James Ottley
James Hamilton "Jim" Ottley is a Panamanian bishop in The Episcopal Church.
James "Jim" Ottley | |
---|---|
The Episcopal Diocese of Long Island | |
Church | Anglican |
Orders | |
Consecration | June 24, 1984 |
Personal details | |
Born | Panama |
Life
Ottley was born in Colon, Panama. He received his bachelor's and master's degrees from the Episcopal Theological Seminary of the Caribbean, in Puerto Rico, and was ordained to the priesthood in 1964. He returned to Panama as a priest and on January 21, 1984, was consecrated bishop and was the fifth bishop of The Episcopal Diocese of Panama until 1995.
Bishop Ottley has a master's degree in science with a specialization in clinical psychology. He has three Doctorate Degrees Honoris Causa from The Theological Seminary Of The Southwest, Austin, TX, The University of the South and Berkeley Divinity School at Yale. He has co-authored many books and recently authored the renowned book, First Time You Say hello! Next Time We Will Be Friends.
He served simultaneously as bishop of the Anglican Diocese of El Salvador from 1985-1992. At the time Ottley was the bishop, Panama was a diocese in Province 9 of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America. Panama is now part of the Anglican Church in Central America. He was subsequently appointed Anglican Observer at the United Nations by the Anglican Consultative Council and the Archbishop of Canterbury. In 2000, he became interim bishop of the Diocese of Honduras, serving until the consecration of Lloyd Allen. And recently he served as Interim Bishop of the Diocese of Cuernavaca of the Anglican Church of Mexico.[1][2]
Until the end of May 2007, Ottley was the assistant bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Southeast Florida, In June of that year he became the assistant bishop of Long Island.[3] He has a wife and 4 children and 8 grandchildren.
References
- "JAMES HAMILTON OTTLEY". episcopalchurch.org.
- "Episcopal News Service: Press Release # 90236". episcopalarchives.org.
- "Bishop James Ottley announces return to Diocese of Long Island". Episcopal News Service. March 29, 2007. Retrieved 2016-08-18.