Mark S. Sisk

Mark Sisk

Bishop, Episcopal Diocese of New York

The Right Rev. Mark Sean Sisk has been Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of New York, one of the Episcopal Church’s largest dioceses with over 200 congregations since 2001. Before returning to New York as Bishop Coadjutor in 1998, the "On Faith" panelist served for 14 years as President and Dean of Seabury-Western Theological Seminary in Evanston, Illinois. The bishop also worked as a parish priest for 10 years before his predecessor Bishop Paul Moore asked him to join his staff as Archdeacon of Westchester, Putnam and Rockland Counties in New York. Mission, worship and nurture are the three main focus areas of Sisk’s episcopacy. At the root of each is the promise of keeping our Lord and our faith centered in our lives while we work together to help the most vulnerable in our society. He believes that his and other moderate, socially conscious Christian viewpoints need to be heard. It is his hope to function as a bridge-builder in dealing with the important social issues confronting us as a nation. Sisk earned a degree in economics from the University of Maryland and a Masters of Divinity at General Theological Seminary in New York. He was ordained in 1967. Close.

Mark Sisk

Bishop, Episcopal Diocese of New York

The Right Rev. Mark Sean Sisk has been Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of New York, one of the Episcopal Church’s largest dioceses with over 200 congregations since 2001. Before returning to New York as Bishop Coadjutor in 1998, the "On Faith" panelist served for 14 years as President and Dean of Seabury-Western Theological Seminary in Evanston, Illinois. more »

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Prayer is the Soul's Response To God's Movement

Prayer is the soul’s response, that is to say the person’s inner response, to God’s movement at the center of one’s own being.

I do pray, which is to say I attempt to respond to God by allowing God’s Spirit to work within me, conforming me to the Divine will. It is not so much a matter of what I do; it is rather a matter of what God does, in each and all of us.

In my response to God’s invitation, it is my hope that my will be shaped to reflect, God’s will. That is to say it is my hope that through prayer I will be equipped to see God’s presence in the world. I will come to see God in every one and in every place.

It is my hope that God praying in me will bring me that place where I will see the good that is now hidden from me; that I will work for the good of others that God wills for them. It is, as well, my faith that prayer will help me to see that which is evil cloaked in good. It is my belief that the river of prayer which sustains me will guide me to work for the peace and the wholeness of society and creation with a fire burning with God’s own passion.

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