Anglican ministry, service, doctrine, and church order.
I serve as an Anglican cleric, with work across preaching, teaching, pastoral care, worship, administration, doctrine, and the ordered life of the Church.
The Reverend Samuel J. Ivey BSc (Hons), MLitt, MPhil
Service in the life of the Church
Clerical work is both spiritual and practical: prayer, preaching, teaching, pastoral care, administration, governance, and the quiet labour of helping church institutions work properly.
My ministry is shaped by Scripture, the Anglican tradition, the historic life of the Church, and a concern for faithful teaching, reverent worship, pastoral care, and institutional integrity.
Preaching and teaching
Sermons, Bible teaching, catechesis, theological explanation, and the formation of Christian people through careful attention to Scripture and doctrine.
Pastoral care
Prayer, conversation, visiting, counsel, and the ordinary work of accompanying individuals and families through the joys and difficulties of Christian life.
Worship and liturgy
Leading and assisting in public worship according to the Anglican tradition, with concern for reverence, clarity, continuity, and the formation of the Church.
Governance and administration
Practical and constitutional work relating to church structures, councils, trusts, doctrine, worship, and the institutional responsibilities of Anglican bodies.
Seabury College in the UK
Forming Seabury College
I led the work with the REC and RES to form Seabury College in the UK, developing a structure for theological education and formation in service of Anglican ministry.
This work reflects a broader concern for the formation of clergy and lay people: not merely the transfer of information, but the cultivation of faithful doctrine, disciplined study, pastoral judgement, and service to the Church.
Anglican doctrine, worship, and church life
I am interested in Anglican doctrine, identity, worship, ecclesiology, and the relationship between church teaching and institutional order. My clerical and theological work often concerns how doctrine, worship, governance, and pastoral life belong together.
- Anglican doctrine, identity, worship, and ecclesiology.
- The relation between Scripture, tradition, reason, and church authority.
- Pastoral theology and ordinary Christian discipleship.
- Church order, institutional trust, and ecclesial governance.
- The interaction between Christian thought, public life, and modern technical systems.
Church responsibilities
Current and recent service in the Reformed Episcopal Church, especially in Scotland and the Northern Diocese, ordered around the Church’s worship, doctrine, pastoral care, and common life.
Clerical enquiries
For clerical enquiries, invitations, or church-related correspondence, please get in touch.