Ruth Bushyager
Quick Facts
Biography
Ruth Kathleen Frances Bushyager (née Twitchen; born March 1977) is a British Anglican bishop. Since July 2020, she has served as Bishop of Horsham, a suffragan bishop in the Diocese of Chichester.
Early life and education
Bushyager was born in March 1977 in Essex, England. She studied at the University of Bristol, graduating with a Master of Science (MSci) degree in 1999. From 2000 to 2004, she was a policy advisor at the Cabinet Office. She then entered Wycliffe Hall, Oxford, an evangelical Anglican theological college to train for ordination. She graduated from the University of Oxford with a Bachelor of Arts (BA) in theology in 2004. She then undertook a further year of training, completing a diploma in Christian ministry, before leaving theological college to be ordained in 2005.
Ordained ministry
Bushyager was ordained in the Church of England as a deacon in 2005 and as a priest in 2006. From 2014 to 2020, she was Vicar of St Paul's Church, Dorking in the Diocese of Guildford. She previously served in parish ministry in the Dioceses of Southwell and Nottingham and of Oxford, as a school chaplain, and as a missioner in the Diocese of London.
Episcopal ministry
In April 2020, Bushyager was announced as the next Bishop of Horsham, a suffragan bishop in the Diocese of Chichester. She is the first woman to serve as a bishop in the diocese. Her consecration as a bishop took place on the morning of 15 July 2020, in the Chapel of Lambeth Palace. The principal consecrator was Sarah Mullally, Bishop of London, making her the first female bishop in the Church of England to be consecrated by a bishop who is female.
She is chair of the trustees of Church Pastoral Aid Society (CPAS), an Anglican evangelical mission agency.
Views
In 2023, following the news that the House of Bishop's of the Church of England was to introduce proposals for blessing same-sex relationships, she signed an open letter which stated:
many Christians in the Church of England and the Anglican Communion, together with Christians from across the churches of world Christianity, continue to believe that marriage is given by God for the union of a man and woman and that it cannot be extended to those who are of the same sex. [...] Without seeking to diminish the value of many committed same-sex relationships, for which there is much to give thanks, we find ourselves constrained by what we sincerely believe the Scriptures teach which cannot be set aside.