

The Rt. Rev. Frank S. Cerveny, sixth Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Florida, died January 7, 2026, at the age of 92. At the time of his death, he was the senior prelate of the Episcopal Church, having served as a bishop for more than half a century. He was born June 4, 1933, in Ludlow, Massachusetts, and was raised ten miles away in Springfield. There, his family attended Christ Church Cathedral, where as a boy, he sang in the choir.
Frank Cerveny believed deeply in the dignity of every person as a child of God, a conviction reflected throughout his ministry as he sought to bring people together across social divisions, political differences, and lines of race and class. He was married to his beloved wife, Emmy Pettway Cerveny, for 64 years and often said it was Emmy who taught him to truly love life. Together they raised three children, establishing a home by the St. Johns River in Jacksonville, Florida.
Bishop Cerveny graduated cum laude from Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut, where he served as president of Alpha Chi Rho fraternity. Accepted for admission to Yale Law School, he chose instead to attend General Theological Seminary, where he served as student body president and graduated with honors. He also served as a missionary to Cuba as part of his seminary training. Later, he received five honorary doctorates.
He began his ordained ministry in 1958 as assistant at the Church of the Resurrection in suburban Miami Shores. He was called to Trinity Parish in New York City in 1960 and became intimately involved with inner-city work, especially among the poor of Manhattan's Lower East Side, Brooklyn, and Chinatown. In 1963, he was called to Jackson, Tennessee, where he worked tirelessly for racial reconciliation and the integration of churches at the height of segregation. The family moved to Knoxville in 1968 where Cerveny ministered at St. John’s Church, and helped form an ecumenical coalition that fostered missional partnerships across the city. In 1972, he became Dean of St. John’s Cathedral in Jacksonville before being consecrated Bishop of Florida in 1974.
As Bishop, Cerveny was propelled by his love of Jesus Christ to proclaim the Gospel from the pulpit and to witness the Gospel in his personal life by word and action. He is remembered for boldly embracing the gifts of the Holy Spirit, encouraging and equipping the saints to discover their gifts for ministry, and urging participation in the “one ministry of our Lord” shared between laity and clergy.
A man of vision and purpose, Bishop Cerveny established a companion relationship for the Diocese of Florida with the Diocese of Cuba, drawing on his own relationship with Bishop Emilio Hernandez, who had been his priest and mentor as a young missionary. He led his diocese of more than 30,000 to become more fully one family, and they gathered often at his beloved Camp Weed and the Cerveny Conference Center in Live Oak, Florida. He believed in the power of the Holy Spirit to heal the wounded and broken and invited Judith and Francis MacNutt to establish what became Christian Healing Ministries, an international ministry in the Diocese of Florida. He cared deeply for the disenfranchised, supporting and expanding St. Mary’s Outreach Ministry in downtown Jacksonville to serve the poorest of the poor. He also devoted time to prison ministry, including ministering to those on death row at Florida State Prison in Raiford. He encouraged renewal among lay people, notably through Cursillo and Happening, lay-led movements of Christian formation and witness. He was a creative and innovative thinker whose ministry was built on the bedrock of oneness and the upbuilding of the body. His leadership was an anchor in ever-changing times.
Cerveny retired from the Diocese of Florida in 1992 and continued his ministry as Executive Vice President of the Church Pension Group in New York City. He helped establish the Compass Rose Society in 1997, which provides financial support for the ministry of the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Anglican Communion Office. He later worked for the duPont Fund as Clerical Trustee and then for the Community Foundation of Northeast Florida.
In his later years, Bishop Cerveny lived peacefully in retirement, surrounded by his wife, grandchildren, and dear friends. He will be remembered as an early fitness enthusiast and was often seen at the YMCA in Jacksonville as a quiet, familiar presence whose discipline mirrored the steadiness of his faith. His legacy testifies to the grace, power, and love of Jesus Christ and to a life spent building bridges and urging the Church toward unity.
He was preceded in death by his parents, Frank Charles Cerveny and Julia Victoria Ludwig Cerveny; his sisters June Hammett and Gloria Falcone; and his beloved grandson Clay Norum Block Cerveny.
He is survived by his wife, Emmy; by their three children, Frank S. Cerveny, Jr. (Gretchen), Emmy Cerveny Gilbert (Barritt), and William “Billy” DeMoville Pettway Cerveny (Charla); and by grandchildren William Barritt Gilbert, Jr. (Sophie), Anne-Elizabeth Patten Gilbert Garza (Luis ), Thomas Cerveny Gilbert, Mary Harbin Gilbert, Frank Charles Cerveny, Katherine Grace Cerveny, Emmy Lampley Cerveny, William “Wiley” DeMoville Pettway Cerveny, Jr., Carolina Scout Cerveny.
A service celebrating his life will take place on Saturday, January 17, 2026, at 11:00 a.m. at St. John’s Cathedral in Jacksonville.
In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to the Cerveny Conference Center, 11057 Camp Weed Place, Live Oak, FL 32060.
Visit this link to order his memoir, You Will Be My Bishop: https://shop.ingramspark.com/b/084?params=5a7UY4UO9VgtxtM3zU58qQeQY95Zh8eTMzlHLLLpkg9
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Cerveny Conference Center11057 Camp Weed Place, Live Oak, Florida 32060
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