More Than a Passing Acquaintance with Oppression

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

More Than a Passing Acquaintance with Oppression More than a Passing Acquaintance with Oppression .... Remembering the Rt. Rev. Barbara Harris Barbara Clementine Harris (1930-2020), the woman who would become the first female bishop in the Episcopal Church – and in the worldwide Anglican Communion – was a towering spirit who always put God first in her life. Born in Germantown, Pennsylvania, she attended church with her mother and siblings at St. Barnabas Episcopal Church, an African American parish (now merged with St. Luke to become a multicultural parish). Barbara loved everything about attending church – the singing, the music, the preaching, the fellowship and Sunday School. She looked forward to attending church, where she sang in the choir, and she enjoyed hearing her mother play the piano. Back at home, she was the preacher, using her memory to repeat the sermon of the day, to the delight and amazement of the whole family. Barbara took joy and pride in accompanying her mother, Beatrice “Bea” Harris, to church, even while her dad, Walter, proudly claimed himself a “blue moon” attendee (once in a blue moon – at Christmas and Easter). Barbara loved reading the Bible, and would learn passages by heart. When she read something she did not understand, she would write it down, ask for help, and then write it again in words that she could understand. Barbara never claimed that she received a call to ministry at any particular time. But, even as a young girl, she was committed to church. When she would play Church with her siblings and friends, she would even make sure they had communion. When one of the children protested, “We can’t do it. We have no bread,” Barbara improvised and administered communion in the form of gold fish food. When one of her playmates did not understand her reference to the Tower of Babel, Barbara explained the Bible text, then invited her to attend church with the family. Within a year, 1 that little girl became a member of Barbara’s church, and this was not the last time that little Barbara practiced evangelism by inviting a friend to church. As she grew into young adulthood, even when she and her friends “partied hearty” on Saturday night, she always reminded them to be at church on Sunday morning. As a child, Barbara was a precocious prodigy, possessed of an excellent memory, an uncanny wisdom, great humility, and good common sense. She made friends well, got along well with others, and showed early leadership prowess. Yet, even then, she did not brook threats or insults, but stood up for herself and for others in the face of injustice. Barbara was an avid reader, a gifted singer and musician and, by her teenage years, a professional writer, turning out a weekly column for the Pittsburgh Courier for which she was paid $3 per week. And, she was resourceful too. When she heard that Paul Robeson would be speaking in her hometown of Philadelphia, she parlayed her press pass into front row seats to hear this giant of the African race speak. She learned from his life to stand up for justice, be loyal to your friends, and expect to pay a price for living into this integrity. Barbara’s early career after graduation led her to work for Joseph V. Baker Associates, a Black-owned national public relations firm headquartered in Philadelphia. She thrived in this work, representing White companies in the Black community. Within ten years, she had risen to the position of president of the firm, and had gained the respect of her peers, the clients and members of the community. She continued there for 20 years, until 1968, when she took a position at Sun Oil Company, as a public relations officer. By the time she left Sun Oil in 1980 to be ordained a priest, she would become head of the public relations department. Barbara’s strong Christian values and sense of justice naturally led her to become involved in civil rights and social justice causes. She participated in the Freedom Rides of 1961, and walked 2 part of the way with the 1965 Selma to Montgomery five-day march that led to the passage of the Voting Rights Act. She also spent some of her summer registering voters in Greenville, Mississippi. The trajectory of her entire life was marked by a deep concern for the lost, the least and the left out, as she took up issues of equity and inclusion for Blacks, women, gays, the homeless, the imprisoned and the poverty-stricken. When Barbara transferred her membership to Church of the Advocate, she found a home for her social justice activism. She said: “I am very passionate about these issues. We must bring about full inclusion of all peoples into the church, eradicate racism, and get rid of sexism. We must use the influence of the church to address some of the issues in our society, issues of economic injustice, equal opportunity, quality education for all people, housing and homelessness”. She also started to do her part in prison ministry. All of this driven by her own experiences since childhood of the many ways in which the society could reject and marginalize people who looked like her. But, prejudice, exclusion, discrimination and oppression did not build any house that Barbara would occupy. As senior warden on