The Transition Committee of the Diocese of New Jersey hosted the five candidates to be presented at the electing convention of the Diocese of New Jersey from January 9 2023 to January 14, 2023. Their visit included visiting Trinity Cathedral, Trenton NJ, the Diocesan offices, several churches, with the purpose of talking about ministries, and meeting many New Jersey Episcopalians. A total of five candidate forums for the candidates to answer questions and engage in conversation were organized by the Transition Committee. One forum, at Trinity Cathedral, was exclusively for the clergy. The other four forums were held at The Church of the Ascension, Gloucester City; Holy Trinity Episcopal Church, South River, NJ; St. Luke’s Church, Gladstone NJ; and St. Mark’s and All Saints Church, Galloway NJ.
The questions that were asked of the candidates at each were from among dozens of questions that were submitted in December 2022. The Transition Committee narrowed down the questions to those that were asked of the candidates at each of the forums to ensure that a variety of topics were covered at each forum.
On Wednesday, January 11, 2023, from 1:30 to 3:30 PM., the Church of the Ascension, Gloucester City hosted the first of four public forums for clergy and lay delegates to the electing convention for the election of the XIII Bishop of the Diocese of New Jersey. That electing convention, on January 28, 2023, resulted in the election of Rt. Rev. Sally French to be our Bishop Diocesan.
The Diocese of New Jersey was founded in 1785, and is the second oldest diocese in the Episcopal Church, after the Diocese of Connecticut.
We elected our first bishop in 1815, the Right Reverend John Croes, who had been rector of Christ Church in New Brunswick prior to his election.
New Jersey ranks sixth out of 100 domestic dioceses in the Episcopal Church in the number of parishes. The diocese is 11th in number of baptized persons and the 9th largest by Average Sunday Attendance (2021). It is also the largest diocese to be led by a woman. The diocese originally covered the entire state; due to the growth of the church in the mid-1800s, the northern third was split off in 1874 to become the Diocese of Northern New Jersey, known today as the Diocese of Newark. The dividing line is the border between Essex and Union Counties, between Morris and Somerset Counties, and between Warren and Hunterdon Counties. The exception is the City of Summit, which was assigned to the Diocese of Newark, allegedly because of 19th-century train routes.
There are 134 congregations in this diocese, including seasonal, collegiate, and institutional chapels. The oldest congregation in the diocese is Saint Peter’s Church in Perth Amboy, where services began in 1685. The oldest extant church building is St. Mary’s in Burlington, built in 1703 and enlarged several times. There are more than 15 colonial-era parishes in this diocese. The Diocese has a reputation for broad ethnic, liturgical and socio-economic diversity.
Currently there is one retired bishop and 370 priests and deacons in the diocese, along with 55 clergy “licensed to act.” The Right Reverend Sally J. French, our diocesan bishop, was elected in January 2023 and consecrated in June 2023. She is the thirteenth diocesan bishop of New Jersey, and the first person in the Anglican Communion whose ordinations as deacon, priest, and bishop were all by women.
More information about the history of the diocese can be found in our Archives.
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Last Updated: 6/22/2024