Anglican Diocese of Melbourne

The Anglican Diocese of Melbourne is the metropolitan diocese of the Province of Victoria in the Anglican Church of Australia. The diocese was founded from the Diocese of Australia by letters patent of 25 June 1847[1] and includes the cities of Melbourne and Geelong and also some more rural areas. The cathedral church is St Paul's Cathedral, Melbourne. The current Archbishop of Melbourne since 2006 is Philip Freier, who was translated from the Anglican Diocese of The Northern Territory, and who was the Anglican Primate of Australia from 2014 to 2020.

Diocese of Melbourne
Coat of arms
Coat of arms
Location
Ecclesiastical provinceVictoria
ArchdeaconriesBox Hill, Dandenong, Frankston, Geelong, Kew, La Trobe, Maroondah, Melbourne, Port Philip & Bayside & Kingston North, Stonnington & Glen Eira, and The Yarra
Coordinates37°49′1″S 144°58′3″E / 37.81694°S 144.96750°E / -37.81694; 144.96750
Information
RiteAnglican
CathedralSt Paul's Cathedral, Melbourne
Current leadership
ArchbishopPhilip Freier
Assistant bishopsPaul Barker, Jumbunna Episcopate
Kate Prowd, Oodthenong Episcopate
Genieve Blackwell, Marmingatha Episcopate
Brad Billings, Theological Education & Wellbeing (Monomeeth Episcopate)
Website
melbourneanglican.org
St Paul's Cathedral, Melbourne

History

The diocese was founded from the Diocese of Australia by letters patent of 25 June 1847[1] and includes the cities of Melbourne and Geelong and also some more rural areas. The cathedral church is St Paul's Cathedral, Melbourne. The ordinary of the diocese is the Archbishop of Melbourne, Philip Freier, who was translated from the Anglican Diocese of The Northern Territory, and who was the Anglican Primate of Australia from 2014 to 2020.

Areas of episcopal care

The Diocese of Melbourne is divided into areas of episcopal care in which assistant bishops exercise a pastoral role on behalf of the archbishop.[2] These areas are divided into archdeaconries with further subdivision into area deaneries.

Following consultation with the Wurundjeri people of Melbourne, local Indigenous names have been used for the areas of episcopal care. The areas are:

  • Marmingatha, covering the inner city, especially along major transport corridors;
  • Oodthenong, covering the northern and western growth areas in Greater Melbourne and Geelong;
  • Jumbunna, covering parishes south of the Yarra and to the east, including the South-East Growth Corridor; and
  • Monomeeth, of which the bishop has responsibilities across the whole of the diocese with a particular focus on people, culture and wellbeing.

Marmingatha means “being with the divine or supreme being, Oodthenong means “gathering", Jumbunna means “speaking out” or “proclamation” and Monomeeth means "rightness, wellness and goodness". Together, they comprise the Woi Wurrung equivalent of the diocesan vision of Making the Word of God Fully Known through “gathering in the divine presence to speak out and proclaim”.[citation needed]

Theological colleges

There are two Anglican theological colleges within the diocese, both in the suburb of Parkville. Trinity College Theological School, founded in 1878, is a college of the ecumenical University of Divinity and part of Trinity College, a residential college within the University of Melbourne and is more Liberal and Anglo-Catholic in tradition. Ridley College was founded in 1910 as an independent college in the evangelical tradition and is affiliated with the Australian College of Theology.

Issues

Churchmanship within the Melbourne diocese is diverse and the three nineteenth-century Anglican traditions, Evangelical, Liberal and Anglo-Catholic, are all significantly represented.

The existence of such differing traditions within the diocese is sometimes a cause of theological tensions, evident in the existence of separate theological colleges. The difficulty with which an archbishop was elected in 2006 provided a recent example.[3]

The Diocese of Melbourne has been affected by issues that have been debated in the worldwide Anglican Communion. The theological diversity of the diocese means that there is sometimes disagreement over more contentious matters. In addition, it is frequently perceived that there is a significant tension between the theologically broad Melbourne diocese and the far more conservative Sydney diocese.[4]

Ordination of women

The diocese was the first in Australia to ordain a woman, when Bishop Moorhouse ordained Marion Macfarlane as a deaconess in 1884.[5] It has ordained women to the diaconate since 1986 and to the priesthood since 1992.[6] The September 2007 decision of the Appellate Tribunal opening the way for the consecration of women to the episcopate was welcomed by the present archbishop, Philip Freier.[7] General Synod approved a motion in October 2007 which welcomed the "clarity" of the decision.[8] Melbourne's first woman to become a bishop, Barbara Darling, was consecrated at St Paul's Cathedral on 31 May 2008.[9][10] The ordination of women to be bishops is opposed by some within the diocese, particularly conservative Evangelicals and some Anglo-Catholics, necessitating the provision of alternative episcopal oversight.[11][12]

Homosexuality

The diocese officially subscribes to the traditional Anglican stance on homosexuality. Most conservatives and Evangelicals remain opposed to the blessing of same-sex unions and the ordination of non-celibate gay and lesbian clergy.[citation needed]

However, the diocese also contains a number of liberal parishes and prominent laypeople, such as Muriel Porter, who have been very vocal in their support for changes in the church's teaching on human sexuality.[4][13]