the vestry of the parish she played a leadership role in the forefront of these issues. Thus, it was no surprise, that on July 29, 1974, when the now famous Philadelphia Eleven women were ordained by three retired bishops at Church of the Advocate, in defiance of Episcopal Church dogma, Barbara was the crucifer, front and center, leading the procession. What Barbara did not know is that she was clearing a path for her own entry into priestly ministry, and advancement to becoming the first woman bishop. In fact, in light of the lava-like advancement of women to the priesthood, Bishop Barbara’s rise was meteoric. As an African American woman, she was not even on the radar for ordination at the time of the controversial ordination of the Philadelphia 11 in 1974, and then the Washington 3 Four in the following year. These were all White women., who were vouchsafed deacon status but denied priestly ordination by the completely male Church leadership. Certainly, no African American woman was even considered at the time. In 1975, Dr. Pauli Murray, Esq. resigned her post on the faculty and administration of Brandeis University to pursue seminary, graduating in 1976, and being the first African American woman ordained a priest in January 1977. Barbara took an alternative path to clerical ministry. While still heading up the public relations department of Sun Oil Company, she engaged in rigorous theological study – at Villanova University and at a theological unit in Sheffield, England. She also graduated from the Pennsylvania Foundation for Pastoral Counseling. In October 1980, she became the third African American female priest in the Church; and less than ten years later, she was consecrated Bishop Suffragan of Massachusetts, the first woman bishop in the Episcopal Church. Bishop Barbara’s consecration ceremony on February 11, 1989 at the Hynes Convention Center drew a crowd of 8,000 people, including 1,200 dignitaries, and 62 bishops for the laying on of hands. She was given a security detail and asked to wear a bulletproof vest as a response to obscene messages and death threats she received. She declined to wear the vest, later saying: “I thought that if some person decided to shoot me, what better place to be than at the altar?” Barbara Harris continued, throughout her time in the episcopate, to speak truth boldly, to hone her writing, and to champion justice. She will always be remembered as the woman – an African American – who blazed the trail for women to be consecrated bishops in the worldwide Anglican Communion. Responding about her work as a bishop, she once said: "I certainly don't want to be one of the boys. I want to offer my peculiar gifts as a black woman ... a sensitivity and an awareness that comes out of more than a passing acquaintance with oppression." On March 13, 2020, Bishop Barbara Harris died peacefully at hospice in Boston, Massachusetts, three months shy of her 90th birthday. 4 The Union of Black Episcopalians invites you to join us on Sunday, May 14, at 4:00 EST, as we remember, celebrate, and explore the lasting impact the Rt. Rev. Barbara Harris, the Anglican Communion’s first female bishop, has had upon The Episcopal Church and Anglican Communion. Using excerpts from The Miter Fits Just Fine!, Parting Words, and Hallelujah, Anyhow!, as well as personal witness, our panelists will speak to how this avid supporter of UBE continues to compel us never to forget “the least, the lost and the left out”. Guest speakers include the Rev. Canon Nan Arrington Peete, the Very Rev. Dr. Kelly Brown Douglas and the Rev. Debra Q. Bennett. Advance registration required. Please register today at: https://zoom.us/meeting/register/tJcoc-2hpzgoH9Jm5-OiOOw1mJSO03JMeT7L 5.
Recommended publications
  • Seeds of Hope Prophetic Witness at Diocesan Convention
    THE WINTER 2014 Episcopal News EpiscopalWWW.EPISCOPALNEWS.COM SERVING THE SIX-COUNTY News DIOCESE OF LOS ANGELES Seeds of Hope Prophetic witness at Diocesan Convention THE EPISCOPAL NEWS Winter 2014 1 FROM THE BISHOP Sharing God’s Peace join my sister bishops and JOHNNY BUZZERIO JOHNNY our families in wishing you J. Jon Bruno I and your family and friends a Bishop of Los Angeles blessed Christmastide and a won- derful new year as once again we welcome the Prince of Peace to be By J. Jon Bruno born in new ways in our lives. In the coming year, let us do all we can to work for peace with justice locally, regionally and in- ternationally — remembering that true peace begins as each of us cul- tivates peace within our own lives and homes, and then our work- The Church of the Nativity marks the site of Jesus’ birth in Bethlehem. places, schools and congregations. My own prayers for peace include the Holy Lands considered the oldest church in Christendom. where Jesus our Savior was born. Each time I have This is a model for Christians everywhere, call- visited Bethlehem and the Church of the Nativity ing all of us — as we honor and share the diverse marking Christ’s birthplace, I have appreciated the gifts of our unique traditions — to come together ways in which monastic communities of three in common prayer and common cause to welcome faith traditions — the Armenian Apostolic, everyone hospitably into the good news of God’s the Greek Orthodox, and the Roman Cath- love for all.
