Nigel Simeon McCulloch
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Nigel Simeon McCulloch is the Bishop of Manchester. He was named to the post in August 2002[1], took up duties later that year, and was formally installed in February 2003[2].
He was born and brought up in Crosby in Liverpool and was educated at Liverpool College and read theology at Selwyn College, Cambridge. He trained for the priesthood at Cuddesdon College, Oxford. He was ordained in Chester Cathedral in 1966, and served as a curate in the large urban parish of Ellesmere Port from 1966-70. He was appointed as Chaplain to Christ's College, Cambridge from 1970-1973 and was Director of Studies in Theology there until 1975. He also served as Diocesan Missioner in the Diocese of Norwich from 1973-1978.
He was appointed Archdeacon of Sarum and Rector of the city-centre church of St Thomas’s, Diocese of Salisbury, in 1978, and in 1986 was appointed Suffragan Bishop of Taunton in the Diocese of Bath and Wells. In 1992 he was appointed Diocesan Bishop of Wakefield.
He was appointed Lord High Almoner to The Queen in 1997.
He is also Chairman of the West Yorkshire Ecumenical Council and Chairman of the Police Standards Committee for West Yorkshire.
[edit] References
- ^ A new bishop for Manchester, Diocese of Manchester, August 2002
- ^ City's 11th bishop sworn in, BBC News Online, 1 February 2003
Religious Posts | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by David Michael Hope |
Bishop of Wakefield 1992-2003 |
Succeeded by Stephen George Platten |
Preceded by Christopher Mayfield |
Bishop of Manchester 2002- |
Succeeded by Current Incumbent |