Terrell Lyles Glenn Jr. (born 1958) is an American bishop of the
Anglican Church in North America. He is a former
Episcopal
Episcopal may refer to:
*Of or relating to a bishop, an overseer in the Christian church
*Episcopate, the see of a bishop – a diocese
*Episcopal Church (disambiguation), any church with "Episcopal" in its name
** Episcopal Church (United State ...
priest who played an active role in the
Anglican realignment in the United States. Consecrated in 2008 to serve as a bishop in the
Anglican Mission in the Americas
The Anglican Mission in the Americas (AMiA) or The Anglican Mission (AM) is a self-governing church inheriting its doctrine and form of worship from the Episcopal Church in the United States (TEC) and Anglican Church of Canada with members and chu ...
, Glenn is now an assisting bishop overseeing North Carolina congregations in the
Diocese of the Carolinas
The Diocese of the Carolinas is a diocese of the Anglican Church in North America, comprising 34 parishes in the American states of North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee and Kentucky. Its first bishop is Steve Wood. He is also the re ...
.
Early life, education, and early career
Glenn was born in Columbia, South Carolina, to
Terrell L. Glenn Sr., a former U.S. attorney, and Louise Owens Glenn.
His paternal grandfather,
John Lyles Glenn Jr.
John Lyles Glenn Jr. (April 2, 1892 – May 2, 1938) was a United States district judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of South Carolina and the United States District Court for the Western District of South Carolin ...
, was a federal judge, and his maternal grandfather, Frank Owens, was a former mayor of Columbia.
The Glenn family were active (though not, according to Terrell Jr., particularly devout) members of
Trinity Episcopal Cathedral in Columbia. Terrell Jr. described his family's faith as "good churchmanship equaled good citizenship."
Terrell Jr. attended
St. Andrew's School in Delaware. One summer during high school, he had a
conversion experience while participating in the youth group at home at Trinity Cathedral, led by the Rev. John Yates Jr., the future longtime rector of
The Falls Church Anglican. He and a group of fellow students sought to hold
evangelistic chapel services once the school year began at St. Andrew's, but Glenn has said that the administration stopped the services after two were held.
Glenn attended the
University of South Carolina and during this time was discipled by a
Presbyterian minister in Columbia who educated him on
Reformed theology. At the end of college, Glenn was approved for seminary studies by the
Episcopal Diocese of Upper South Carolina
The Episcopal Diocese of Upper South Carolina (EDUSC) is a diocese in the Episcopal Church.
Originally part of the Diocese of South Carolina, it became independent on October 10–11, 1922 following nearly two years of planning. The see city is ...
and enrolled at
Virginia Theological Seminary. He recalled that his first
systematic theology professor began the class by disputing the
physical resurrection of Jesus. Despite VTS' reputation as a bastion of
low-church evangelical Episcopalianism, by the 1980s, Glenn said "it became clear to me that evangelicalism was tolerated and evangelicals were marginalized."
Glenn married Teresa deBorde; they had three children.
After his ordination, Glenn served at a small rural parish in South Carolina, then as assistant rector at
St. Philip's Episcopal Church in
Charleston
Charleston most commonly refers to:
* Charleston, South Carolina
* Charleston, West Virginia, the state capital
* Charleston (dance)
Charleston may also refer to:
Places Australia
* Charleston, South Australia
Canada
* Charleston, Newfoundlan ...
for six years. In 1990, he was called as rector of
St. Andrew's Episcopal Church in
Mount Pleasant, South Carolina.
Anglican realignment
Glenn was a deputy to the 1994 and 1997
General Conventions of the Episcopal Church and was troubled by a resolution in 1997 that removed the "conscience clause" regarding
women's ordination; dioceses were no longer permitted their own choice on whether to ordain women to the priesthood. "Regardless of one's view of women's ordination, we were now on slippery slope of mandating behavior that had neither been thoroughly studied theologically nor considered extensively with our ecumenical partners," Glenn recalled. "The 1997 Convention also failed to uphold and require a biblical sexual ethic for the church's clergy and people. For me, it was the
writing on the wall. . . .
realized that the real divide in TEC was not over women's ordination or human sexuality but over the Bible and its interpretation."
In September 1997, Glenn joined a group of 26 conservative or traditionalist Episcopal priests—including
Chuck Murphy,
T. J. Johnston, and
Jeffrey Steenson
Jeffrey Neil Steenson PA (born April 1, 1952) is an American retired priest and prelate of the Catholic Church and a former bishop of the Episcopal Church within the Anglican Communion. Steenson was the first ordinary of the Personal Ordinariate o ...
―in signing what became called the "First Promise" statement.
The statement—drafted at Murphy's church,
All Saints Episcopal Church in
Pawleys Island, South Carolina—declared the authority of the Episcopal Church and its General Convention to be "fundamentally impaired" because they no longer upheld the "truth of the gospel."
Glenn and the statement's other signers also stated their intention to be aligned with
Anglican Communion members whose theological principles aligned with the First Promise statement.
After the controversy over Resolution 1.10 at the 1998
Lambeth Conference—at which Anglican bishops by a vote of 389 to 190 passed an amendment stating that "homosexual practice" is "incompatible with Scripture" and that the conference "cannot advise the legitimising or blessing of same sex unions nor ordaining those involved in same gender unions"
—Glenn recalled that
Global South
The concept of Global North and Global South (or North–South divide in a global context) is used to describe a grouping of countries along socio-economic and political characteristics. The Global South is a term often used to identify region ...
