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Arthur C Lichtenberger

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Church
  
Episcopal Church

Education
  
Kenyon College

Ordination
  
November 21, 1926

Name
  
Arthur Lichtenberger

Consecration
  
1951

Nationality
  
American

Predecessor
  
Henry Knox Sherrill

In office
  
1958-1964

Successor
  
John E. Hines


Arthur C. Lichtenberger

Born
  
January 8, 1900 Oshkosh, Wisconsin, USA (
1900-01-08
)

Previous post
  
Bishop of Missouri (1951-1958)

Died
  
September 3, 1968, Bethel, Vermont, United States

Arthur Carl Lichtenberger (January 8, 1900—September 3, 1968) was a bishop of the Episcopal Church in the United States. He served as Bishop of Missouri from 1952 to 1959, and as Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church from 1958 to 1964.

Contents

Early life

Lichtenberger was born in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, where his father ran a grocery store. He attended Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio, where he played quarterback on the football team and was president of the Sigma Pi fraternity chapter. He was also president of the senior class, chairman of the Commons Committee, president of the Kenyon Masonic Club, lettered in basketball, headed the College Choir, and served on both the Collegian and Reveille staffs. He graduated cum laude from Kenyon with a Bachelor of Philosophy degree in 1923 and was chosen by the English Department to give the class address.

Early Ministries

Lichtenberger was influenced to join the priesthood by his father-in-law, Rev. Martin Tate, and entered the Episcopal Theological School in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He earned his Bachelor of Divinity degree in 1925, and did his postgraduate work at the General Theological Seminary in Manhattan. He was ordained a deacon on March 21, 1925, and a priest on November 21, 1926.

He began his ministry as missionary professor of New Testament at St. Paul's Divinity School in Wuchang. In 1928 he returned to the U.S. to be rector of Grace Church in Cincinnati, Ohio for five years, then rector of St. Paul's Church in Brookline, Massachusetts, for eight years. After serving as dean of Trinity Cathedral in Newark, New Jersey he went back to teaching as professor of pastoral theology at General Theological Seminary in New York City.

Bishop

In 1951 he became the Bishop of Missouri, and he held that post until he was elected the Presiding Bishop in 1958. In 1956 he assumed the chairmanship of an Episcopal delegation studying the problems of the Church of South India.

In 1958 he was an attendee of the Lambeth Conference in London.

In 1961 he was the first Episcopal Church leader to meet with a pope when he met Pope John XXIII at the Vatican. The meeting was commemorated with his image on a stamp from the Vatican post office.

In 1963 Princeton University gave him an honorary degree in Doctor of Divinity.

On November 23, 1963, he received a telegram from Robert Kennedy, U. S. Attorney General and brother of the late President, asking that he participate in the funeral of John F. Kennedy. Bishop Lichtenberger, was recovering from phlebitis at the time and asked Bishop William Creighton to represent him.

He retired from his position in 1964 because of health reasons and became a visiting professor at Episcopal Theological Seminary in Cambridge, MA.

He died in 1968 in Bethel, Vermont.

In 2010 he posthumously received the Founders' Award from Sigma Pi fraternity.

References

Arthur C. Lichtenberger Wikipedia