Philip Russell (bishop) explained

Type:Bishop
Honorific-Prefix:The Most Reverend
Philip Russell
Archbishop of Cape Town
Primate of the Anglican Church of Southern Africa
Church:Anglican
Diocese:Cape Town
Province:Southern Africa
See:Cape Town
Term:1981–1986
Predecessor:Bill B. Burnett
Successor:Desmond Tutu
Ordination:1981
Birth Date:1919 10, df=yes
Birth Place:Cowies Hill, South Africa
Death Place:Adelaide, Australia
Previous Post:Bishop of Natal

Philip Welsford Richmond Russell, (21 October 1919 – 25 July 2013) was a South African Anglican bishop.

Personal life

Russell was born 21 October 1919 in Cowies Hill, South Africa and died 25 July 2013 in Adelaide, Australia.[1]

He was educated in Durban at Clifton Preparatory School and Durban High School.[2] Having trained as a quantity surveyor, he served in World War II as part of a bomb disposal unit in the South African Engineering Corps. He was awarded the MBE in 1943 for his service. It was during this time he felt called to the priesthood. He studied at Rhodes University and St Paul's Theological College in Grahamstown. He was ordained as a deacon in 1940 and as a priest in 1941.

He met fellow-South African Eirene Hogarth in Rome in 1944, whom he married in 1945 at the Garrison Church, Foggia, Italy. [3] Together they had four children, Susan, June, Pauline and Christopher.[4] After the death of his wife in 2001, Russell moved to Adelaide, Australia, where three of his four children had settled.

Church career

After World War II he served in various parishes in the Diocese of Natal including Greytown, Ladysmith, Kloof and Pinetown. He was consecrated bishop, and served as suffragan bishop of Cape Town from 1966 to 1970.

From 1970 to 1974 he was the bishop of the new Anglican Diocese of Port Elizabeth and, from 1974 to 1981, he was Bishop of Natal.

In 1980 he was named Archbishop of Cape Town[5] by the Episcopal Synod of the Anglican Church after the Diocese of Cape Town was unable to decide between Desmond Tutu and Michael Nuttall, the then Bishop of Pretoria. He retired on 31 August 1986, being succeeded by Desmond Tutu. Philip had the title "Archbishop Emeritus" conferred on him by the Synod of Bishops in 1997.

Apartheid

As a parish priest in country towns, he started expressing his doubts about Apartheid in sermons. In 1962 he saw black people and white people sitting together and talking for the first time, while at a church council.[6] He served on the council of Diakonia, an ecumenical body which was very active in both the spiritual and social service sides of Christian life. He was an ardent supporter of human rights through the South African Institute of Race Relations and the Civil Rights League. His ecumenical enthusiasm led him to an active involvement in Diakonia, Vuleka Trust, the South African Council of Churches and the World Council of Churches.

Publications

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Tributes to South Africa's former Primate. 29 September 2013. Anglican Communion News Service. Anglican Communion Office. 2013. Anon.
  2. Anon. Diakonia's tribute to Archbishop Russell. Anglican News. 2003. 13. 1&2. 3. 9 April 2008. https://web.archive.org/web/20110904020552/http://www.anglican.co.za/Archives/2003-04-28.pdf. 4 September 2011. dead. dmy-all.
  3. Web site: Philip Welsford Richmond Russell (1919 – 2013). 23 December 2022. Natalia. The Natal Society Foundation. 2013. Michael Nuttall. Michael Nuttall.
  4. Book: Anon. The International Who's Who 1992–93. 29 September 2013. 1 August 1992. Taylor & Francis. 978-0-946653-84-3. 1409.
  5. Book: Anne R. Kotzé. Bishopscourt and its residents. 29 September 2013. 1992. Creda Press. 55.
  6. Web site: The beginning of the end of Apartheid. June 2007. Cathedral Magazine. 4 April 2008.