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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Sunday, March 11, 2007

Bishop ascends amid a 'celebration of life'

 Photo gallery Bishop ordained gallery

By Mary Kaye Ritz
Advertiser Religion & Ethics Writer

Episcopal Diocese of Hawai'i Bishop Bob Fitzpatrick, right, and his wife, Bea, were greeted yesterday by Jean Redman, left, of McCully.

REBECCA BREYER | The Honolulu Advertiser

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BISHOP ROBERT “BOB” LEROY FITZPATRICK

Fifth bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Hawai'i

1,015th prelate of the Episcopal Church

Background: Hired by retired Bishop Richard Chang, Fitzpatrick has served all over the globe. He's taught as a volunteer for mission at Trinity Theological College, Umuahia, Nigeria; and served as assistant to the rector at St. Peter's Church, Morristown, N.J., from 1986 to 1990; and as rector of Grace Episcopal Church, Fort Wayne, Ind., from 1990 to 2000.

Family: Wife, Beatrice Elizondo Fitzpatrick, teaches medical technology. They have two sons.

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THE EPISCOPAL DIOCESE OF HAWAI'I

  • One of the smallest dioceses in the Episcopal Church

  • Estimated members: 8,645

  • Number of churches: 39

  • Established in Hawai'i in 1862

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    Retired Bishop Richard Chang, left, and former Presiding Bishop Edmond Browning walk the aisle of St. Andrew's Cathedral after Fitzpatrick's ordination. The congregation included about 500 people.

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    Bishop Bob Fitzpatrick, center, kneeled at his ordination yesterday as the fifth bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Hawai'i. Eighteen bishops from around the world attended the ceremony at St. Andrew's Cathedral.

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    In a three-plus-hour service full of bright reds and swelling hymns, Bishop Bob Fitzpatrick was ordained yesterday as the fifth bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Hawai'i at St. Andrew's Cathedral before a congregation of about 500 people.

    On hand were 18 Episcopal bishops from places around the world, including Japan and Taiwan, as well as a notable interfaith contingent of Hawai'i's Buddhists, Greek Orthodox and Roman Catholics, Christians from other mainline denominations, even Bahai.

    The Most Rev. Katharine Jefferts Schori, the presiding bishop of the U.S. Episcopal church, served over the ceremonies, which included the traditional laying on of the hands by bishops during the consecration about halfway into the service.

    The sermon — given by former Presiding Bishop Edmond Browning, who also served as the second bishop of Hawai'i — was focused on cycles of life. Browning talked about how he remembered retired Bishop Richard Chang in earlier days, and how it was the last time anyone would refer to Fitzpatrick, 48, as "bishop elect."

    "I am one of the earlier things that has come and passed," Browning said, drawing big laughs. "I am an old thing. Now even Richard Chang is an old thing; that sage young priest who was more than a right hand for all those years in a moment or two is going to be your bishop emeritus. I think the passing of time has got to be one of the greatest things."

    Browning also talked about "new things," such as the election of Jefferts Schori as the first woman presiding bishop, and the fact that controversy is never far from the Episcopal church.

    "To become a bishop today is a little like being drafted," he said. "You find yourself located in the midst of conflict you didn't start, but though which you must lead. It was like that for me, for my predecessor and for his predecessor. ... It carries conflict, because being a church involves us in conflict. There hasn't been a time when the church didn't disagree internally about important things."

    After being consecrated, Fitzpatrick smiled broadly as he served communion to members of his family and gathered dignitaries.

    All the pomp and pageantry was enough to move some onlookers to dab their eyes. Jan Ellison, who came from the Big Island for the ceremonies, said she started tearing up the moment a majestic red-and-gold streamer came fluttering down the aisle, twirled by a woman holding a long pole.

    "I thought it was spectacular," Ellison said. "Such a celebration of life. ... I loved the intercultural flavor of it, and using Hawaiian throughout. Even repeating King Kamehameha's invitation to the first bishop! It was so meaningful to me."

    Multicultural, it was: Besides including bishops hailing from all over the globe, the ceremony included scriptural readings in Korean and Cantonese; and prayer requests in Portuguese, Samoan, Spanish, Japanese and even Igbo, a language spoken in Nigeria.

    With the Episcopal diocese's deep roots in Hawai'i, the organizers made sure Hawaiian culture was represented in song, dance and prayer, with the Gospel read first in English, then Hawaiian and Ilocano.