Icon (Close Menu)

Rise in Glory: Bp. Mark Dyer

Adapted from a release by Curtis Prather of Virginia Theological Seminary

The Rt. Rev. James Michael Mark Dyer died November 11, said the Very Rev. Ian S. Markham, dean and president of Virginia Theological Seminary. He was 84.

“As we absorb this news, the sense of loss is palpable. I was among many who found tears in my eyes as I learned the news,” Markham said. “Mark Dyer was a giant of this seminary. He was a profound gift to the Church and to this seminary.”

Bishop Dyer joined the VTS faculty in 1996 as professor of systematic theology and director of Christian formation. He also served as professor of theology and mission. While at VTS he was a senior consultant for the Center for Anglican Communion Studies. After his retirement from VTS, Dyer maintained a presence within the VTS community as an adjunct professor until his death.

Born June 7, 1930, in Manchester, New Hampshire, Dyer served in the U.S. Navy during the Korean War before studying contemporary philosophy at the Catholic University of Louvain in Belgium. He went earned a bachelor’s degree in theology magna cum laude from New Hampshire’s St. Anselm College in 1959.

The following year, he was professed a monk in the Order of St. Benedict at St. Anselm Abbey, on the college’s campus. He was ordained priest of the abbey in 1963. He earned a master’s degree in theology and licentiate in sacred theology at the University of Ottawa, Canada, in 1965, while teaching at St. Anselm Seminary. He also taught theology at Queen of Peace Mission Seminary in New Hampshire and as an adjunct professor at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary in Massachusetts.

He entered the Anglican Church of Canada in 1969 and was received as a priest in the Episcopal Church in the Diocese of Massachusetts in 1971. He served Massachusetts as missioner to clergy; as priest-in-charge of Trinity Church, Bridgewater; and as rector of Christ Church, Hamilton and Wenham, before being ordained Bishop of Bethlehem in 1982.

Bishop Dyer’s voice was important in dialogues between the Episcopal Church and Lutheran and Orthodox churches in the United States in the 1980s and 1990s. His contributions to the wider Anglican Communion include service on the steering and design committees for the Lambeth Conference, the Archbishop of Canterbury’s Commission on Communion and Women in the Episcopate, the Inter-Anglican Theological and Doctrinal Commission, the Anglican Consultative Council, and the Lambeth Commission.

The only American to serve on the commission that produced the Windsor Report, Bishop Dyer also chaired the Lambeth Conference’s editorial committee and was co-chair of the Anglican-Orthodox Theological Dialogue, which produced an agreed statement on the theology of the Church in 2006, published as The Church of the Triune God.

“Under his gentle tutelage an entire generation of future priests and lay leaders were shaped and formed for their vocations,” said the Rev Martha Horne, 13th dean of VTS. “Mark’s extraordinary legacy as scholar, teacher, pastor, spiritual director, liturgist, and ecumenist lives on in the ministries of his students and in the lives of the countless men and women whose lives he touched as a monastic, a parish priest, and a diocesan bishop.”

Bishop Dyer is survived by his children John and Jennifer Dyer; stepchildren Robin and Amanda Gearey; grandchildren Sam and Ava Wandler; and his wife, Amelia J. Gearey Dyer, who serves VTS as James Maxwell Professor of Christian Education and Pastoral Theology, and director of the Ministry Resident Program. He is also survived by a sister, Patricia Cashin.

Bishop Dyer’s first wife, the Rev. Marie Elizabeth Dyer, died in 1999. She was an Episcopal priest and they were married 29 years.

WEEKLY NEWSLETTER

Top headlines. Every Friday.

MOST READ

CLASSIFIEDS

Most Recent

Suffragan Bishop Joey Royal Resigns

In Ottawa, Bishop Royal will become the international relations and operations manager with the Christian Embassy of Canada.

Protestant and Catholic Newman

In this clearly written book, T.L. Holtzen explains why the complicated debates about the doctrine of justification before and after the Reformation still matter today.

S. African Priests Protest Rejection of Same-Sex Blessings

The Rev. Canon Chris Ahrends: “It’s time for a form of ‘civil disobedience’ within the church — call it ‘ecclesiastical disobedience’ — by clergy of conscience.”

St. David’s of Denton, Texas, Celebrates Larger Space

The Rev. Paul Nesta, rector: “We aren’t here today because a building was consecrated [in the 1950s]. We’re here because a people were consecrated and given good work to advance.”