| Sam Lloyd to Return to Trinity as Priest-in-Charge |
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Read the letter from Wardens Bob Cowden and Alex Burke. "Fresh new ministry in familiar and much-loved place" to begin in October BOSTON (July 8, 2011) – The Vestry of Trinity Church Boston has announced its approval of the appointment of the Very Rev. Dr. Samuel T. Lloyd III as Priest-in-Charge, by the Rt. Rev. M. Thomas Shaw, SSJE, the Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts. Lloyd will assume the leadership role at the historic church in mid-October. He currently serves as the Dean of Washington National Cathedral, but is well-known to many in Boston, having previously served as Trinity's rector from 1993 until 2005. "Since the announcement of the retirement of our Rector, Anne Bonnyman, we have sought a priest who is of outstanding ability as a spiritual leader through preaching and teaching; can build community within the church, and extend our involvement in the community outside our doors," said Robert Cowden, III, Senior Warden of the Trinity's Vestry (the lay board charged with overseeing finances and church property). "We concluded, in consultation with Bishop Shaw, that Sam Lloyd's considerable abilities, already demonstrated at Trinity and more broadly within the Episcopal Church, and his desire to return to his vocation as teacher, preacher, and pastor, presented an unusual opportunity for Trinity. While Sam will bring deep knowledge of Trinity from his service here before, he will focus on God's call to Trinity now." Lloyd concurs that his new role will be "... a fresh, new ministry in what turns out to be a familiar and much loved place. Trinity has grown and continued its vibrant life in many important ways in these past years, and I have found myself engaged in a rich and often exciting ministry at the National Cathedral. And we both have also wrestled with demanding times and difficult issues. Now, though, we have an opportunity to launch a fresh journey together to discover the new thing that God wants to happen at Trinity Church." As Priest-in-Charge, Lloyd will hold the responsibilities and duties of a rector as well as the special charge to lead a parish-wide consideration of the mission, identity and goals of the parish going forward. At the conclusion of that process, he and the parish will determine, through mutual discernment, whether he should become Rector of Trinity and lead the parish in implementation of those goals. This determination typically happens in the third year of service. "While the return of a rector in the role of priest-in-charge is unusual, I know that Sam's particular gifts and his commitment to spiritual growth, social justice ministry and congregational development will be of great value as Trinity begins to imagine the next chapter in its future," Bishop Shaw commented. THE VERY REV. DR. SAMUEL T. LLOYD III was installed as the ninth dean of Washington National Cathedral on April 23, 2005, charged with leadership of what is widely referred to as "the national house of prayer" and is also the official seat of the Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church. His ministry has focused on preaching, teaching, and developing Christian community, with emphases on lay leadership, wide-ranging styles of worship, and engagement in a broad array of direct and social justice ministries, while promoting a generous-spirited, intellectually vibrant Christian faith. Dean Lloyd previously served as rector of historic Trinity Church, Copley Square in Boston, Massachusetts, for 12 years. He also served as rector of the Church of St. Paul and the Redeemer in Chicago, Illinois; chaplain of the University of the South in Sewanee, Tennessee; assistant to the rector and chaplain at St. Paul's Memorial Church in Charlottesville, Virginia, and as an assistant professor of religious studies at the University of Virginia. Dean Lloyd holds a Masters of Divinity degree from Virginia Theological Seminary, a Ph.D. in English Literature from the University of Virginia, an M.A. degree in English Literature from Georgetown University, and a B.A. from the University of Mississippi. He has received honorary Doctor of Divinity degrees from the University of the South and Virginia Theological Seminary. ABOUT TRINITY CHURCH IN THE CITY OF BOSTON |