    [Show full text]
  • St. Andrew's Episcopal Church the Fourth Sunday in Lent And
    St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church The Fourth Sunday in Lent And Commemoration of Bishop Barbara Clementine Harris Home Eucharist, Rite III March 14, 2021 Things to know about Zoom - WELCOME all! Wherever you’re joining us from, we’d love to meet each other and talk after the service. Just accept the invitation to go into breakout rooms to socialize with others! - Everyone is muted during the service to preserve sound quality. You’re still encouraged to pray and sing along at home! The Rt. Rev. Barbara C. Harris June 12, 1930 – March 13, 2020 Born in Philadelphia, Bishop Barbara Harris is the first woman to be consecrated a bishop in the Episcopal Church, and the entire Anglican Communion. As a laywoman, she served as the crucifer at the ordination of the Philadelphia Eleven – the first ordination of women in the Episcopal Church – which took place at the Church of the Advocate in Philadelphia. She is remembered as a powerful advocate for justice within our church, constantly challenging us “never to be instruments of our own or another’s oppression.” Bishop Barbara was a woman of great truth and wit who inspired, challenged, and was held dear by Episcopalians across the country. With her death coming at the beginning of lockdown, it was decided to hold her funeral when it was safe to re-gather (more than 8,000 people attended her consecration as Suffragan Bishop of the Diocese of Massachusetts in 1989). To date, no funeral has been held. The current bishops of Massachusetts issued a call for churches to commemorate Bishop Barbara on this first anniversary of her death.
    [Show full text]
  • Barbara Harris Visit 1989 Robin Bartlett Denison University
    Denison University Denison Digital Commons Looking Back, Looking Forward Women's and Gender Studies 1989 Barbara Harris Visit 1989 Robin Bartlett Denison University John Jackson Denison University Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.denison.edu/lookingback Recommended Citation Bartlett, Robin and Jackson, John, "Barbara Harris Visit 1989" (1989). Looking Back, Looking Forward. 9. http://digitalcommons.denison.edu/lookingback/9 This Letter is brought to you for free and open access by the Women's and Gender Studies at Denison Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Looking Back, Looking Forward by an authorized administrator of Denison Digital Commons. December 16, 1988 The Rev. Barbara C. Harris Diocese of Massachusetts 13d Tremont Street Boston.. MA 02 111 Dear Rev. Harris: Next year we at Denison University will celebrate an institutional milestone: the Tenth Anniversary of our pioneering graduation requirement in Women's Studies/Minority Studies. Both Black Studies, Women's Studies, and me College Chaplain, would be honored and excited if you could help us celebrate this event by delivering a public lecture or sermon on campus. Your achievements, coupled with the regrettable opposition to your elevation to the office of Suffragan Bishop, make you a singularly appropriate choise as our keynote speaker. We want to mark both how far the cause of human rights and acceptance has progressed in the United States and yet how far we still have to go. We also want our Tenth Anniversary to mark a renewed educational and spiritual commitment on the part of Denison to the ideal of tolerance of diversity.
    [Show full text]
  • Interview with John L
    Interview with John L. Harrison, Jr., Esquire, by Clark Groome, for the Episcopal Diocese of Pennsylvania Oral History Project, North Wales, Pennsylvania, November 14, 2013. CLARK GROOME: All right. You grew up as an Episcopalian? JOHN HARRISON: Yes. CG: And where did you start your life as an Episcopalian? JH: I lived in Bryn Mawr when I was born, and my family went to the Church of the Redeemer, and I was baptized there, probably in 1936, by the then rector, Canon Earp. CG: E-A-R-P? JH: E-A-R-P. CG: Okay. And then, as a kid, were you active in the church? JH: Not really. I would say that my family were people that went to church when there was a family funeral, or a wedding. And I didn’t really become very active, although by the time I was ten or twelve years old my mother thought that my brother and I should go to Sunday school wherever we lived. And typically we would be taken and left and picked up later. CG: Right. And you were confirmed, I assume? JH: I was confirmed in, I think, 1949, at the Church of the Redeemer in Bryn Mawr. Excuse me—at the Church of the Messiah in Gwynedd. Roughly, then—I could get the exact dates, if that’s important. CG: I think maybe you have. I think you may have given them to me. It’s not important. JH: But at that particular point in my growing up, we were living in Montgomeryville, Pennsylvania, and we went to church, by then, fairly regularly, at the Church of the Messiah in Gwynedd, where my HARRISON 2 parents had been married in 1934.
