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Cathedral Church of Saint Paul the Apostle (Springfield, Illinois) Episcopal Church of the Atonement and Parish House; St. James Cathedral (Chicago) Christ Episcopal Church (Joliet, Illinois) Christ Episcopal Church (Springfield, Illinois) Church of the Epiphany (Chicago)
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The Episcopal Church (TEC) is governed by a General Convention and consists of 108 dioceses: 96 dioceses in the United States proper, plus ten dioceses in other countries or outlying U.S. territories, the diocese of Convocation of Episcopal Churches in Europe, and a diocese for Armed Services and Federal Ministries.
The Episcopal Diocese of Michigan is the Episcopal diocese comprising 70 congregations in the southeast part of Michigan. [1] The diocese traces its roots to the founding of St. Paul's, Detroit in 1824. It became a diocese of the Episcopal Church in 1836, one year before the State of Michigan
Now meets at St. Cyprian's Episcopal Church, 2097 Turk Street (at Lyon) San Francisco, California: First primarily-English-speaking Lutheran church in California; its historic building survived the 1906 San Francisco earthquake.
The diocese does not ordain women to the presbyterate, [3] but does have eight female deacons. [8] As of 2006 it was one of only three dioceses in the Episcopal Church that did not ordain women to the priesthood; the other two were the Diocese of San Joaquin, whose convention voted to secede from the Episcopal Church in December 2007, and the Diocese of Fort Worth, whose convention voted in ...
The Episcopal Diocese of Chicago is the official organization of the Episcopal Church in Chicago and Northern Illinois, USA. The diocese is served by The Right Reverend Paula Clark, who serves as Bishop of the diocese. The cathedral of the diocese is St. James Cathedral, which is the oldest Episcopal congregation in the city of Chicago.
Modeled on the medieval English parish church under the influence of the Ecclesiology movement and Art and Crafts movement of the 19th century, "St. Stephen's Episcopal Church in Sherman of 1909 is one of the finest of this generation." [131] St Paul's Episcopal Church Seattle, Washington: Self-identifies as progressive Anglo-Catholic. [132]