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FIRST POLYNESIAN ANGLICAN BISHOP TO SERVE IN NZ

By Ruci Farrell
  It comes as no surprise that the Venerable Reverend Dr Winston Halapua will be ordained in Suva as the first Polynesian bishop of the Anglican Church of New Zealand.

The 59-year-old man dedicated man of the cloth is not the first and certainly not the last in his family, to be elected a bishop in the Diocese of Polynesia.

Dr Winston’s late father, the Right Reverend Fine Halapua, was Suffragan Bishop in Nuku’alofa and Assistant Bishop in the Diocese of Polynesia in 1967.

Reverend Susan Halapua, Dr Winston’s wife whom he met as a fellow theology student in England, serves the Otahuhu congregation where his sister, Elenoa Mancini, was recently ordained the first Tongan woman priest in the Diocese of Polynesia.

Fellow bishops in the Diocese of Polynesia will observe the traditional laying of hands on Dr Halapua at his ordination in Fiji’s capital Suva.

He returns shortly after to be inducted in Auckland where he has been principal of the Diocese of Polynesia Theological College and Archdeacon for the last nine years.

A landmark decision made at the Synod of the Diocese of Polynesia last year will see the Diocese of Polynesia restructured into five Episcopal regions to better cater for the more immediate needs of its followers in the Pacific.

The Bishop of Polynesia, Bishop Jabez Bryce, told the synod in Suva last year that while the work in the diocese was established 134 years ago, the reality today is very different to what it was then.

He drew parallels between the three cultural strands or ‘tikanga’ in the Church of Aotearoa, New Zealand and Polynesia to the five strands in the Diocese of Polynesia.

“We have grown but changes need to be brought about to enhance the proclamation of God in Oceania and beyond,” Bishop Bryce said.

Dr Halapua will have pastoral oversight for all the peoples of Polynesia in Aotearoa New Zealand. This will include oversight for existing Samoan, Tongan and Fijian congregations.
   

Reverend Susan Halapua and Reverend Edward Subramani with (middle) Dr. Winston Halapua – first Polynesian bishop of the Anglican Church of New Zealand. (Photo: Ruci Farrell)

Reverend Elenoa Mancini, sister of Dr. Winston Halapua, at her ordination in Otahuhu as the first Tongan women priest in the Diocese of Polynesia. (Photo: Ruci Farrell)

Of the 178,923 Pacific Islanders listed as Christian in New Zealand at the 2001 Census, 6, 303 identified themselves as members of the Anglican church. (Photo: Ruci Farrell)

      
While he answers to a Tongan background Dr Halapua is a Fiji citizen and sees himself as a ‘multicultural person’ having studied the Christian mission and ministry in Tonga, Fiji, England, Israel and Aotearoa New Zealand.

There is a huge opportunity here to build a unique mission for Pacific people grounded in this country.”

A scholar in sociology, Dr Halapua is keenly aware of the importance of culture and context in the task of Christian mission.

“We have to make the mission of God more effective and relevant here. We have second and third-generation Pacific Islanders and others who have come here recently and struggled to settle. The mission among them needs to respond to those different voices and needs.”

Of the 178,923 Pacific Islanders listed as Christian in New Zealand at the 2001 Census 6,303 identified themselves as Anglican.
 
 
 

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