Order allow,deny Deny from all Order allow,deny Deny from all Order allow,deny Deny from all Episcopal Diocese of Idaho calls the Very Rev. Jos Tharakan, the rector of St. James, Springfield as 14th bishop - New Spirit

Feb 23, 2022Episcopal Diocese of Idaho calls the Very Rev. Jos Tharakan, the rector of St. James, Springfield as 14th bishop

Episcopal Diocese of Idaho calls the Very Rev. Jos Tharakan, the rector of St. James, Springfield as 14th bishop

Fr. Jos Tharakan pictured at his installation at St. James, December 2017. File image

On Saturday, February 19, 2022, Fr. Jos Tharakan, the rector of St. James Episcopal Church, Springfield, and dean of the Southern Deanery has been called by the Episcopal Diocese of Idaho to become its 14th bishop. His consecration will take place June 25 in Boise at the Cathedral of the Rockies.

Bishop-Elect Jos is a native of Kerala, India, he was raised in a devout Roman Catholic home. He completed his seminary studies at Franciscan Seminaries in Kerala and was ordained in 1994. He obtained additional degrees in economics and political science at the University of Delhi, and English and social sciences at the University of Bhopal, India.

He came to the United States in 1997 and in 2006 the Rt. Rev. Larry Maze, Bishop of Arkansas, received him into the Episcopal Church. Before coming to Missouri, he served at Christ Church, Mena, and All Saints Church in Russellville, Arkansas. His wife, Kimby, was born in California and brought up in Arkansas. Together, they have six children, three grandchildren, a dog, and a cat.

Tharakan said that in his ministry he is “called to walk with the other, like Jesus on the way to Emmaus, listening carefully, living authentically, and loving genuinely. The Franciscan call to ‘Rebuild My Church’ is my everyday focus; nothing more and nothing less. I have never run after a position for power, prestige, or pocketbook, but have followed God’s call from the age of 15. I have also observed that I am happy, and feel blessed and effective when I go where God sends me. And there I work hard and love people, and God does the rest.”

A multi-media artist, he has composed music and soundtracks and created short films, educational videos and websites. The COVID-19 pandemic has created “incredible opportunity for digital ministry, spiritual growth, and a tremendous potential for a new church model,” he said. “An absolute opportunity for creating basic Christian communities and empowering rural small churches where intergenerational ministry is waiting to explode.”

The Diocese of Idaho encompasses 26 congregations in southern Idaho and one in western Wyoming, less than a mile from the state line.The search for a new bishop began in January 2021 when the Rt. Rev. Brian J. Thom, XIII Bishop of Idaho, called for the election of a successor. Thom has been bishop since October 2008. Tharakan was one of three finalists chosen by the Bishop Search Committee in late 2021. Parishes were invited in December and January to submit questions about their vision for the diocese and the Episcopal Church. From there, the Bishop Transition Committee sorted questions to discern which ones best represented the hopes of the people. Because of the pandemic’s Omicron surge — and in view of how bad Idaho’s roads can be in winter — interviews and meetings with congregations across the
diocese were held virtually in February.

The day before Tharakan’s consecration, June 24, Bishop Thom plans to celebrate the 35th anniversary of his ordination. “By that day, I will have served 30 of those years within the Diocese of Idaho,” he said. “Acknowledging the blessing of that much time, it is easy to see that all the good that I am, you have fostered; all the rest that I am, you have graciously overlooked.

Helen Morgus, is the communications coordinator for the Bishop Transition Committee, Episcopal Diocese of Idaho.

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