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Event gives clergywomen sense of empowerment from peers
Aug. 21, 2006
By Linda Green*
CHICAGO (UMNS) — Cars, planes and trains brought 1,500 United Methodist
clergywomen together to celebrate their past and proclaim their future.
Participants from around the globe came here Aug.
13-17 to hear sermons from bishops, participate in a banquet celebrating
the 50th
anniversary of full
clergy rights for women, and purchase books by women who’ve written about
women in ministry.
Each participant in the 2006 International United
Methodist Clergywomen’s
Consultation attended four of 42 workshops on a host of topics, including:
- Building relationships between lay
and clergywomen;
- Peacemaking in a multi-faith world;
- Balancing parenthood and pastoral ministry; and
- Learning how to bring passion, purpose, prayer and play into church
Annual conferences, individuals and schools produced a variety of films to
commemorate the anniversary celebration, and clergywomen screened the offerings
Aug, 14-15.
During the four-day event, clergywomen learned
about the lives of the women bishops when the robes come off. The assembly
heard from
German Bishop Rosemarie
Wenner, the first woman elected to the United Methodist episcopacy outside
the United States, and Bishop Minerva Carcaño, the first Latina bishop
in the denomination. They examined the advances clergywomen have made in the
last 50 years and celebrated the leadership and the gifts of women clergy.
Some clergywomen also signed a declaration encouraging the ending of the war
in Iraq, bringing the troops home by Sept. 21 and establishing a concrete peace
plan.
During the consultation, participants were urged to sign a “bloody knuckle
petition” from supporters of full inclusion of gays, lesbians, bisexuals
and transgender people in the church. The petition came in response to a sermon
by retired Bishop Judith Craig who spoke of the continued knocking of groups
of people who want to enter the church. Signatories agreed to help open United
Methodist doors that deny people with those orientations full membership rights,
full marriage equality, full ordination rights and full access to denominational
funding.
Native American clergywomen formed a Native American
Clergywomen’s Association
on Aug. 14. Their conversation centered on the need to develop a system for
networking and mentoring. The group of 30 Native American clergywomen from
seven annual conferences also said it wants to cooperate with other denominations
to conduct an inter-tribal clergywomen’s gathering. The 2006 consultation
was the largest gathering of Native American clergywomen within the denomination.
Why did you come? When asked why they attended the gathering, participants offered a variety
of reasons; answers generally focused on the empowerment they received by being
with clergywomen from around the world.
“I came to celebrate women being in ministry for 50 years. I am here
to be with my clergy sisters and with other women who want an inclusive church
for all persons and to get my praise on,” said the Rev. Charlene Zuill
of the California-Pacific Annual (regional) Conference.
Zuill was especially impressed with the witness
of the bishops. “I am
amazed at their presence, their leadership and the ways in which the church
is really going to be turned upside-down because of the presence of all the
women called by God that are assembled together.” She told United Methodist
News Service that she is inspired to encourage other women who are experiencing
a call to ministry.
The Rev. Katie Cannon, an African-American clergywoman in the Presbyterian
Church, said she attended the consultation “because I love worship,
and the Methodist women do it right. They do it super good,” she
said. Cannon is the author of Womanism and the Soul of the Black Community. “I
did not know my writings were making that significant a difference,” she
said.
The Rev. Renee McCleary of the Greater New Jersey
Annual Conference said the consultation is a manifestation of the importance
of
women gathering in community. “I
am here because I knew that ministry was going to happen here, ministry that
I personally needed,” and to have fun, she said.
McCleary appreciated the opportunity to converse
with women from other areas and to pray, worship and cry together. It was
an opportunity “to know
that we are in the presence of the movement of the spirit of God, and if we
allow ourselves to let go ? there is transformation that will occur,
healing will occur, encouragement will come, if we will just open up and let
it all in.”
The consultation was enjoyable and spiritual,
according to the Rev. Jackie Chandler of the South Indiana Annual (regional)
Conference. “I
love being in the gathering with women. It is so spiritually inspiring for
me and helps
me feel renewed and at home in my calling to ministry.”
The Rev. Cheryl Bell of the Kansas West Annual
Conference did not want to miss the opportunity to be with other clergywomen
from around
the globe. “It
was an opportunity to nourish my soul, my spirit,” she said. “Each
time I am with my sisters, I keep thinking that I want to do this more and
more.”
Bell found the worship services beneficial. “There is nothing like the
input from a variety of cultures and people coming together. ... There is nothing
like God’s women coming together to worship and praise God. It is contagious,
and I love that.”
The Rev. Sandra Griggs of the Tennessee Annual
Conference attended the 2002 consultation in San Diego as a seminary student,
and she
delighted in meeting
the women from across the world that were there to celebrate their ministries.
When she learned the 2006 gathering in Chicago would celebrate the 50th anniversary
of clergywomen receiving the same rights as men, “I thought this would
be a good time to come.”
She most appreciated the bishops showing the clergywomen
who they were and how they keep their sanity through pastimes. “Ministry is hard,” she
said.
?Change was slow’
Bishop Susan Morrison, who retires in September,
served as the episcopal liaison to the task force that planned the consultation.
She said that while the 1956
General Conference action “opened an official door that was embarrassing
to have closed, change was slow ... The anniversary is a reminder of that action
and a celebration of the leadership of women clergy.” The event was sponsored
by the United Methodist Board of Higher Education and Ministry.
Before the consultation, the board’s Women
of Color Scholars Program was celebrated with an Aug. 11-13 gathering. Professional
women at United Methodist
seminaries and theological schools began the program in 1988 to address the
absence of ethnic-minority women teachers and researchers in their institutions.
Forty women have participated since then, and 22 have advanced degrees in religious
studies as a result.
The clergywomen were also introduced to “Wing It,” a performance
ensemble from Oakland, Calif. The nine-member group specializes in “in
the moment” dance, theater, song, wit and wisdom “on life’s
scary themes,” according to the group’s biography. The ensemble
turned what it learned from the gathering into dance, drama and song.
During the consultation, the clergywomen also participated in a silent auction
of the banners used in the worship services. Proceeds from the banners, designed
by the Rev. Miyoung Paik from South Carolina, benefited the Georgia Harkness
Scholarship Fund. In 1939, Harkness accepted a position at Garrett Evangelical
Theological Seminary, becoming the first woman to teach theology at a Protestant
seminary in the United States. She was an early advocate of full clergy rights
for women in the Methodist Church.
*Green is a United Methodist News Service news writer based in Nashville,
Tenn.
News media contact: Linda Green, (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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