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Ottawa bishop sees much potential for growth: diocese has `a good feel'.


THE EIGHTH bishop of Ottawa sounds almost apologetic as he concedes that life in his diocese, where he has spent much of the nearly 30 years since his ordination, is pretty good.

"It sounds trite but I find it very cohesive," Bishop Peter Coffin said. "I don't find rural-urban splits.

"It's a great diocese to work in. It's got a good feel. It's embarrassing to say things are good. It's not politically correct politically correct Politically sensitive adjective Referring to language reflecting awareness and sensitivity to another person's physical, mental, cultural, or other disadvantages or deviations from a norm; a person is not mentally retarded, but . You're supposed to be devastatingly honest about your shortcomings A shortcoming is a character flaw.

Shortcomings may also be:
  • Shortcomings (SATC episode), an episode of the television series Sex and the City
. And we do have shortcomings."

Shortcomings, maybe. But many strengths too.

The diocese is growing as Ottawa welcomes an influx of high-technology workers in its embodiment of Silicon Valley North. New churches are being planted in neighbourhoods where the population has outgrown the church building. And the diocese continues to be respected for its involvement in local social issues.

Bishop Coffin is married to Deborah and has a daughter, Erin, 25. The former dean of Ottawa and rector of Christ Church Cathedral Christ Church Cathedral is the name of the Anglican Cathedral in several cities around the world, including the following: In Australia
  • Grafton, New South Wales http://www.graftoncathedral.org.au/
  • Newcastle, New South Wales http://www.newcastlecathedral.org.
 was elected bishop in May 1999 over 10 other candidates. He succeeded Bishop John Baycroft who was appointed head of the Anglican Centre in Rome.

Bishop Coffin is from a military family and his father was posted to Ottawa, he said. Ottawa was carved out of the Diocese of Ontario 104 years ago, although church buildings have existed there since the early 1800s. The diocese covers an area along the Ottawa River Ottawa River

River, eastern central Canada, the chief tributary of the St. Lawrence River. It rises in the Laurentian plateau of western Quebec and flows west to form the Quebec-Ontario border before joining the St. Lawrence west of Montreal.
 from Mattawa in the west to Hawkesbury in the east. It extends north into Quebec as far as Maniwaki and its southern boundary stretches from Cornwall in the east through to Algonquin Park on the west.

Ottawa was little more than swamp in the early 1800s, with Hull, Que., the main city. Important industries were lumber and farming, with much of the lumber, then, going to the British fleet.

Indeed, the Rideau Canal Rideau Canal (rēdō`, rē`dō), 126 mi (203 km) long, S Ont., Canada, connecting the Ottawa River at Ottawa with Lake Ontario at Kingston. The canal, which has 47 locks, follows the course of the Rideau River.  was built for strategic reasons. "It was a garrison town and a lumber town," the bishop said. "It stayed that way until it became the capital."

As the national capital, Ottawa became a civil servant town. But a far more diversified economy has developed in the past 20 years, Bishop Coffin said. As the high-tech industry has moved in, so have scores of new people, spilling out into formerly rural areas and putting pressure on churches built to serve 30 or so families.

"Where our rural areas are experiencing some of the normal difficulties of rural areas, we are experiencing considerable growth in the city," he said. "We need to be intentional about church planting Church planting is a process by which new churches are established. This is usually accomplished with help from a denomination, a church planting center, a local church or churches, a network, an association, and/or other church planting resources.  ...

"We are one of those dioceses that have significant potential for growth. But we have not engaged in the best sort of planning to deal with it."

The rural areas on the Ontario side of the diocese are doing quite well, with one reopening a closed church. That, however, is not the case in western Quebec, which, while it contains almost as large a geographical area as the Ontario side, contributes no more than 10 to 15 per cent of the diocese's Anglican population. Many of the small parishes there that still rely on farming and lumber are suffering and the population is stagnating. "It feels a little beleaguered be·lea·guer  
tr.v. be·lea·guered, be·lea·guer·ing, be·lea·guers
1. To harass; beset: We are beleaguered by problems.

2. To surround with troops; besiege.
," Bishop Coffin said. "We're looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 new models of ministry in a widely dispersed area. We haven't gotten there yet."

Because Ottawa includes the federal government and borders Quebec, bilingualism is a fact of life and the bishop is bilingual himself. Several Ontario towns bordering the river are more French than English, Bishop Coffin said. "I would like more bilingual priests," he said.

Ottawa also houses the world's embassies. "We are in the nation's capital," he noted. "We probably haven't used that position to the extent that we ought."

The diocese has worked on foreign issues, however. The bishop and others held a protest on Parliament Hill that focused on Sudan and a diocesan group continues to work on it.