Abortion

In November 2007, an all-female committee from the Diocese of Melbourne made a submission to the Victorian Law Reform Commission outlining its position in relation to abortion. The submission stated that "the Anglican Church is for life" and acknowledged "diversity of ... views" within the diocese. However it also declared that the diocese "supports the provision of safe and affordable abortions with appropriate safeguards for women who, for whatever reasons, request them". The underlying ethical view concerning embryonic life is that "while the embryo/foetus is fully human from the time of conception, it accrues moral significance and value as it develops ... we believe the moral significance increases with the age and development of the foetus. The significance increases gradually over time, in parallel with its physical development. As a pregnancy advances, more powerful moral reasons are required to allow the destruction of the embryo/foetus."[14] The submission was announced in The Melbourne Anglican, in an article entitled "Decriminalise abortion, say Anglican women".[15] This is seen to be the first official approval of abortion by Australian Anglicans.[16]

List of Bishops and Archbishops of Melbourne

Bishops of Melbourne
NoFromUntilIncumbentNotes
118471876Charles PerryLeft the diocese in 1874 to return to England where he recruited the first Bishop of Ballarat and assisted in appointment of his successor; resigned in 1876.[17]
218761886James MoorhouseTranslated to Manchester.
318871901Field Flowers Goe
419021905Lowther ClarkeBecame Archbishop of Melbourne in 1905.
Archbishops of Melbourne
419051920Lowther ClarkeBishop of Melbourne until 1905.
519211929Harrington LeesDied in office.
619291941Frederick HeadDied in office.
719421957Joseph BoothPreviously coadjutor bishop in Melbourne (Bishop of Geelong) since 1934.
819571977Sir Frank WoodsTranslated from Middleton; also Primate of Australia from 1971; knighted in 1972.
919771983Bob DannPreviously coadjutor bishop in Melbourne since 1969.
1019841989David PenmanPreviously coadjutor bishop in Melbourne since 1982; died in office.
1119901999Keith RaynerPreviously Bishop of Wangaratta, then Archbishop of Adelaide; also Primate of Australia from 1989.
1220002005Peter WatsonPreviously Bishop in Parramatta and then of the Southern Region (both in Sydney diocese).
132006presentPhilip FreierTranslated from the Northern Territory; also Primate of Australia from 2014 to 2020.

List of assistant bishops

Bishops coadjutor
FromUntilIncumbentNotes
19341942Joseph BoothBishop of Geelong, translated to the diocesan see of Melbourne.
19461960John McKieBishop of Geelong and Archdeacon of Melbourne;[18] became Assistant Bishop of Coventry.
19601963Donald ReddingPreviously Bishop of Bunbury.
19621969Geoffrey SambellTranslated to Perth
19631970Felix ArnottTranslated to Brisbane
19691977Bob DannTranslated to the diocesan see of Melbourne.
19701985James GrantDean of Melbourne 1985-1999[19]
19711982Ged MustonTranslated to North West Australia.
19821984David PenmanTranslated to the diocesan see of Melbourne.
Assistant bishops
19781988David ShandPreviously Bishop of St Arnaud; translated between regions.

Bishop of the Southern Region (1978-1985) then Bishop in Geelong (1985-1988)

19851989Peter HollingworthBishop in the Inner City, then translated to Brisbane
19851993Robert ButterssRobert Leopold Butterss, consecrated 24 February 1985[20]
19852007John WilsonBishop of the Southern Region[21]
19891995John BaytonBishop of the Western Region[22]
19942001John StewartBishop of the Eastern Region
19942002Andrew CurnowBishop of the Northern Region, then translated to Bendigo.
19952001Andrew St. Johncons. 22 July 1995;[23] Bishop of the Western Region,[24] then Rector at the Church of the Transfiguration, New York [25]
20012009Stephen HaleBishop of the Eastern Region[26]
20022017[27]Paul WhiteBishop of the Western Region (2002-2007), Southern Region (2007-2015), Jumbunna Episcopate (2015-2016), Growth Areas Ministry (2016-2017)[28]
20032018Philip HugginsPreviously Bishop of Grafton (1998-2003)
Bishop of the Northern Region (2003-2007), North West Region (2003-2015), Oodthenong Episcopate (2015-2018)
20082015Barbara DarlingBishop for Diocesan Ministries (2008-2009), Eastern Region (2009-2015)
2015presentGenieve BlackwellPreviously Assistant Bishop, Canberra and Goulburn (2012–2015); translated between regions
Bishop of the Marmingatha Episcopate
20152020[29]John HarrowerPreviously Bishop of Tasmania (2000-2015)
Assistant to the Archbishop of Melbourne in the exercise of his leadership responsibilities as Primate of the Anglican Church of Australia[30]
2016presentBradly BillingsBishop for Theological Education and Wellbeing (Bishop of the Monomeeth Episcopate)[28][31]
2016presentPaul BarkerBishop of the Jumbunna Episcopate[28]
2016presentLindsay UrwinPreviously Bishop of Horsham (1993-2009)
Bishop for Schools[32][33]
2018presentKate ProwdBishop of the Oodthenong Episcopate

Archdeaconries

Archdeacon of Melbourne

Archdeacon of Sale

The first archdeacon was Theodore Carlos Benoni Stretch.[35]

Archdeacon of Castlemaine

The first archdeacon was Archibald Crawford.[36]

Archdeacon of Geelong

Lloyd Crossley was Vicar of All Saint's, St Kilda from 18 September 1905 until 1911.[37]

See also

References

Bibliography

  • Porter, Brian, ed. Melbourne Anglicans: the Diocese of Melbourne, 1847-1997. Melbourne: Mitre Books, 1997.

External links