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And if this conference can strengthen that, it will be a real privilege to be involved and that’s what I look forward to doing.”Published by the Anglican Communion Office © 2020 Anglican Consultative Council William Nigel Stock is a British Anglican bishop.
With a Communion spanning 39 provinces, over 165 countries, and a variety of languages and cultures, the Lambeth Conference must represent a global faith. And so being very aware of that I think it helps to understand what people are hoping for and what people are looking for at the conference.”For Bishop Nigel, this role is about ministering to the entire Communion, not only the bishops. I am confident that all the initiatives in evangelism will evoke a response from many people. “Getting worship right for everybody is always difficult and you have to be aware of the diversity our Communion and how that is properly represented,” he said.
From 2013 until his 2017 retirement, he was Bishop at Lambeth, Bishop to the Forces and Bishop for the Falkland Islands; from 2007 to 2013 he was Bishop of St Edmundsbury and Ipswich. He is a graduate of the University of Oxford where he studied theology at …
That said, Bishop Nigel shared his experiences in the Church of England’s College of Bishops, during which the bishops traded off managing the worship, and demonstrated the clear need in his mind for a specific chaplain role for such events.“For some reason that meeting always struggled to have a satisfactory feel about it and then one year decided that what we really need was an outside facilitator to help organise the worship and prayer structure and good music and it absolutely transformed the meeting.
In general, whatever approaches the chaplaincy takes, it has three main objectives, of which a major one is organising worship.“What they [the Design Group] look for the chaplaincy to provide is quality worship, which is the lifeblood of the conference – as the chairman of our design group has described it – which helps people not just to feel that they’ve attended a meeting but that they’ve worshiped together, and they’ve experienced the joy of the Holy Spirit in that worship,” Bishop Nigel said. “At Lambeth you can’t help but get an experience of the vibrant variety of the Anglican Communion, both the wonderful opportunities it has and the very severe tensions as well. The bishop’s time as Bishop at Lambeth – the Archbishop of Canterbury’s episcopal colleague at his Lambeth Palace headquarters – also impressed upon him the existence, and the value, of the diversity of the Communion.
Nigel Stock may refer to: Nigel Stock (actor) (1919–1986), British actor; Nigel Stock (bishop) (born 1950), current bishop at Lambeth; This disambiguation page lists articles about people with the same name. As Bishop at Lambeth, Bishop Nigel supported the Archbishop’s work in the House of Bishops, the Synod and the Archbishops’ Council. "“I am enormously grateful to Bishop Nigel for his years of service here at Lambeth. The Chaplain to the Lambeth Conference is a crucial role, organising worship representative of the diversity of the Anglican Communion as well as providing prayerful … Bishop Nigel Stock announces retirement as Bishop at Lambeth 2 August 2020 He has also supported the advisers in ecumenical affairs and the safeguarding advisers in the national team.He took up the additional responsibility of Bishop to the Forces and Bishop to the Falkland Islands Bishop Nigel said: “It has been a privilege to work with this Archbishop of Canterbury in all that he has brought to the Church of England in his first four years.
“That means dealing with people of many different cultures used to worshipping in different languages and somehow to bring that together so that everybody can have a meaningful experience of worship and prayer and openness to the Holy Spirit.”Bishop Stock also stressed that just because his role must organise worship that does not mean that the bishops will not be involved. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change … As Bishop to the Armed Forces I’ve hugely enjoyed seeing the extraordinarily varied work of the Armed Forces in places as diverse as Germany, Cyprus and the Falklands.”Speaking about his prayers for Lambeth and the Archbishop, he said:“There are crucial events in the not too distant future, not least the Lambeth Conference 2020. “And I will be there with a concern for the bishops and their spiritual care and their ability to worship – but not taking part,” he said.The concept that clergy require a chaplain may be an odd or unusual one for many people. His profound spirituality has led us all closer to Christ.“We will miss all that he has brought to the role and we pray for him and his family as he enters the next phase of his life.”Bishop Nigel’s successor will be announced in April.
