
about rob
rob shearer (he/him/his) is a Jesus-follower who is a minister in The United Church of Canada, parent of twin teenagers and partner of Rebekka. He’s an an activist, church starter, podcaster, organiser, preacher, contemplative, musician and writer. Rob’s a co-founder and part of the neo-monastic Emmaus Community, clergy/co-founder at The AbbeyChurch and Regional Minister for Church Planting with the west coast region (PMRC) of The United Church of Canada where he helps support over a dozen new communities of faith. He lives on lands stolen from the Songhees and Xwsepsum (Esquimalt) Nations; the Lək̓ʷəŋən peoples’ on southern Vancouver Island.
For much more on Rob, please see below.
more about me – expanded bio & activities
I’m rob shearer, ec – a Jesus-follower who is (still) amazed by God’s grace.
By that grace I’ve worked in vocational Christian ministry, activism and music for over 30 years.
I’m partner to Rebekka and dad to twin teenagers who teach me so much about beauty, life, music, wonder, culture and hope. I co-parent my children with my wonderful ex-spouse and still-colleague Meagan, who remains a close friend.
I was ordained as Anglican clergy in 2016 (deacon) and 2018 (priest) and was admitted to the ministry of word and sacrament in The United Church of Canada in 2024. I view my ordination and admission as the culmination of experiencing a call to ministry at an old fashioned Holy Ghost Pentecostal camp meeting in my teens, subsequent deconstruction and reconstruction, and a couple of decades of lay ministry which then followed.
I’ve been blessed to sojourn in Pentecostal, Roman Catholic, Anglican and United Church / Methodist traditions, and I bring an ecumenical love for Jesus that is married to a passion for inclusion, anti-oppression, creation care, liberating tradition and connecting people to the transcendent, living Triune God through worship and praise.
These days, I describe myself as an ‘Anglican-leaning Methodist’ and I’m drawn to the witness, music and rich spirituality of the Wesleys as well as the sacramental-liturgical tradition of the Church.
As a pacifist and anti-fascist, I’m deeply influenced by the streams of radical Christianity including the Catholic Worker Movement, Christian Anarchism the Franciscans / Claires, Benedictines and the Anabaptists.
My full time paid gig is as Regional Minister for Church Planting with the Pacific Mountain Regional Council of The United Church of Canada where I have the joy of supporting over a dozen diverse new communities of faith. In that role I coordinated the Resurrect Learning Parties in 2018 and 2023 and I co-host the Vocare: Stories of Call podcast with Amy Haynes.
As a co-founder and member of the monastic-inspired intentional Christian Community The Emmaus Community in 2014, I root my life in the Way of Jesus with others, living our commitments to prayer, presence and simplicity within Emmaus’ monastic-inspired Rule of Life. The ‘ec’ you sometimes see after my name signifies that I’m a part of this community.
In 2015 I co-founded The AbbeyChurch – a Christ-centred, inclusive, sacramental community (United Church / Anglican Church) in Victoria, BC, and I continue to regularly preach, preside and play music there.
Since the 1990s, I’ve been involved in a number of direct actions of non-violent civil disobedience to oppose wars of aggression, oppression, colonialism and ecological destruction.
From 2022 to 2024 I had the painful honour of being a regular attendee of ?aps ciik cha chim hiy ap – a monthly listening group of survivors and allies of the United Church-run Alberni Indian Residential ‘School’. The stories, resilience and witness of the survivors continues to shape my work to decolonize myself and the church.
I have a passion for decolonizing land by moving from private to shared ownership of land by engaging cooperative housing and land trust models to foster deeper community and affordability in the face of the ‘polycrisis’ we find ourselves in.
As a contemplative – and as part of my Emmaus commitments, I make a yearly silent retreat at a monastery – my favourite being Mount Angel Abbey in Oregon – with their on-site brewery and library, of course. I also, in grace, take a weekly sabbath day, do monthly spiritual direction and pray morning prayer and compline from the daily office (with examen at times). I completed Annotation-19 of the Ignatian Spiritual Exercises in 2022.
I have a Master of Arts in Public and Pastoral Leadership from the Vancouver School of Theology where I was recipient of the Frederick Buechner Award for Excellence in Preaching and the Chancellor’s Scholarship – as well as an Honours BA in Religious Studies and English Literature from the University of Toronto.
I’ve got a few longer writings on the go – one on faith deconstruction & reconstruction, one on ways of being in times of polycrisis and one on spiritual and religious trauma.
Growing up in southern Ontario (Burlington, ON) from the 70’s to the 90’s, my heart was shaped by the contours of the Lake Ontario shoreline, where I biked around, wrote stories and drew maps about a parallel fantasy world with a group of fellow weirdos who were all inspired by the Inklings (Lewis, Tolkien, et al), played alternative and electronic music – and got into culture jamming, silkscreening, dumpster diving and raving.
After living in the 20s and 30s in the Parkdale neighbourhood in Toronto, I moved to Victoria, BC in 2012 and nearby Sooke, BC in 2024 – and am now shaped by the enchanting and immense rhythms of the Pacific Ocean. I relocated to Victoria in 2026.
I’m a descendent of (low) German immigrant Lutherans from what is now Ukraine (Lviv) – who converted to Pentecostalism as Manitoba farmers, from highland Scots from Dunnet, Caithness who immigrated to Canada in the 18th century and included numerous Presbyterian and UCC clergy in their ranks – and, of course, from Methodist United Empire Loyalists who lived in Mallorytown, ON (near Brockville).
