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The Rt Rev Richard Lewis, 76, bishop and kind pastor who championed Suffolk rural ministry
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Michael Rhodes
2020-11-05 13:53:39 UTC
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_/ The Right Reverend Richard Lewis, who has died aged 76, was Bishop of St Edmundsbury and Ipswich from 1997 to 2007....He took a liberal approach to human sexuality and supported the move to ordain women as bishops....
mig73alle...@yahoo.co.uk
2020-12-22 14:18:14 UTC
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_. The Right Rev Richard Lewis, who has died of cancer at the age of 76, was a man of integrity and principle, whose preaching was shaped by a desire that people might work towards making sense of faith in a challenging world.

Between 1970 and 1982 Richard worked as industrial chaplain and then communications officer in Durham, during which time he and Sara (nee Hamilton), whom he married in 1968, had three sons.

The family moved to Shropshire, where Richard was Hereford chaplain for agriculture, then archdeacon of Ludlow. Heavily involved in the Tenant Farmers Association, rural affairs was a thread that ran throughout his career.

Richard was consecrated at Westminster Abbey in 1992 as bishop of Taunton and later of St Edmundsbury and Ipswich, where he served until his retirement in 2007.

He used his maiden speech in 2002 in the House of Lords to highlight the diverse and hidden challenges of predominantly rural communities.


He had a deep commitment to inclusivity in the church and wider society, and his gentle resonant voice belied the often trenchant messages he conveyed so articulately. His denouncement of homophobia in response to the controversy in 2003 around the openly gay Canon Jeffrey John led to vitriol against him, but did not deter him from raising questions about ethics and the morality of the day. He was also a vocal supporter of women in the episcopate, appointing many to parochial posts.

Born in Kimbolton, Herefordshire, he was the middle of three children of John, the archdeacon of Hereford, and Mary (nee Griffin). Educated at Radley college, Oxfordshire, and then King’s College London, Richard started his career as curate of Hexham, Northumberland. It was at KCL that he met Sara, through her brother, John.
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