Buckingham was born in Dannevirke, New Zealand to Salvation Army officers Hillmon and Lorraine (née Smith) Buckingham,[5] who were stationed at Woodville Corps (church) at the time.[6] Hillmon and Lorraine Buckingham were later appointed to the rank of Commissioner and held Territorial Leadership posts. According to interviews, Buckingham had his first personal experience of the Holy Spirit and received his call to Officership aged 17 at a Salvation Army Youth Councils in August 1979.[7]
Buckingham married Bronwyn Robertson in Whangārei, before they moved to Trentham, Upper Hutt to attend William Booth Memorial Training College (now Booth College of Mission), the Salvation Army's officer training college. They have two children, who are both officers in the Salvation Army, serving in the New Zealand, Fiji, Tonga and Samoa Territory.[8] Lyndon and Bronwyn Buckingham have resided in London since they took up appointments at the Salvation Army's International Headquarters (IHQ) in 2018.
Career
Lyndon Buckingham was commissioned as a Salvation Army officer along with his wife in 1990 in New Zealand.[9] Along with his wife, Buckingham has been appointed to corps (local church centres), divisional (regional oversight), and other territorial headquarters postings in New Zealand and Canada, and held Territorial leadership roles in Singapore and the United Kingdom.
Buckingham was appointed Chief of the Staff of the Salvation Army in 2018, serving under General Brian Peddle. In 2023, Buckingham summoned the High Council of The Salvation Army to meet at Sunbury Court in London to elect a successor to General Peddle, who had announced his retirement, under the requirements of the Salvation Army Act 1980.[10] After a week of formalities and deliberations, the members of the High Council elected Buckingham to the position of General-Elect.