Michael Simmons (priest)

For other people with the same name, see Michael Simmons.

Michael Bland Simmons is an archbishop of the Anglican Church of the Americas,[1] a church in the Continuing Anglican movement, as well as an associate professor of history at Auburn University at Montgomery, Alabama.

Simmons was born in Raleigh, North Carolina, and earned a B.A. from the University of South Alabama (1976), studying Spanish Language and Literature and (Latin American) History and working as a student pastor. In 1980, he received his M.Div. at the Duke Divinity School, having studied Comparative Semitics, and in 1982 received his Master of Sacred Theology at Yale University. He then studied at New College, Edinburgh, and earned a Ph.D. in Early Church History (1985). His dissertation, Arnobius of Sicca. Conflict and Competition in the Age of Diocletian, was published in 1995 by Oxford University Press.[2][3][4]

Simmons was consecrated Bishop at St. Jude's Episcopal Church, Marietta, Georgia in 2000. He was elected Archbishop in 2007 by the House of Bishops of the Anglican Province of Christ the Good Shepherd and was installed on March 26, 2008.[5]

A curiosity: in the dedication of his book "Universal Salvation in Late Antiquity. Porphyry of Tyre and the Pagan-Christian Debate" (Oxford University Press, 2015), to his beloved wife, he introduces a fragment of the Mexican popular song "Cielito Lindo".

References

  1. "Ordination requirements". Anglican Church of the Americas. Retrieved 28 February 2012. The Anglican Church of the Americas is an orthodox Anglican network of churches, ministries, dioceses, and provinces in the tradition of convergence theology and spirituality
  2. Markus, R.A. (1997). "Rev. of Simmons, Arnobius of Sicca". Journal of Ecclesiastical History. 48: 135–36. doi:10.1017/s0022046900012045.
  3. Potter, David Stone (2004). The Roman Empire at bay, AD 180-395. Taylor & Francis. p. 659. ISBN 978-0-415-10058-8. Retrieved 27 February 2012.
  4. Drake, H.A. (1997). "Rev. of Simmons, Arnobius of Sicca". Church History. 66 (2): 305–307. doi:10.2307/3170662. JSTOR 3170662.
  5. "The Archbishop". Anglican Church of the Americas. 2010–2012. Retrieved 27 February 2012.
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