And if this conference can strengthen that, it will be a real privilege to be involved and that’s what I look forward to doing.”Published by the Anglican Communion Office © 2020 Anglican Consultative Council William Nigel Stock is a British Anglican bishop.
With a Communion spanning 39 provinces, over 165 countries, and a variety of languages and cultures, the Lambeth Conference must represent a global faith. And so being very aware of that I think it helps to understand what people are hoping for and what people are looking for at the conference.”For Bishop Nigel, this role is about ministering to the entire Communion, not only the bishops. I am confident that all the initiatives in evangelism will evoke a response from many people. “Getting worship right for everybody is always difficult and you have to be aware of the diversity our Communion and how that is properly represented,” he said.
From 2013 until his 2017 retirement, he was Bishop at Lambeth, Bishop to the Forces and Bishop for the Falkland Islands; from 2007 to 2013 he was Bishop of St Edmundsbury and Ipswich. He is a graduate of the University of Oxford where he studied theology at …
That said, Bishop Nigel shared his experiences in the Church of England’s College of Bishops, during which the bishops traded off managing the worship, and demonstrated the clear need in his mind for a specific chaplain role for such events.“For some reason that meeting always struggled to have a satisfactory feel about it and then one year decided that what we really need was an outside facilitator to help organise the worship and prayer structure and good music and it absolutely transformed the meeting.
In general, whatever approaches the chaplaincy takes, it has three main objectives, of which a major one is organising worship.“What they [the Design Group] look for the chaplaincy to provide is quality worship, which is the lifeblood of the conference – as the chairman of our design group has described it – which helps people not just to feel that they’ve attended a meeting but that they’ve worshiped together, and they’ve experienced the joy of the Holy Spirit in that worship,” Bishop Nigel said. “At Lambeth you can’t help but get an experience of the vibrant variety of the Anglican Communion, both the wonderful opportunities it has and the very severe tensions as well. The bishop’s time as Bishop at Lambeth – the Archbishop of Canterbury’s episcopal colleague at his Lambeth Palace headquarters – also impressed upon him the existence, and the value, of the diversity of the Communion.
Nigel Stock may refer to: Nigel Stock (actor) (1919–1986), British actor; Nigel Stock (bishop) (born 1950), current bishop at Lambeth; This disambiguation page lists articles about people with the same name. As Bishop at Lambeth, Bishop Nigel supported the Archbishop’s work in the House of Bishops, the Synod and the Archbishops’ Council. "“I am enormously grateful to Bishop Nigel for his years of service here at Lambeth. The Chaplain to the Lambeth Conference is a crucial role, organising worship representative of the diversity of the Anglican Communion as well as providing prayerful … Bishop Nigel Stock announces retirement as Bishop at Lambeth 2 August 2020 He has also supported the advisers in ecumenical affairs and the safeguarding advisers in the national team.He took up the additional responsibility of Bishop to the Forces and Bishop to the Falkland Islands Bishop Nigel said: “It has been a privilege to work with this Archbishop of Canterbury in all that he has brought to the Church of England in his first four years.
“That means dealing with people of many different cultures used to worshipping in different languages and somehow to bring that together so that everybody can have a meaningful experience of worship and prayer and openness to the Holy Spirit.”Bishop Stock also stressed that just because his role must organise worship that does not mean that the bishops will not be involved. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change … As Bishop to the Armed Forces I’ve hugely enjoyed seeing the extraordinarily varied work of the Armed Forces in places as diverse as Germany, Cyprus and the Falklands.”Speaking about his prayers for Lambeth and the Archbishop, he said:“There are crucial events in the not too distant future, not least the Lambeth Conference 2020. “And I will be there with a concern for the bishops and their spiritual care and their ability to worship – but not taking part,” he said.The concept that clergy require a chaplain may be an odd or unusual one for many people. His profound spirituality has led us all closer to Christ.“We will miss all that he has brought to the role and we pray for him and his family as he enters the next phase of his life.”Bishop Nigel’s successor will be announced in April.