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Episcopal Diocese of Connecticut

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Ecclesiastical province
  
Province I

Members
  
51,068 (2015)

Suffragans
  
Laura J. Ahrens

Cathedral
  
Christ Church

Congregations
  
165

Rite
  
Episcopal

Bishop
  
Ian Douglas

Suffragan
  
Laura J. Ahrens

Episcopal Diocese of Connecticut

Address
  
290 Pratt St, Meriden, CT 06450, USA

Hours
  
Open today · 10AM–1PMSaturday10AM–1PMSunday10–11AM, 12–1PMMonday9AM–5PMTuesday9AM–5PMWednesday9AM–5PMThursday9AM–5PMFriday9AM–5PM

Similar
  
St Peter's Episcopal Church, St Paul's Episcopal Church, St Mark's Episcopal Church, St Andrew's Episcopal, St Paul's Episcopal Church

Profiles

Episcopal diocese of connecticut provisional ordination process application


The Episcopal Diocese of Connecticut (also known as The Episcopal Church in Connecticut) is a diocese of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America, encompassing the entire state of Connecticut. It is one of the nine original dioceses of the Episcopal Church and one of seven New England dioceses that make up Province 1.

Contents

History

Its first bishop, Samuel Seabury, was the first Anglican bishop with a see outside the British Isles. Anglican services have been conducted in the diocese since 1702, but the first diocesan convention did not take place until after the diocese was organized, having been convened by Seabury in 1785.

The cathedra of the bishop is at Christ Church Cathedral (45 Church Street) in the see city of Hartford. Diocesan offices are at 1335 Asylum Avenue, Hartford. There are 177 parishes in the diocese, with about 68,500 baptized members. One of Connecticut's well-known bishops was Walter H. Gray, who served as the first chairman of the Civil Rights Commission in Connecticut. Gray also played a leading role at two meetings of the Lambeth Conferences.

Ian Douglas, elected 15th bishop of the diocese on October 24, 2009, was consecrated at the Koeppel Center of Trinity College on April 17, 2010, at a service at which the preacher was Desmond Tutu, Archbishop emeritus of Cape Town. He was seated at Christ Church Cathedral the following day. Douglas is the first priest ever to be elected from outside the diocese, and at the time of his election was Angus Dun Professor of Mission and World Christianity at Episcopal Divinity School in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and associate priest at St. James’s Church, Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Douglas is assisted by Laura J. Ahrens (since 2007). Ahrens was the first woman to be elected bishop in Connecticut and was consecrated on June 30, 2007 at Woolsey Hall, Yale University, New Haven.

As of 2013 the diocese had a membership of 54,145, down from 68,000 in 2003.

Parishes

  • Trinity Episcopal Church (Brooklyn)
  • Christ Church (New Haven)
  • St. Andrew's Episcopal Church (Stamford, Connecticut)
  • Trinity Church on the Green, New Haven
  • References

    Episcopal Diocese of Connecticut Wikipedia