    [Show full text]
  • Barbara C. Harris: Remembering an Irrepressible "First" and Tireless Advocate for Justice
    Barbara C. Harris: Remembering an irrepressible "first" and tireless advocate for justice Print It has been said that God's time and ours met on Feb. 11, 1989, when Barbara C. Harris became the first woman to be ordained a bishop in the worldwide Anglican Communion. On that day, while the world watched, a woman donned the symbolic regalia of the church's highest order for the first time—an African-American woman and one who had not followed the traditional path to the episcopacy. MATTHEW CAVANAUGHThe Rt. Rev. Barbara C. Harris As the first, Harris belonged, in a sense, to the whole church. With great grace, she honored her symbolic role while tirelessly serving the people of the Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts as their suffragan (assisting) bishop for 13 years, until her retirement in 2002—all the while striving to be faithful to her calling, her church and her God. Her years of episcopal leadership were filled with traveling and witnessing, preaching and teaching and administering the sacraments. A gifted storyteller known for her quick wit and raspy-voiced delivery, she was also a spirited and sought-after preacher of hymn-laced, Gospel-grounded sermons, and an outspoken advocate for, in her words, "the least, the lost and the left out." In 2018, having reached the 30th anniversary of her consecration, she wrote a thank-you message to the people of the Diocese of Massachusetts in which she summed up her episcopacy by paraphrasing the words of the apostle Paul: “God chooses the foolish things of the world to confound the wise.” Harris died on March 13, 2020, at Care Dimensions Hospice House in Lincoln following a hospitalization in Boston, faithfully attended throughout by close friends and upheld by the prayers of many.
    [Show full text]
  • Smith, Ann Robb
    The Archives of Women in Theological Scholarship The Burke Library (Columbia University Libraries) At Union Theological Seminary, New York Finding Aid for Ann Robb Smith Papers, 1971 - 2004 Finding Aid prepared by: Ruth Tonkiss Cameron, May 2006 Additional material prepared by: Patricia LaRosa, July 2006, revised by Ruth Tonkiss Cameron, July 2008 Summary Information Creator: Ann Robb Smith Title: Ann Robb Smith Papers Inclusive dates: 1971 - 2004 Bulk Dates: 1974 - 1975 Abstract: Member of the Women’s ordination planning group prior to the ordination of the first women Episcopal Priests at the Church of the Advocate, Philadelphia, July 29, 1974 [the Philadelphia 11]; lay presenter for the ordination of Sue Hiatt; ordained Asst at Church of the Advocate. Contains newspaper clippings, articles, correspondence, minutes of planning meetings, reports, statements, sermons, service sheets, and the ordination service sheet for the Philadelphia 11, July 29, 1974. Size: 2 boxes, 1 linear ft. Storage: On-site storage Repository: The Burke Library Union Theological Seminary 3041 Broadway New York, NY 10027 Email: [email protected] AWTS: Ann Robb Smith Papers 2 Administrative Information Provenance: Ann Robb Smith donated her papers to the Archives of Women in Theological Scholarship in October 1999 with another addition in 2006. Some of the material donated consists of records from the Women’s Ordination Now support group. Access: Archival papers are available to registered readers for consultation by appointment only. Please contact archives staff by email to [email protected], or by postal mail to The Burke Library address on page 1, as far in advance as possible Burke Library staff is available for inquiries or to request a consultation on archival or special collections research.
