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Bishops' Conference of Scotland

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Assembly of Catholic bishops

Bishops' Conference of Scotland
(Catholic National Endowment Trust)
Co-labhairt Easbaigean na h-Alba(in Scottish Gaelic)
AbbreviationBCOS
TypeReligious body
Legal statusUnder charitable trust
(SC016650)[1]
Purpose"To enable the Roman Catholic Bishops in Scotland to work together, undertaking nationwide initiatives through their Commissions and Agencies."[1]
HeadquartersAirdrie, North Lanarkshire
Location
MembershipIncumbent and retired archbishops and bishops of the Catholic Church in Scotland
President
Bishop John Keenan
Main organ
The Episcopal Conference
AffiliationsCouncil of European Bishops' Conferences, Commission of Bishops' Conferences of the European Union, Catholic Bishops' Bioethics Committee, Action of Churches Together in Scotland, Churches Together in Britain and Ireland
Websitehttp://www.bcos.org.uk/

TheBishops' Conference of Scotland (BCOS), under the trust of theCatholic National Endowment Trust, and based inAirdrie, North Lanarkshire, is anepiscopal conference forarchbishops andbishops of theCatholic Church inScotland. The conference is primarily made up of thepresiding bishops of Scotland's eightdioceses as well as bishops who haveretired.

As of 2024, the president of the conference is BishopJohn Keenan of theDiocese of Paisley.[2]

Agencies

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The BCOS is organised into several agencies. These are: The Commission for Doctrine and Unity, The Communications and Press and Media Relations Office, The Commission for Catholic Education and Scottish Catholic Education Service, The Justice and Peace Commission, operating using the name Justice and Peace Scotland, The Heritage Commission as well as some other offices.[3]

The Conference is also a member of several international organisations including theCouncil of European Bishops' Conferences and theCommission of the Bishops' Conferences of the European Community.[4]

Before 1980, the organisation first registered withOffice of the Scottish Charity Regulator and stated that its objective was to "promote, establish, develop, expand, contribute to, support and maintain facilities, projects, schemes and institutions of all kinds having a religious, educational or charitable purpose for the benefit of the community throughout Scotland; and in addition for the benefit of students for the priesthood at home and abroad including the maintenance of the following colleges, all now closed; (a)St. Mary's College, Blairs,Aberdeen,Aberdeenshire; (b)St. Peter's College,Cardross,Dumbarton; (c)St. Andrew's College, Drygrange,Melrose,Roxburghshire."[5]

Ecumenical relations

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The Bishops' Conference of Scotland is a full member ofAction of Churches Together in Scotland. The BCOS sends a representative to the Ecumenical Relations Committee of theChurch of Scotland and is always invited to send a delegate to theGeneral Assembly of the Church of Scotland.

Member bishops

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Map of dioceses in Scotland
Bishops Conference meeting First MinisterJohn Swinney in 2024

Leadership

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Presidents

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Source:[6]

Arms

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Coat of arms of Bishops' Conference of Scotland
Notes
Granted by theLyon Court, 3 September 2025.[7]
Escutcheon
Azure on a saltire Argent two bishops's croziers in saltire Gules a harrier Or all within a tressure Gules.
Supporters
Behind the shield is set a Celtic bishop's cross Or.

See also

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References

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  1. ^BCOS.org.uk retrieved 15 June 2016
  2. ^"Bishops Conference of Scotland > Bishops".newwww.bcos.org.uk. Retrieved5 November 2024.
  3. ^Bishops' Conference of Scotland[permanent dead link] from EuroCathInfo.eu, retrieved 15 June 2016
  4. ^Our Member BishopsArchived 17 October 2016 at theWayback Machine fromCOMECE, retrieved 15 June 2016
  5. ^Catholic National Endowment Trust, SC016650 fromOSCR, retrieved 15 June 2016
  6. ^"Bishops' Conference of Scotland".GCatholic. Retrieved10 April 2024.
  7. ^"Archbishop Cushley, Metropolitan Archbishop of St Andrews and Edinburgh..." Lyon Court. Retrieved29 October 2025.

External links

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