladesh (a United Protestant denomination).[1] It was formed in 1990 out of the Diocese of Dhaka, and its first three bishops each went on to become archbishop of Dhaka and primate & moderator of the Church of Bangladesh.[2]

Diocese of Kushtia

কুষ্টিয়া ধর্মপ্রদেশ
Church of Bangladesh
Incumbent:
Hemen Halder
from 2019 as Bishop of Kushtia
StyleThe Right Reverend
Location
CountryBangladesh
Ecclesiastical provinceDhaka
MetropolitanDhaka
Deaneries2
Statistics
Area20,835.15 km2 (8,044.50 sq mi)
Parishes44
Members8,000
Information
First holderMichael S. Baroi
RiteChurch of Bangladesh Book of Common Prayer
Established1990
CathedralSt John's Cathedral Church
Current leadership
Parent churchChurch of Bangladesh
GovernanceEpiscopal
BishopHemen Halder
Metropolitan ArchbishopSamuel Sunil Mankhin
Bishops emeritusMichael S. Baroi

Structure

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Based in Kushtia, the Diocese of Kushtia comprises two deaneries. Bollovpur Deanery, in the southwestern area of Bangladesh, is the largest deanery by membership in the Church of Bangladesh with about 5,000 members in 13 parishes. Protestant work in this area has included a hospital and schools formed by the Church Mission Society in the 19th century. The deanery holds an annual spiritual revival called Dhannya Budhbar Savha.[3]

The Rajshahi deanery has 3,000 members in 31 parishes, most of them part of the Santal people, which grew out of English Presbyterian missions. The deanery hosts an annual spiritual revival called Helmel Sova.[4] The moderator of the COB chairs the board of the Christian Mission Hospital Rajshahi, built by Presbyterian missionaries in 1926.[5]

List of bishops

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  1. Michael Baroi (1990–2003)
  2. Paul Sarker (2003–2009)
  3. Samuel Sunil Mankhin (2009–2019)
  4. Hemen Halder (2019–present)

References

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  1. ^ "Congregations". Church of Bangladesh. 2012-01-29.
  2. ^ "Our History". Church of Bangladesh. 2012-01-29. Retrieved 2020-08-27.
  3. ^ "Bollovepur Deanery". Church of Bangladesh. Retrieved 26 March 2024.
  4. ^ "Rajshahi Deanery". Church of Bangladesh. Retrieved 26 March 2024.
  5. ^ "Who we are". Christian Mission Hospital Rajshahi. Retrieved 26 March 2024.
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