John McIntyre (bishop of Gippsland) explained

John McIntyre
Bishop Of:Bishop of Gippsland
Church:Anglican Church of Australia
Diocese:Gippsland
Enthroned:18 February 2006
Ended:6 June 2014
Predecessor:Jeffrey Driver
Successor:Kay Goldsworthy
Consecration:11 February 2006
Birth Name:John Charles McIntyre
Birth Date:27 October 1951
Birth Place:Sydney, New South Wales
Death Date:6 June 2014
Nationality:Australian
Religion:Anglican
Residence:Sale, Victoria

John Charles McIntyre (27 October 1951 – 6 June 2014) was an Australian Anglican bishop. He was the 11th bishop of the Diocese of Gippsland in south-east Victoria.[1]

McIntyre was ordained as a bishop on 11 February 2006 and installed as Bishop of Gippsland at St Paul's Cathedral in Sale on 18 February 2006. Prior to this, he was the rector of the South Sydney parish in the Anglican Diocese of Sydney for 15 years.

McIntyre was known to be an "alternative voice" in the Anglican Church of Australia.[2] While working in the Sydney diocese, he often took a stance against the more conservative attitudes of the diocesan authorities there, arguing for the ordination of women[3] and homosexual rights within the church.[4]

Another of McIntyre's missions throughout his ministry was to support the underprivileged, which is what drew him initially to urban ministry and which continued to influence his work as a bishop in the rural Gippsland diocese. In particular, he focused much of his energy on Indigenous Australians and initiated ministries to benefit local Indigenous communities both within his previous community of Redfern and Waterloo and then in Gippsland.

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Gippsland Bishop John McIntyre dies, aged 62. 11 June 2014. Anglican Diocese of Melbourne. 29 May 2015.
  2. Muston, Anglican Diocese of Gippsland Press Release: The Reverend John McIntyre Elected Bishop of Gippsland
  3. Baird, "Numbers rule as Team Sydney muscles up"
  4. ABC Gippsland, "Bishop defends gay priest appointment"