Queer Places:
New York University, 70 Washington Square S, New York, NY 10012
Crown Hill Cemetery Indianapolis, Marion County, Indiana, USA

Caricamento di un’immagine più grande di pagina commemorativa...Archbishop Alfred Louis Lankenau (August 28, 1930 - February 24, 2010) was the Primate of the Orthodox-Catholic Church of America.

Lankenau was born in 1930 in Brooklyn, New York, the son of the late Cecelia and Alfred Lankenau. He was educated in the New York City Public Schools; St. Mary's Seminary and held a Ph.D. from New York University. He served in the U.S Army in the 1950s.

Lankenau was ordained a priest in 1956 by Roman Catholic bishop James McNulty of the Diocese of Paterson, New Jersey. Lankenau was the founding pastor of Holy Eucharist Church in Indianapolis, Indiana, which developed a ministry with the gay and lesbian community. In June 1980, Fr. Lankenau was consecrated bishop by Bishop George Augustine Hyde of the Orthodox-Catholic Church of America, assisted by Bishop Joseph Raffaele. He was then named the first bishop of the Diocese of Indianapolis and Chicago. In 1983 he was elected to the position of Presiding Bishop with the title of Archbishop of Washington and Indianapolis as well as Metropolitan of the Church.

He was the first Canonical Orthodox Bishop to authorize the ordination of women, in 1994. Lankenau was an outspoken supporter of the GLBT Community and favored legalizing same sex unions with full benefits. In 2000 he retired as Presiding Bishop and was given the title of Patriarch of Honor. During his lifetime, he encouraged the growth of the Church and at his death there were congregations in 20 States with priests also serving Mexico and Australia. Always hospitable, he was recognized as a friend of priests and served many as their spiritual director and confessor.

In secular life, Lankenau was employed by the American Legion National Headquarters as Director of their National Emblem Sales Catalog Division. He was considered an authority in Direct Marketing and had taught the subject for several semesters at Purdue University in Indianapolis.

Lankenau died on Wednesday, February 24, 2010 in Indianapolis, Indiana. He had suffered a lengthy struggle with cancer. He was buried in the Crown Hill Cemetery in Indianapolis.


My published books:

Amazon Logo Nero 010.pngSee my published books

BACK TO HOME PAGE