A Friends of Sabeel branch, which supports Palestinian Christians, was opened in Ottawa in December 1998. Bishop Baycroft delivered a strongly worded Christmas Eve homily homily (hŏm`əlē), type of oral religious instruction delivered to a church congregation. In the patristic period through the Middle Ages the focus of the homily was on the explanation and application of texts read or sung during the  that year focusing on the plight of the Palestinians, angering some Jews.

Bishop Coffin realizes the issue is sensitive and controversial. "A significant number of folks from our diocese made pilgrimages to the Holy Land and came back very concerned about the plight of Palestinian Christians," he said. "They feel quite impassioned about that."

Though Friends of Sabeel is headed by a priest, it's not an official program of the diocese.

The diocese has been involved in other political causes over the years, including protesting apartheid.

Three days after his consecration as bishop, Bishop Coffin participated in a rally of about 1,000 people, set up to oppose a planned demonstration (that never occurred) by notorious anti-gay pastor Fred Phelps FRED PHELPS WILL BURN IN HELL! HIS LIFE ISN'T WORTH BEING DISCUSSED!

SPREAD THE WORD. THE WORD OF:

GAY RIGHTS!!
 of Kansas. The gay and lesbian task group in his diocese is "a very gentle sort of group," he said. "They're brutally honest but much more gentle than the folks that would stand in opposition to them."

The diocese has been heavily involved in practical social issues, setting up shelters for homeless people and providing day programs. Other churches approach the Anglicans for partnerships.

Bishop Coffin has little patience for people complaining about issues he believes are not particularly important in the life of the church, including complaints about the new hymn book a book containing a collection of hymns, as for use in churches; a hymnal.

See also: Hymn
 or debates on the prayer book.

His impatience is undoubtedly related to the perspective he gained while working overseas. "I was in and out of the Philippines for 20 years, working on human rights violations. I was shot at." Hie also worked in Malaysia. "I have a short wick for people getting passionate about things that in the great scheme of things, don't mean a hell of a lot."

MONTREAL DIOCESAN THEOLOGICAL COLLEGE LE SEMINAIRE DIOCESAIN DE MONTREAL

Applications are invited for the position of Director of Pastoral Studies. The position is a permanent faculty position of the college, and it is hoped that the successful applicant will assume office in August 2001. Among other duties, the Director takes responsibility for the field education programme, aspects of the Reading and Tutorial Course in Theology (a distance education programme), and instruction in one or more subjects in practical theology Practical theology or applied theology consists of several related sub-fields: applied theology, such as missions, evangelism, pastoral psychology or the psychology of religion, church growth, administration, homiletics, spiritual formation, pastoral theology, spiritual direction, . Preference will be given to a priest of the Anglican Church of Canada with pastoral experience and an earned doctorate in a discipline relevant to the practice of ministry.

The college prepares men and women for the ordained or·dain  
tr.v. or·dained, or·dain·ing, or·dains
1.
a. To invest with ministerial or priestly authority; confer holy orders on.

b. To authorize as a rabbi.

2.
 ministry in the churches of the Anglican Communion Anglican Communion, the body of churches in all parts of the world that are in communion with the Church of England (see England, Church of). The communion is composed of regional churches, provinces, and separate dioceses bound together by mutual loyalty as , and provides educational programmes for laity. It is part of an ecumenical consortium including the Presbyterian College Presbyterian College is a private liberal arts college in Clinton, South Carolina, USA. Presbyterian College, or PC, is affiliated with the Presbyterian Church USA. PC was founded in 1880 by William Plumer Jacobs, a prominent Presbyterian minister who also founded the nearby , and the United Theological College This article is about school in Bangalore. For school in Wales, see United Theological College Aberystwyth.

United Theological College (UTC) is a theological seminary situated in the southern city of Bangalore in the state of Karnataka in South India.
, and is affiliated with the Faculty of Religious Studies of McGill University McGill University, at Montreal, Que., Canada; coeducational; chartered 1821, opened 1829. It was named for James McGill, who left a bequest to establish it. Its real development dates from 1855 when John W. Dawson became principal. . An entente Entente: see Triple Alliance and Triple Entente; Balkan Entente; Little Entente.  with the University of Montreal permits the college to enrol students who wish to prepare for ministry under the college's aegis in a francophone environment.

Applications, including c.v. and the names and addresses of three referees should be submitted by December 15, 2000 to:

The Principal, Montreal Diocesan Theological College, 3473, University St., Montreal (Quebec) H3A 2A8. Phone: (514) 849-3004; Fax: (514) 849-4113; E-mail: diocoll@netrover.com Web page: www.montreal.anglican.org/mdtc
COPYRIGHT 2000 General Synod of the Anglican Church of Canada
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2000, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Blair, Kathy
Publication:Anglican Journal
Date:Oct 1, 2000
Words:1196
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