Older Stuff
During my time as an Anglican, I co-chaired the Diocesan Vision Team for the Anglican Diocese of BC, travelling around Vancouver Island to ‘take the pulse’ and co-authored (with the Rev. Anne Privett) the bold report adopted by Synod in 2014.
From my ordination in 2016 until 2020 I was the Bishop’s Advisor on Emerging Communities and worked for several years with diocesan staff and clergy on an innovative vision for team ministry which incorporated cooperative housing with a model to deploy clergy and others in a shared life of intentional Christian community going ‘from temple to table (to work) daily’.
Before moving to the west coast in 2012, I was a founding member of The Jeremiah Community, a missional / new monastic community in Toronto.
In 2011 I did a fun thing called the (Dis)Robe experiment where, as a parent of one-year olds I wore a monk’s robe for a few months and blogged about it.
I was National Youth Coordinator with Alongside Hope (then known as PWRDF) where I was part of a delegation to Mexico in 2007, and had the honour of meeting with Bishop Samuel Ruiz Garcia, visiting autonomous Zapatista communities and visiting other partners across Mexico.
I directed the the Nidus Festival (short photo/video retrospective here) with the Canadian Council of Churches in 2006 which featured contributions from protestant, evangelical, Orthodox and Roman Catholic folk – and also Danielson, Starflyer, Steve Bell, Shad, Frederica Mathewes-Greene, Brian McLaren, Susan Aglukark, Shane Claiborne, James Loney and many others.
From 2001-2006, I lived in Zacchaeus House, a Catholic Worker community House of Hospitality in Toronto. These 5 years continue to shape my life in profound ways. Dorothy Day, Peter Maurin and the spiritual and philosophical foundations of that movement (Mounier, Maritian, Kropoktin, Chesterton) – and notions of personalism, localism and subsidiarity are central in how I approach faith and action.
I served as music director and liturgist at the campus-based Wine Before Breakfast (Christian Reformed / Anglican) – an early morning eucharist – for several years in the first decade of the 2000s.
I was involved for over a decade at Parkdale Neighbourhood Church – a Baptist ‘street church’ in Toronto (now called “The Dale”) both as board chair and music leader.
In 2001, shortly after 9/11 and in the midst of the HIV/AIDs crisis, I was invited to be part of and participated in the first student pan-African Consultation on LGBTQ2IA+ sexuality and HIV/AIDS with the World Student Christian Federation (Africa Region) in Togo, West Africa. I write about that life-altering experience here.
In 2000 and 2001 I organized Student Christian Movement Solidarity Summers experiments where a small group of youth / students lived off a piece of land and shared in spiritual practices in intentional community. I was part of SCM Canada through the 1990s including serving on their national board of directors.
I came out as bisexual and Christian in 1998 in the UofT campus paper the Varsity, and that article prompted ongoing homophobic attacks against both myself and campus ministry (SCM) at UofT – an experience which drew me deeper into my personal faith in Jesus Christ, and almost lost me my first congregational job in a rural United Church.
I’ve co-led pilgrimages to the Taizé Community, the Greenbelt Festival, Methodist history sites, and the protest / vigils to close the School of the Americas (including visits to various Catholic Workers and other Intentional Christian Communities along the way), as well as a pilgrimage to explore the effects of globalisation in the early 2000s.
Fun!
I once co-owned an organic bakery in rural Ontario.
I was born on the 7th day of the 7th month of a year in the 70’s (not ’77, sadly). I weighed 7 pounds and 7 ounces and was born at 7am. True story.
I’ve written and recorded many kinds of music – electronic / ambient, worship / praise, alternative, folky and protest. I sing, play guitar and keyboard (programming electronic stuff too) – and play a tiny bit of bass and drums.
I love music (!!!) – and scavenging for vintage vinyl at thrift stores – especially for African-American gospel and 80’s alternative music – although I’ve collected lots of kinds of music over the years.
I unwind with hiking / walking, running at the gym, watching and reading Nordic Noir mysteries and watching standup comedy specials, brewing Trappist-inspired beer and cooking or baking.
I’ve walked the entire West Coast Trail, parts of the Juan Da Fuca Marine Trail – and done 3 long bike trips (Toronto, ON to Winnipeg, MB, Quebec City to the Gaspé Peninsula and Niagara Falls to Concord, New Hampshire).
I’m an Enneagram 9 (conflict avoider / bridge builder / peacemaker), if that matters to you.
Resume / CV
You can read and download my CV here.
Land and Watershed
I’m a Christian queer settler of European descent who is living, working, praying and playing on the unceded lands of the Nations now known as the T’Sou-ke Nation as well as the Songhees and Xwsepsum (Esquimalt) Nations; the Lək̓ʷəŋən peoples’ . I’m committed to the Land Back Movement and I acknowledge the complicity and genocide perpetuated by the religious and spiritual traditions I am part of (broadly, speaking, the Christian Church and – more specifically, The United Church of Canada), and whom I benefit from.
I live and work in the Rock Bay and Bowker Creek Watersheds on the border of the North Park / Downtown neighbourhoods in Victoria.
I’m grateful to the various photographers on this page who include Kimiko Karpoff (arrest photos), Tressa Brotsky (me and the kids at the diner) and Rebekka K. (a bunch of the others.) This website was designed by me, Rob.








