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Va. Bishop Cancels Search for Suffragan

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The Rev. Rev. Shannon S. Johnston writes to members of the Diocese of Virginia in a letter dated May 24:

I am writing to let you know that the Executive Board and I, with the knowledge and consent of the Standing Committee, have made the decision to end the ongoing search toward the election of a second bishop suffragan. This action is effective immediately.

We have taken this extraordinary step for two fundamental reasons. First, over the past few months, serious questions have been brought forward by members of the diocesan staff having to do with the leadership and the culture among diocesan staff. As Bishop I must take full responsibility for this situation. Utmost in my priorities will be to ensure that all of us function well together. The crucial point as we face this reality is that this is not the time to introduce a new bishop into the diocesan system. Rather, it is much preferable to bring in the help we need to address the difficulties and identify ways that the staff as a culture and system can be become fully functional again. To this end, it is my hope to engage the services of the Lombard-Mennonite Peace Center, the leading church organizational consultant group in the country, to work with us. I have been in touch with the Presiding Bishop’s office about our situation and the possibilities to address it, and we have been advised that they are in full agreement with our decision. I am confident we will succeed in the tasks before us because our staff is a talented group and each person is deeply committed to the Church, to this Diocese and to building up the Kingdom of God.

Secondly, now reaching age 60 with 30 years of service in the Episcopal Church (eleven years as a bishop in Virginia), I have begun to look more seriously about retiring earlier than I had originally planned. I am acutely aware that my wife Ellen is several years my senior and we want to be able to enjoy an active retirement together. At this point in our marriage, it is important to consider how we take care of ourselves. Of course, there is a great deal of research and consultation to do to determine readiness for retirement, all requiring much prayerful consideration. In looking at my options, I am no longer as certain as before that I can promise working another five years with a new suffragan as I had said I would be able to do.

Read the rest.

Matthew Townsend is a Halifax-based freelance journalist and volunteer advocate for survivors of sexual misconduct in Anglican settings. He served as editor of the Anglican Journal from 2019 to 2021 and communications missioner for the Anglican Diocese of Quebec from 2019 to 2022. He and his wife recently entered catechism class in the Orthodox Church in America.

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