Pennsylvania
Erie experiences, Pa. resiliency prepared Sean Rowe to lead Episcopal Church
Bisop Mariann Budde makes plea to Trump to have mercy on immigrants
Bishop Mariann E. Budde, of the Episcopal Church, pleaded to Donald Trump to have “mercy” on immigrants and members of the LGBTQ+ community.
Reuters
The Most Rev. Sean Rowe, leader of the U.S. Episcopal Church, learned how to be a bishop in northwestern Pennsylvania.
He was only 32 in 2007 when he was elected bishop of the Erie-based Episcopal Diocese of Northwestern Pennsylvania after serving as a rector in Franklin. At 49, he was elected as presiding bishop and primate of the 1.4-million member Episcopal Church. After he was chosen to be the presiding bishop in 2024, Rowe told the Erie Times-News that his experience working in the 13-county northwestern Pennsylvania diocese helped him gain the experience he needed for the mainline Protestant denomination’s top job.
Rowe said the Erie region’s smaller congregations represent the broader base of the New York City-based Episcopal Church, which is part of the worldwide Anglican Communion. Rowe also served as bishop provisional of the Episcopal Diocese of Western New York for five years when it shared a bishop and staff with the Pennsylvania diocese.
“One thing I’ve learned in northwestern Pennsylvania is resilience,” Rowe said in 2024.
More recently, he responded to questions from the Erie Times-News related to challenges and issues he faces today and how his experiences in Erie have shaped his approach to his work leading the Christian denomination.
Q&A with The Most Rev. Sean Rowe
Question: How did your experiences leading the Episcopal Diocese of Northwestern Pennsylvania prepare you to lead the Episcopal Church?
Answer: We are resilient people here in northwestern Pennsylvania, and we already have decades of experience with institutional decline and the need to be more resourceful and innovative with less. Much of our church is facing that reality now for the first time. I learned from the people of the Diocese of Northwestern Pennsylvania how to have the direct and authentic conversations required to navigate through these kinds of hard times, and how to persevere even when it is tempting to give up. I will always admire the people of this diocese for taking on the challenges of ministry with such grit and love for our neighbors. Their example continues to guide and inspire me every day.
In Erie, you dealt with claims of sexual abuse against a former bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Northwestern Pennsylvania. If you received a similar claim about a leader in the Episcopal Church, how would you respond? Would you do anything differently?
I would respond to any allegation of sexual abuse by taking immediate action, just as I did back in 2010. I do have one regret from that experience, and it has changed the way I listen to and work with victims of clergy abuse: In my first formal meeting with the courageous young woman who brought the horrific abuse perpetrated by one of my predecessors to light, we complied with the intent of our church’s disciplinary structures and canon laws by having lawyers, psychologists and me, a bishop, all present to hear her tell the story of her abuse. She was brave and persevered. I learned that meetings like this run a high risk of retraumatizing victims and should not be part of our investigative process. I will always regret that, working within a faulty structure, I learned this lesson at the expense of a woman to whom the church had already done its worst.
Thoughts on immigration
Erie and the Episcopal Church both have experience welcoming immigrants yet the Episcopal Migration Ministries no longer resettles white Afrikaners from South Africa whom the U.S. government has classified as refugees. What are your thoughts on the current state of immigration in the United States, within the Episcopal Church and in Erie?
I think that immigration has become a wedge issue in the United States, and I think that is also true to some extent in our church and in our city. The divide at this point is so pronounced that people with different political views sometimes seem to be inhabiting two separate realities.
As the leader of the Episcopal Church, I want to ask Christians to think about immigration not in the divisive terms that politics and social media use to box us in, but based on the scriptural commands to welcome the stranger and care for the vulnerable. If enough of us took that seriously, I think our country would have a sane immigration policy and humane enforcement that would protect human dignity and respect the rule of law.
In our church, we believe that the people at the so-called margins of society are actually at the center of God’s story, and we don’t believe we can truly be the church unless all of us — immigrants and citizens — have safe access to worship and a fair chance at a life of dignity and freedom. That’s why, even before we declined to resettle white Afrikaners from South Africa, we became litigants in a lawsuit challenging the executive order that rolled back protections from immigration enforcement in sensitive locations like houses of worship, schools and hospitals.
Erie proud
How often do you get back to Erie County and what do you think of the direction it is heading?
