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Bishop and the Baptized

Anglican episcopal ministry through the lens of the ordinal

Bishop and the Baptized

Anglican episcopal ministry through the lens of the ordinal

This item is in stock and will be dispatched within 48 hours.

More than 50 units in stock.

Paperback / softback

£40.00

Publisher: SCM Press
ISBN: 9780334067023
Number of Pages: 160
Published: 28/11/2025
Width: 15.6 cm
Height: 23.4 cm

This unique text poses serious questions about the way the Church of England is structured, how dioceses are run and the role of bishops through the lens of liturgical theology.

In The Bishop and the Baptized, Justin Pottinger argues that baptismal ecclesiology has had more influence on the ordinal of the Church of England than the Episcopal Church. As arguably the key document for understanding Anglican ecclesiology, the ordinal affirms the importance of the bishop ordaining in the context of a Eucharist, with the liturgical action indicating the ontology and praxis of the bishop’s ministry in the daily life of the Church.

The liturgy, placing the bishop within the eucharistic congregation, defines the ontology and praxis of the bishop’s ministry. Managerial modes and financial pressures have shaped recent debates, but the ordinal offers an alternative model of leadership in the shepherd metaphor. The diaconal nature of episcopal ministry, seen in the ordinal’s innovation of foot washing and the giving of the pastoral staff, is applied to the discernment and training of candidates for episcopal ministry, and the culture and shape of the life of the Church. This is an original contribution to these wider discussions, grounding responses in Anglican ecclesiology and the nature of episcopal ministry.

BLOGPOST: Ordination is for life, not just for Petertide by Justin Pottinger on the SCM Press blog here.

Introduction 1. The Church is an institution defined by ecclesiology 2. The significance of baptismal ecclesiology 3. Ordination at the bishop’s hands within the Church’s prayers 4. A sacramental ecclesiology for a sacramental ministry 5. Anglican Episcopal Ministry is relational 6. Eschewing the temptation to be defined by power 7. The Church needs foot washer bishops 8. The use of Shepherd in the Anglican ordinals of the British Isles 9. Shepherd in the Bible and Ancient Near Eastern Culture 10. The pastoral staff 11. Shepherd is the defining metaphor 12. Conclusions for contemporary Episcopal ministry

Justin Pottinger

Revd Dr Justin Pottinger is currently Chaplain of Lancing College. He was previously Vicar of the Red Post Benefice and Rural Dean of Milton and Blandford in Salisbury Diocese. He has an MTh in Applied Theology from the University of Oxford and a PhD from Lambeth Research Degrees in Theology. His thesis explored episcopal ministry through the ordinal and Rule of St Benedict, drawing together his interests in theological reflection, liturgy, ecclesiology and spirituality.