Alexander Pryor
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Alexander Pryor | |
|---|---|
| Bishop of the Arctic | |
| Church | Anglican Church of Canada |
| Diocese | Arctic |
| In office | 2025–present |
| Predecessor | David Parsons |
| Other posts | Executive archdeacon, Diocese of the Arctic (2022–2025) |
| Orders | |
| Ordination | February 15, 2015 (priesthood) by Charlie Masters |
| Consecration | May 11, 2025 by Greg Kerr-Wilson |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 1987 or 1988 (age 37–38)[1] Sibley's Cove, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada |
| Spouse | Kristina |
| Children | 4 |
| Education |
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Alexander Roy Pryor is a Canadian Anglican bishop. Since 2025, he has been the diocesan bishop of the Diocese of The Arctic in the Anglican Church of Canada.
Pryor was born in Sibley's Cove, Newfoundland and Labrador, to a fisherman father and fish-plant worker mother. They relocated to St. John's after the closure of the cod fishery.[2] He grew up attending church; at age 9, he began playing the organ for his local Anglican church, and by 12 was leading music during services. As a young adult, he was also licensed as a eucharistic assistant and subdeacon. Pryor attended Memorial University of Newfoundland, where he earned a B.Mus. in organ and a B.Mus.Ed. During his studies, he was music minister at the newly planted Anglican Church of the Good Samaritan in St. John's.[3] He was also chosen as a youth delegate of the Anglican Network in Canada to the founding provincial assembly of the Anglican Church in North America in Bedford, Texas.[4]
Receiving a call to ministry, Pryor then he went on to Nashotah House, where he obtained an M.Div in 2014.[3] He was ordained a deacon in 2013 and a priest in February 14 at the Church of the Good Samaritan in a service presided over by Bishop Charlie Masters of the Anglican Network in Canada.[5] Pryor then spent five years working at Nashotah House, where he conducted the St. Mary's Choristers and the Choral Scholars of Nashotah House, established a workshop for church musicians, ran the chapel program with 14 weekly services and introduced sacred music and liturgical leadership into the seminary's hybrid-distance program.[6] During this time, in 2016, he moved from the ACNA to the ACC, becoming canonically resident in the Anglican Diocese of Calgary.[2]