    [Show full text]
  • ROYAL CROSS Na 4*"^" the Official MAGAZINE of the ORDER of the DAUGHTERS of the KING
    The Episcopal FALL 1994 ROYAL CROSS Na 4*"^" the official MAGAZINE OF THE ORDER OF THE DAUGHTERS OF THE KING 5SSa;;:fl54 CRUCEM, V CUSTINE FhS wm]m THE ORDER OF THE DAUGHTERS OF THE KING A Religious Orderfor Women Founded in 1885 — Incorporated in 1917 OBJECT OF THE ORDER - The extension of Christ's Kingdom, especially among women and girls, and the strengthening of the Church's spiritual life. HONORARY MEMBERS Mrs. Edward D. Smith, Miss Hattie K. Bunting, Mrs. Cari A. Johnson, Mrs. John C. Herren, Mrs. Henry B. H. Rif^ey, Jr., Anne WhitOcId (Whitty) Bohmer, Mrs. James Hart NATIONAL COUNCIL EXECUTIVE BOARD President: Laurie Ann Herman (Mrs. Ronald),4673 Cottonwood Dr., Holland, MI 49423-8926,(616) 335-2165 First Vice-Presideni: Sue Schlanbusd)(Mrs. Lowell), 36319 Park Place Dr., Sterling Heights, MI 48310-4218,(313) 939-1042 Second Vice-President: Ardie Edwards(Mrs. William C.), 1798 N.W. 57th St., Miami,PL 33142-3054,(305) 691-6913 Secretary: Mavb I. Stapleford (Mrs. Edmond M.),P.O. Box 44 or 1 Country Club Dr., Waynesboro, PA 17268-0044,(717) 762-5722 Finance Chairman: Cinde Pfisterer(Mrs. Gary), 214 Cascade Dr., Riverton, WY 82501-2415,(307) 856-6603 Junior Daughters Division: Kathleen Nyhuis(Mrs. Peter A.), 10990 N. Guava Dr.,Tucson, AZ 85737-9566,(602)797-1913 COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN Daughters-ai-Large: Wanda Sinclair(Mrs.) 1100 ColemaaDr, Longview,TX 75605,(903)757-2995 Devotions: Lynne Moody (Mrs. Charles), 409 Vista Suerte, Newport Beach, CA 92660-3518,(714) 640-8509 Endowment Fund A Archives: Gladys A. Clark (Mrs.), 123 W.
    [Show full text]
  • Newsletter June 2014 End of an Era: Thank You Bishop Tom! on June 21
    Newsletter June 2014 End of an Era: Thank you Bishop Tom! On June 21, the Diocesan community will gather at Jamaica Pond to celebrate and give thanks for +Tom Shaw’s 20 years as our Bishop. As is typical of Bishop Tom, he wants the emphasis of the day to be on the community of the Diocese rather than on him. The celebration will begin with the Eucharist at 10:30 at which former Presiding Bishop the Most Rev. Frank Griswold will preach and the Rt. Rev. Barbara C. Harris will offer reflections. During the offertory, every parish will present its red book of memories in thanksgiving for Bishop Tom’s ministry among us. After the Lord’s Table, all are invited to bring and share picnics; the Diocese will provide beverages and ice cream. A North Shore Deanery bus will leave from the St. Stephen’s parking lot at 9:00am. Over the next several weeks, I encourage everyone to write in our remembrance book. The book will be in the Galahad Area before and after services each Sunday in June. Drawings and photographs can certainly be included. Reflections may be emailed to the office, and we will print them and paste them in the book. Each Church School Class will have its turn to fill up some of the pages with words of thanks or exuberant drawings. The goal is to have the rich diversity of each parish reflected in the pages of the books of remembrance. Certainly for St. Stephen’s, the episcopate of +M. Thomas Shaw SSJE has been an important two decades.
    [Show full text]
  • Archbishop Rowan Williams's Reflections on the 2009 General
    ATR/92:3 A Dim Mirror: Archbishop Rowan Williams’s Reflections on the 2009 General Convention James F. Turrell* This article examines “Communion, Covenant, and our Anglican Future,” Archbishop Rowan Williams’s essay on the 2009 General Convention of the Episcopal Church, in which he addresses legis- lation concerning the ordination of partnered gay clergy and the provision of rites to bless same-sex unions. This article finds Wil- liams’s essay deficient on three points: its distortion of the argu- ments made by pro-inclusion advocates, its ahistorical vision of how change happens in the church, and its idiosyncratic version of Anglican polity, in which national churches (provinces) are ar- tificial constructs and the diocese is the only organic unit of com- munion. While Williams is a theologian of great renown and ostensibly seeks the maintenance of unity, this essay’s failings will likely increase fragmentation in the church. No one could envy the task of Rowan Williams. To be Archbishop of Canterbury is, under the best of circumstances, a fairly thankless job, as one must balance the demands of being a diocesan bishop, the chief primate of the English church, and the figurehead of the Angli- can Communion—an “Instrument of Communion,” as a number of documents rather impersonally put it. Since 2003, these have not been the best of circumstances, to say the least, as Anglicans have battled over competing understandings of human sexuality. The Church of England saw a crisis over the nomination of a gay-but-celibate man to be bishop of Reading, a nomination that Williams himself quashed in * James F.
