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[UMNS-ALL-NEWS] UMNS# 358-Bishop Yemba re-elected in the Congo


From NewsDesk <NewsDesk@UMCOM.ORG>
Date Wed, 27 Aug 2008 17:49:11 -0500

>Bishop Yemba re-elected in the Congo

>Aug. 27, 2008

NOTE: A photograph is available at http://umns.umc.org.

>By United Methodist News Service

United Methodist Bishop David Kekumba Yemba has been re-elected to
oversee the church's Central Congo Area after four years of service.

With his re-election, he is now a bishop for life.

Yemba won Aug. 26 on the third ballot by the Congo Central Conference,
meeting in Kananga in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The election had begun with three candidates, but one was dropped with
too few votes. The final ballot gave 119 votes to Yemba and 35 to the
Rev. Richard Okoko, a pastor in the church's East Congo Annual
Conference.

"It was a great expression of joy to know the people have confidence in
what we have been doing and want to continue as far as the Lord is
helping," he said.

Yemba said the 2008 United Methodist General Conference held in Fort
Worth, Texas, last April set clear priorities for The United Methodist
Church to focus on leadership, strengthening congregations, global
health and fighting poverty.

"The people are expecting leadership from the church in terms of how The
United Methodist Church and our connectional system can help us exchange
experiences, ideas and to share resources."

Yemba is the third United Methodist bishop elected or re-elected in
Africa this year. In July, Bishop Eben Nhiwatiwa was re-elected to lead
the denomination's Zimbabwe Area, and the Rev. Joaquina Filipe Nhanala
was elected to oversee the Mozambique Area. On Sept. 1, Nhanala will
become the first female United Methodist bishop in Africa.

One more United Methodist bishop is expected to be elected in Africa
this year. In December, balloting is scheduled to replace retiring
Bishop Joseph Humper of Sierra Leone.

The Central Congo Area, where Yemba leads the church, is one of the
church's largest episcopal areas, with four annual conferences and two
provisional annual conferences. Together, they cover 10 out of 11
provinces in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Yemba said it is a challenge to serve such a large area.

"The Congo has just gotten out of repeated wars and we need people
trained to deliver what is needed," he said. "We need district
superintendents, lay people ... all pledging to work together with the
bishop."

When he was first elected in 2005, Yemba was a professor and founding
dean of the faculty of theology at United Methodist-related Africa
University in Zimbabwe. He replaced Bishop Fama Onema, who had served
the area for more than 30 years.

Since his election, Yemba has been an outspoken proponent of changing
the denomination's structure in an effort to make The United Methodist
Church less U.S.-centric and more global.

In an interview last fall with United Methodist Communications, he said
the change should come "in terms of services, in terms of meetings, in
terms of use of human resources, personnel from different corners of the
globe. I think this is a kind of a church we are dreaming of."

Yemba was on the staff of Africa University from 1990 until his
election. Prior to that, he was a senior lecturer and associate
professor at Zaire Protestant Seminary.

He has a bachelor of divinity degree from the Protestant School of
Theology of the Congo Free University at Kisangani and a doctorate in
systematic theology from the University of Strasbourg, France. He was
ordained an elder in the church's Central Congo Annual Conference in
1970.

Yemba and his wife, Henriette, have five children.

News media contact: Marta Aldrich, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or
newsdesk@umcom.org.

>********************

United Methodist News Service Photos and stories also available at: http://umns.umc.org

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