Diocese of Edmonton Dioecesis Edmontonensis Diocèse d'Edmonton | |
---|---|
Location | |
Country | Canada |
Ecclesiastical province | Northern Lights |
Archdeaconries | Edmonton, McLeod River, Strathcona, Vermilion River |
Headquarters | All Saints Anglican Cathedral, Edmonton, AB, Canada |
Coordinates | 53°32′24″N 113°29′49″W / 53.540°N 113.497°W |
Statistics | |
Parishes | 44 (2022)[1] |
Members | 5,912 (2022)[1] |
Information | |
Denomination | Anglican Church of Canada |
Rite | Anglican |
Cathedral | All Saints' Cathedral, Edmonton |
Current leadership | |
Bishop | Stephen London |
Website | |
edmonton.anglican.ca |
The Diocese of Edmonton is a diocese of the Ecclesiastical Province of the Northern Lights of the Anglican Church of Canada. The diocese comprises over 126,000 square kilometres of the civil Province of Alberta, consisting of a band across the central part of the province, extending to the borders of the adjacent provinces of British Columbia to the west and Saskatchewan to the east. Its See city is Edmonton, and its roughly 7,000 Anglicans on parish rolls are served by 53 parishes, according to the most recent figures published by the Anglican Church of Canada.[2]
The diocese was established in 1913 when it was divided from the Diocese of Calgary (which in turn had been divided from the Diocese of Saskatchewan in 1888). The following year, the diocese was incorporated by the Alberta legislature.
Edmonton is the major city within the diocese. Other communities are a mix of small, rural centres and suburban bedroom communities of the capital.
A lay order, the Company of the Cross ran the Saint John's School of Alberta which closed in 2008. In the past, the school and order were specifically under the control of the diocese and bishop.[3]
In legal fact the company is two companies, each operated under the auspices of an Anglican bishop, one in Manitoba under the bishop of Rupert's Land, the other in Alberta under the bishop of Edmonton. Since the bishops renew the members in the company's service annually, they could presumably dissolve the company by refusing to admit new members.... Each time the one of the company's activities raises public question or controversy ... the bishops find themselves assailed with the same questions: Are these people part of the church, or are they not, and if they are what controls does the church have over them?