Richard T. Lawson III consecrated 13th bishop of Alabama

Alabama Bishop Richard Lawson consecration

The Diocese of Alabama ordained and consecrated the Rt. Rev. Richard T. Lawson III as its 13th bishop on June 27 at the Cathedral Church of the Advent in Birmingham. Photo: Courtesy of the Diocese of Alabama

[Diocese of Alabama] The Diocese of Alabama ordained and consecrated the Rt. Rev. Richard T. Lawson III as its 13th bishop on June 27 at the Cathedral Church of the Advent in Birmingham. Lawson succeeds the Rt. Rev. Glenda S. Curry.

Presiding Bishop Sean Rowe served as chief consecrator. Co-consecrators included Curry, the Rt. Rev. Henry N. Parsley Jr., 10th bishop of Alabama; the Rt. Rev. John McKee Sloan, 11th bishop of Alabama; West Tennessee Bishop Phoebe Roaf; Louisiana Bishop Shannon Duckworth; and the Rev. Kevin Strickland, bishop of the Southeastern Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. Duckworth preached.

Ahead of the consecration, Lawson shared, “I am overjoyed to be called to serve alongside you. After every baptism, the priest says, ‘You are sealed by the Holy Spirit in baptism and marked as Christ’s own forever.’ If you are longing for this kind of love and a spiritual home, I invite you to visit one of the 86 parishes in the Episcopal Diocese of Alabama.”

Lawson was elected bishop on the first ballot during a special electing convention held Jan. 31 at the Cathedral Church of the Advent. Prior to his election, Lawson served as dean and rector of St. John’s Cathedral in Denver, Colorado. Before moving to Colorado, he served as rector of Grace–St. Luke’s Episcopal Church and School in Memphis, Tennessee. He also served as rector of St. John’s Episcopal Church in Decatur, Alabama.

A native of Guntersville, Alabama, Lawson has served as a priest since 2001. Throughout his ministry, he has been recognized for his commitment to parish vitality, pastoral leadership and the proclamation of the Gospel. He earned a Master of Divinity from General Theological Seminary and a Master of Sacred Theology from the University of the South in Sewanee, Tennessee.

Lawson is married to Katherine, a Birmingham native, and they have two adult children.

As bishop of Alabama, Lawson will provide pastoral and episcopal leadership to 86 parishes, two worshiping communities and eight college ministries across seven convocations that serve more than 29,000 baptized members throughout the diocese.

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