Anglican primates became aware of the theological progressivism in the Episcopal Church and
Anglican Church of Canada
The Anglican Church of Canada (ACC or ACoC) is the Ecclesiastical province#Anglican Communion, province of the Anglican Communion in Canada. The official French-language name is ''l'Église anglicane du Canada''. In 2017, the Anglican Church co ...
.
In 2000, the First Promise statement evolved into the Anglican Mission in America.
Murphy and former
Trinity School for Ministry dean
John Rodgers were made bishops by
Emmanuel Kolini
Emmanuel Mbona Kolini (born Belgian Congo, 1945) is a Congolese-Rwandan Anglican bishop. He was the second Primate of the Episcopal Church of Rwanda, named Anglican Church of Rwanda in 2007, from 1998 to 2011. He is married and a father of eigh ...
and
Moses Tay. They left the Episcopal Church and founded the AMIA with canonical residence in the
Anglican Church of Rwanda—the first significant exodus from TEC since the
Congress of St. Louis The September 14-16, 1977 Congress of St. Louis was an international gathering of nearly 2,000 Anglicans in St. Louis, Missouri, united in their rejection of theological changes introduced by the Anglican Church of Canada and by the Episcopal Church ...
in 1977.
Glenn stepped down from St. Andrew's Mount Pleasant in 1999.
He renounced his ordination in the Episcopal Church in February 2000 and later that year was received as a presbyter by the Anglican Church of Rwanda.
That year, he became the founding rector of Church of the Apostles in
Raleigh, North Carolina, under the auspices of the newly formed AMIA.
Apostles grew to 375 in average attendance and a $1 million annual budget under Glenn.
In 2005, Glenn was called as rector of All Saints, Pawleys Island, succeeding future bishop
David Bryan as senior pastor.
(After All Saints in 2004 changed its articles of incorporation to remove references to the Episcopal Church, the church was involved in a landmark case related to property ownership of Episcopal churches in South Carolina. The state
Supreme Court
A supreme court is the highest court within the hierarchy of courts in most legal jurisdictions. Other descriptions for such courts include court of last resort, apex court, and high (or final) court of appeal. Broadly speaking, the decisions of ...
ruled in 2009 that the parish, which predated the Episcopal Church, was the owner of its property regardless of the
Dennis Canon
The Dennis Canon is a common (though unofficial and unfavored) name used for Title I.7.4 (as presently numbered) of the Canons of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America (also called The Episcopal Church, or TEC).
The Canon seeks t ...
.
)
Episcopacy and transition to ACNA
In 2007, the Rwandan bishops elected Glenn to serve as a missionary bishop in the AMIA. He was consecrated in January 2008 by Kolini alongside
John Miller and Philip Jones.
Glenn oversaw a network of 54 churches while remaining rector of All Saints Pawleys,
as was customary for AMIA bishops.
Glenn resigned as rector of All Saints in November 2010,
during a period of growing tension between AMIA leadership and both the newly formed Anglican Church in North America and the Anglican Church in Rwanda. In 2010, AMIA—which had been a founding member of the ACNA the year before—left full membership, changing its status in ACNA to "ministry partner."
By the next year, the relationship between AMIA chairman Murphy and the Anglican Church of Rwanda's house of bishops, led by Kolini's successor
Onesphore Rwaje, had broken down over questions of financial transparency and collegiality.
Except for Glenn and
Thad Barnum
Thaddeus Rockwell Barnum (born 1957) is an American bishop of the Anglican Church in North America. Consecrated in 2001 to serve in the Anglican Mission in the Americas, Barnum is now assisting bishop in the Diocese of the Carolinas. He was a key ...
, the AMIA bishops removed AMIA from Rwandan jurisdiction and restructured it as a "missionary society."
"What followed was a season of enmity, demonization, and slander," Glenn recalled. "In one case, bishops turned on congregations and clergy in ways that were worse than anything that had occurred at the hands of TEC when AMIA was formed in the first place. It was the single most painful experience that I have ever had in ministry."
v
In early 2012, a majority of AMIA congregations elected to remain canonically in the Rwandan church and pursue full membership and "dual citizenship" in the ACNA, forming
PEARUSA
PEARUSA was the North American missionary district of the Anglican Church of Rwanda. It took the first part of its name from the acronym for the Rwandan church's official French name (Province de l'Eglise Anglicane au Rwanda, or PEAR). PEARUSA was ...
.
Barnum and Glenn were given temporary responsibility for PEARUSA congregations pending the election and consecration of new bishops.
After new bishops were elected for PEARUSA, Glenn moved to Houston to plant the Church of the Apostles in the newly forming ACNA
Diocese of the Western Gulf Coast.
In 2017, Glenn returned to St. Andrew's to serve as campus pastor for its Charleston city location under
Steve Wood, rector of St. Andrew's and diocesan bishop of the Carolinas.
In 2020, Glenn returned to Raleigh to serve as
area bishop for North Carolina congregations in the Diocese of the Carolinas.
That year, the Church of the Apostles, which Glenn had planted in 2000, moved from the
Anglican Diocese of Christ Our Hope
The Anglican Diocese of Christ Our Hope is a diocese of the Anglican Church in North America. The diocese originated from the dissolution of the Missionary District of PEARUSA, which resulted in the creation of two new dioceses, both admitted at ...
to Glenn's jurisdiction in the Diocese of the Carolinas.
He also served as dean for College of Bishops affairs in the ACNA.
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Glenn, Terrell Lyles
Living people
Bishops of the Anglican Church in North America
1958 births
Virginia Theological Seminary alumni
People from Columbia, South Carolina
Anglican realignment people
St. Andrew's School (Delaware) alumni