Thinking Anglicans

Bishop of Rochester resigns

There was still no sign of this release on the Rochester diocesan website at 6.00 pm Saturday, last website update was on 20 March, it says.
Monday lunchtime
A copy of the press release has at last appeared on the Rochester diocesan website, as a PDF file.
——
PRESS ANNOUNCEMENT EMBARGOED UNTIL 10 a.m. 28 MARCH 2009

Bishopscourt, Rochester, Kent ME1 1TS
01634 814439 / 07791 968819

Bishop Michael announces his intention to step down as Bishop of Rochester

Bishop Michael Nazir-Ali has announced his intention to step down as Bishop of Rochester as from 1st September 2009. He will have been Bishop in the Diocese for nearly 15 years and during this time has played a major part in the life of the church.

Bishop Michael is hoping to work with a number of church leaders from areas where the church is under pressure, particularly in minority situations, who have asked him to assist them with education and training for their particular situation. Details of this arrangement are still being worked out.

Bishop Michael, who will be 60 in August, is the 106th Bishop of Rochester. He is originally from Asia and was the first non-white Diocesan Bishop in the Church of England. He was appointed to Rochester in 1994. Before that he was the General Secretary of CMS from 1989-1994 and before that Bishop of Raiwind in Pakistan and theological Assistant to the Archbishop of Canterbury. Since 1999 he has also been a member of the House of Lords where he has been active in a number of areas of national and international concern.

Bishop Michael says, “We thank God for his blessings and for friends we have made in the Diocese in the past 15 years. I am so grateful to God for the friendship and loyalty of those around us and ask for people’s prayers as we take this step of faith ‘not knowing where we are going’ (Heb 11:8).

The Archbishop of Canterbury says: Bishop Michael’s decision to undertake this new and very challenging ministry will leave a real gap in the ranks of English bishops. His enormous theological skill, his specialist involvement in the complex debates around bioethics, his wide international experience and his clarity of mind and expression have made him a really valuable colleague, and he has served the Church and the wider society with dedication and distinction.

In his new work with churches in minority situations, he will need all our prayer and support. It is a courageous initiative and a timely one. I am personally very glad that I shall still be able to draw on his expertise and friendship, and wish him every strength and blessing in his work.

The Bishop of Tonbridge, the Rt Revd Dr Brian Castle says: “Bishop Michael has had a distinguished ministry locally, nationally and internationally. He has been a true prophet in the way that he has courageously spoken out against both injustice and compromising the Word of God. His talks and statements, always prayerfully conceived, are listened to carefully, even by those who disagree with him. His Presidential Addresses at Diocesan Synod merit publication. Bishop Michael, so faithfully supported by Valerie, has exercised a leadership which inspires, challenges and takes full account of the complexities of contemporary culture, ensuring that the structures of the diocese serve its vision. He will be greatly missed by Rochester whose people he has faithfully loved and nurtured over the years.”

The Dean of Rochester, the Very Revd Adrian Newman, says: “Bishop Michael has exercised an influential and high profile ministry within and well beyond the Diocese of Rochester. His passion for making Christ known is matched only by his ability to communicate across cultural divisions, and this has opened doors of influence that he has always been courageous enough to walk through, often at personal cost. It has been a privilege to serve alongside him within the Diocese, and I am delighted that his unique gifts will continue to be offered to the wider life of church and society.”

The Diocesan Secretary, Canon Louise Gilbert, says: “Bishop Michael’s tenure has been characterised by a determination to see some significant Diocesan challenges through to successful conclusion. Through his leadership we now have a senior staff which operates as a cohesive body following a comprehensive Diocesan structures review. This is of benefit to the entire Diocese. In addition, we have reformed partnerships with neighbouring Dioceses. Rochester Cathedral is now positively flourishing thanks to Bishop Michael’s keen interest and thoughtful appointments. His considerable gifts leave the Diocese with a legacy of exemplary arrangements for pastoral care, teaching and a positive environment in which faith can flourish. We will miss his guidance and on a personal note, I wish him every joy and fulfilment in his new role.”

Bishop Michael’s farewell service for the Diocese will be held at Rochester Cathedral on 12th September 2009 at 3.15 p.m. and further details will be circulated at a later date. Details about the process of appointing a new Bishop and the arrangements during the interregnum will also be published later.

ENDS

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JCF
JCF
15 years ago

Speculators, start your engines!

“Bishop Michael is hoping to work with a number of church leaders from areas where the church is under pressure, particularly in minority situations, who have asked him to assist them with education and training for their particular situation.”

Um, he is welcome NOT to consider the USA as such an area (however that vague definition could be twisted). Nazir-Ali’s visits here have been destructive enough…

Viriato da Silva
Viriato da Silva
15 years ago

Or perhaps the US is not on his mind at all. It’s possible that, just as Archbishop-designate Duncan is a frustrated would-be Presiding Bishop of TEC who has found his empire in “ACNA,” +Nazir-Ali may be liberating himself now to salve his frustrations over not becoming AbC with the balm of becoming proto-primate of a parallel CoE being planned…

Hey, stranger things have come to pass in the Anglican Universe…

Father Ron Smith
15 years ago

Perhaps Bishop Nazir-Ali could be persuaded to help Archbishop Akinola in his dialogue with Muslims in Nigeria. Thei objectives seem to be similar on many other issues, too.

martin sewell
martin sewell
15 years ago

I hope that Bishop Michael’s distinctive ability to articulate what the ordinary person in the street or pew is thinking will be preserved by granting him a seat in the House of Lords.

dodgey_vicar
dodgey_vicar
15 years ago

Michael is extraordinarily intelligent, and his complex sentence structures and vocabulary often lose educated and even very intelligent listeners. Those who fail to understand him often assume that what he says is as correct as the manner in which he expresses himself.
Those qualities would add a dangerous factor to Akinola’s pronouncements.
I have a list of clergy I would be glad to see the back of, and Rochester would be a splendid place to send them.
Perhaps Simon, we can start a list of senior clerics with reasons for ‘promoting them’ away from us.

Martin Reynolds
Martin Reynolds
15 years ago

I’m with George Pitcher on this.

His take is closer to the truth I think and I agree with his comments.

Simon Sarmiento
15 years ago

Still nothing on the diocesan website that I could see, but the Church Times blog does have the text of the letter sent to Rochester clergy, see

http://www.churchtimes.co.uk/blog_post.asp?id=72524

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