    [Show full text]
  • Spring- Times Summer 2008 Young Faith on Fire
    e p i s c o p a l Spring- Times Summer 2008 Young faith on fire ‘These young evangelists’: Bishop Shaw on following their example Church @ nite: Young congregations find it’s not too late First person with the Micah Project: What does the Lord require of you? Diocese gets grant and relational evangelists get going For the love of creation: Young Episcopalians lead the way Three become one in Fall River Mission partners in Africa: ‘More than just relief ’ Witnessing: Rick Collins on a rock and a spoon and living the lessons of summer camp 2 Episcopal Times Spring-Summer 2008 Spring-Summer 2008 Episcopal Times 3 3 Timese p i s c o p a l Vol. 31 No. 1 The Episcopal Times was honored in rial writing in a series on a single topic Animals” [below], featuring cathedral April by the national Episcopal Com- (“Paths to Partnership” on the diocese’s dean Jep Streit blessing a Boston Parks A publication of the municators organization with the Polly Gulf Coast hurricane relief and devel- Service horse); to Plati and videogra- Episcopal Church in eastern Bond Award of Excellence for General opment work in the winter 2007 issue) pher Kathy Wittman for liturgical video Massachusetts Excellence among diocesan newspapers and to Sukraw and designer Victoria (“Hip Hop Mass,” available for viewing at and periodicals above 12,000 in circula- Blaine-Wallace for front page editorial www.diomass.org under News/Events/ The Rt. Rev. tion. The judges’ comments cited “its layout. Bishop Bud Cederholm’s winter Media); and to Plati, Sukraw and electron- M.
    [Show full text]
  • 36758 Church
    fall 2017 Series Highlights Church Publishing annouces two new series Little Books of Guidance and In Conversation, plus Volume 7 in popular Church’s Teachings for a Changing World series. Little Books of Guidance Little Books of Guidance allow the reader to answer life’s big questions. Concise, authoritative, and affordable, these little books allow one to grasp the essentials in under an hour! See pages 12–13 for details on the first six books in the series. New In Conversation series Volume 1 of this new series features conversations between Michael Curry and Barbara Harris. See page 1 for details. Church’s Teachings for a Changing World A Word to Live By Volume 7 by Lauren Winner, see details on page 3 The Episcopal Church Episcopal Clerical Directory 2017 The Episcopal Church Annual 2017 The Episcopal Clerical Directory is the With origins dating back to 1830, The Episcopal biennial directory of all living clergy in good Church Annual—aka “The Red Book”—is an standing in the Episcopal Church—more indispensable reference tool, trusted year-after- than 18,000 deacons, priests, and bishops. year by churches, diocesan offices, libraries, It includes full biographical information and and many others. It includes a comprehensive ministry history for each cleric. directory of provinces, dioceses, and churches, 9780898692594 including contact information and listings of $79.95 active clergy. Also includes up-to-date, church- wide statistical data, listings and contact Paper | 8.5 x 11 | 956 pages information for seminaries; Episcopal schools; September 2017 centers for camps, conference, and retreats; BISAC: REL027000 Episcopal Church Women; and more.
    [Show full text]
  • In City of Firsts: TEC Ordination of Women Celebrated in a Plus Size Fashion Kathy Mank
    In City of Firsts: TEC Ordination of Women Celebrated in a Plus Size Fashion Kathy Mank Five of the Philadelphia Eleven, One of the Washington Four, the Presiding Bishop, Bishop Barbara Harris and a host of other women who were the first to be female and ordained at various times and places were celebrated and honored in Philadelphia on Sat. July 26, 2014. The” 40 Years of Women’s Ordained Ministry and 2000 Years in Ministry” Symposium at Temple University provided speakers and panelists the opportunity to share their own history and God’s calling to us now. Inspired by Dr. Fredrica Harris Thompsett who stated that “we study history in order to intervene in it and that we look backward in order to move forward”, the 200+ men and women attending were challenged to make more history in the days ahead in ministry that cares for the least, lost and left out. The Rt. Rev. Clifton Daniel, Bishop of Pennsylvania, reminded the gathering that Philadelphia was where Bishop White “thought up the Episcopal Church”. The first General Convention of the Episcopal Church was held in Philadelphia at Christ Church. At the end of the Civil War in 1865, General Convention met at St. Luke and The Epiphany church in Philadelphia to lead the church in reconciliation. 40 years ago Philadelphia hosted the ordination service for the installation of the first 11 women priests in the Episcopal Church at Church of the Advocate. The Bishop had been a priest for only one year and decided to lay hands on the ordinands and go forward despite the potential cost to his career.
    [Show full text]