Frederick Borsch
Encyclopedia
Frederick Houk Borsch was the Episcopal Bishop of Los Angeles
Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles
The Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles is a community of 85,000 Episcopalians in 147 congregations, 40 schools, and 18 major institutions, spanning all of Los Angeles, Orange, San Bernardino, Santa Barbara, and Ventura counties, and part of Riverside County....

 from 1988 to 2002, then served as interim dean of the Berkeley Divinity School
Berkeley Divinity School
Berkeley Divinity School, founded in 1854, is an official seminary of the Episcopal Church, based in New Haven, Connecticut. The seminary was originally founded as a middle-way between the Anglo-Catholic leaning General Theological Seminary in New York, and the Evangelical-leaning Virginia...

 at Yale University
Yale University
Yale University is a private, Ivy League university located in New Haven, Connecticut, United States. Founded in 1701 in the Colony of Connecticut, the university is the third-oldest institution of higher education in the United States...

 and Chair of Anglican studies at the Lutheran Theological Seminary at Philadelphia
Lutheran Theological Seminary at Philadelphia
The Lutheran Theological Seminary at Philadelphia is one of eight seminaries associated with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America , located in Philadelphia . It was founded in 1864 but traces its roots further back to the first Lutheran establishment in Philadelphia founded by Henry Melchior...

. Remembered particularly for the development of Spanish-speaking congregations, the founding of the Episcopal Urban Intern Program (Episcopal Service Corps), his leadership in environmental stewardship, the building of the Cathedral Center of St. Paul, and advocacy for poverty-wage workers and the living wage while bishop in Los Angeles, he also served for twelve years as the Chair of the House of Bishop’s Theology Committee and as a member of the design and steering teams for the 1988 and 1998 Lambeth Conferences, chairing the section “Called to be a Faithful Church in a Plural World” in 1998. See "The Other Bishop" in Los Angeles Times Magazine, April 11, 1999, pp. 16-19, 44-42. and further biography at http://ltsp.edu/people/fborsch. Working with the Standing Commission on Human Affairs, he helped the General Convention of 1994 to include in the church's canons sexual orientation in the non-discriminatory clauses for ordination.

Educated at Princeton, Oxford and the General Theological Seminary, his Ph.D. degree is from the University of Birmingham in England. In addition to teaching posts in England, at Seabury-Western and the General Theological Seminary, he was formerly Dean, President, and Professor of New Testament at the Church Divinity School of the Pacific. He was Dean of the Chapel with rank of Professor of Religion at Princeton University (1981-1988; again interim in 2007) where he taught in the Program in the History, Archaeology and Religions of the Ancient World.

Contributor of essays, articles and poetry to a number of journal and newspapers, he has been a conference leader and given university and seminary lectures at institutions in this country and abroad. In 1985, for thirteen weeks, he was the preacher for the Protestant Hour. Among his more than twenty books are Keeping Faith at Princeton: A Brief History of Religious Pluralism at Princeton and Other Universities (2012); Parade: Poems of Dark and Light Alike (2010); Our First Atom Bomb: An All-American Story (2009); Introducing the Lessons of the Church Year (1978: new and 3rd ed. 2009); Day by Day; Loving God More Dearly* (2009); The Spirit Searches Everything: Keeping Life's Questions (2005); The Magic Word* (2001); Outrage and Hope (1996); Christian Discipleship and Sexuality (1993); The Bible's Authority in Today's Church (ed. 1993); Many Things in Parables (1988); Jesus: the Human Life of God* (1987); Anglicanism and The Bible (ed. 1984); Power and Weakness* (1983); Coming Together in the Spirit (1980); God's Parable (1975); The Christian and Gnostic Son of Man (1970); The Son of Man in Myth and History (1967). For further bibliography see "Spirit Searching" at www.frederickborsch.com. *Also in audio format with the Episcopal Media Center and Alliance for Christian Media.

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