My family and I actually still live in Erie, and while I travel a great deal in my new job, I still shop locally, check books out from Blasco (Library), and look forward to opening day at Waldameer (Park & Water World). I’m proud of our city and the progress we’ve made, especially in stabilizing our public schools and diversifying the local economy, and I’m looking forward to seeing the results of the Bayfront Parkway project. I miss being deeply involved in the life of the city, but I am grateful it is still my home.
Value of religious life
As you look at your own Episcopal Church and the mainline Christian churches in general, it appears that attendance continues to decline. What should the larger church do to demonstrate the value of religious life and church affiliation?
No matter where I travel across the Episcopal Church, the people I meet are hungry to be part of a community that rejects the loneliness and social fragmentation plaguing our world today. Being part of a religious tradition and a local congregation helps us live in a different way — as people who are always looking for signs of God’s redeeming love at work in the world and participating in them.
The forces that corrode our relationships with one another, with creation and with ourselves are strong, and some days they seem to have the upper hand. When we gather together for worship, prayer, study and service, we can instead shape our lives by being in communion with God, each other and the world. At its best, our church offers a meaning-starved world the feast for which it is longing, and I hope that everyone who is hungry for that experience will join us.
Dana Massing can be reached at dmassing@gannett.com.
Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania man pleads guilty to threatening Trump and ICE agents online
Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania man charged after son brought loaded gun to school, DA says
A Phoenixville, Pennsylvania, man was charged after his son went to school with his loaded gun, the Chester County District Attorney’s Office said Monday.
The DA’s office said Russell Matthews, 58, was charged with endangering the welfare of a child and recklessly endangering the welfare of a child.
East Pikeland Township Police responded to Hares Hill Elementary School on Monday at around 12:15 p.m. for the report of a student who brought a handgun to school.
At school, the student noticed the handgun inside their backpack and told a school counselor, according to the DA’s office. The student told officials that he recognized it and that it belonged to his father. The semiautomatic handgun was loaded with five rounds of ammunition, the DA’s office said.
Matthews told police that he put the gun in the wrong backpack, the DA’s office said.
Nobody was injured during the incident.
“We are grateful to the school officials and the East Pikeland Township Police Department who worked quickly to ensure that [Hares] Hill Elementary School is safe again,” Chester County District Attorney Christopher de Barrena-Sarobe said in a statement.
Pennsylvania
Cynthia Ann Gargasz, Sharon, PA
SHARON, Pa. (MyValleyTributes) – Cynthia Ann Gargasz, age 75, passed away peacefully, on Friday, April 10, 2026, surrounded by her family.
Cynthia was born on October 5, 1950, in Sharon, Pennsylvania, to Mary and Carl Spruk.
Cindy grew up in Farrell, Pennsylvania, where she attended Farrell High School and graduated from class of 1969. She went on to dedicate 30 years of hard work at Packard Electric before retiring.
Cindy found joy in simple comforts at home and maintaining her home and family. Throughout her life, she cared deeply for her animal friends and would always feed and nurture any additional critters that would cross her path. She loved sitting with a cup of coffee, watching the birds and welcoming visits from friends and family. She cherished gathering around the kitchen table for meals and conversation and was always adding simple touches to her space to make it feel more like home. She enjoyed hosting holidays, where everyone felt welcome. Cindy had an eye for style, enjoyed meeting up with friends and dancing the night away to good music. Most recently during her illness, she very much enjoyed trips to the corral drive-in, for vanilla ice cream and burger visits with family.
Cindy is preceded in death by her parents Mary and Carl Spruk; her sister, Carol Crisan; and her brother, Edward Spruk.
She is survived by her children, Frank (Reagan) Gargasz and Ashley Gargasz; her grandson, Jordan DeCarmen; her brother, Mark Spruk (Gretchen); and her nieces and great-nieces.
Per her wish, family and close friends may call on Tuesday April 14, 2026, 10:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m., in the Stephen J. Sherman Funeral Home
Funeral services will be held on Tuesday, April 14, 2026, at 12:00 p.m., in the funeral home, with Father James Power, officiating.
Burial will take place in Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Cemetery Hermitage, PA.
Arrangements entrusted to the SHERMAN Funeral Home & Crematory.
To send flowers to the family or plant a tree in memory of Cynthia Ann (Spruk) Gargasz, please visit our floral store.
A television tribute will air Tuesday, April 14, at the following approximate times: 6:47 a.m. on WYTV, 9:43 a.m. on WKBN, 10:58 a.m. on FOX and 8:12 p.m. on MyYTV. Video will be posted here the day of airing.
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