From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


ELCA to Host Women's Leadership Roundtable August 6-8


From News News <NEWS@ELCA.ORG>
Date Fri, 25 May 2001 11:21:37 -0500

ELCA NEWS SERVICE

May 25, 2001

ELCA TO HOST WOMEN'S LEADERSHIP ROUNDTABLE AUGUST 6-8
01-134-FI

     CHICAGO (ELCA) -- Women leaders of the Evangelical Lutheran Church
in America (ELCA) will cross borders of age, race and geography to meet
and encourage one another.  The first ELCA Women's Leadership
Roundtable, "Lift Our Voice," is set to host about 600 women Aug. 6-8 at
the Marriott Downtown Hotel in Indianapolis.
     "This is the first time an event like this has happened for the
whole ELCA," said the Rev. Michelle L. Miller, associate director for
leadership development, ELCA Commission for Women.  Women of the ELCA,
the church's women's organization, holds assemblies every three years,
but this "women-centered" event is sponsored by almost every unit of the
church, including Women of the ELCA, said Miller, ministry roundtable
project coordinator.
     Roundtables are being used to "really engage people in
conversation," said Miller, and to avoid the passive "workshop" model of
conferences.  Participants will be assigned to tables to ensure a mix of
people -- "cross-generationally, cross-racially, cross-vocationally,"
she said.
     The ELCA has ordained women as pastors since 1970.  The idea for
the roundtable came from conversations of how to celebrate the 30th
anniversary in 2000, said Miller.  Regional celebrations were
encouraged, and a churchwide event was suggested to honor all women in
the church's leadership -- clergy and lay.
     "We're expecting all different kinds of women" -- Lutheran women
who work professionally in the church and outside the church, women who
volunteer their skills in the church and outside the church, students,
as well as women who may not be identified as leaders yet, said Miller.
     Mentoring will be a focus of the gathering, said Miller, "so
people are being encouraged to attend with their mentor or their
'mentee.'"  Those women who don't consider themselves to be mentors will
be urged to start being mentors, she said.  "We need to be intentional
about going back into our communities and identifying those younger
women who have potential for leadership."
     Roundtable planners set a goal of having at least 30 percent of
the participants be women 30 years of age or younger, said Miller.
Early registration suggests that will be achieved, she said.
     Planners set another goal of having at least 30 percent of the
participants be women of color.  People of color make up about two
percent of the ELCA's membership, but announcing this goal has sparked a
lot of interest, said Miller, and it appears this goal will be met, too.
     The event has been planned to precede the ELCA Churchwide
Assembly, which is to be held Aug. 8-14 at the Indiana Convention
Center.  Sixty percent of the assembly's voting members are lay people,
half of whom are women.  About 14 percent of the church's clergy are
women.  So, the assembly will already bring many women in the church's
leadership to Indianapolis, said Miller.
     Speakers will open each roundtable session:
 + the Rev. Barbara K. Lundblad, associate professor of preaching, Union
Theological Seminary, New York;
 + Viola Raheb, director of Lutheran schools, Evangelical Lutheran
Church in Jordan (and Palestine), Bethlehem;
 + Dr. Jeanne Porter, associate minister of the Apostolic Church of God
and associate professor of communication arts at North Park University,
Chicago;
 + Patricia Hickey, therapist and drummer, Rhythmos Seminars, Grand
Rapids, Mich.;
 + Charlotte D. Williams, associate director for leadership development,
cross-cultural advocacy and budget, ELCA Commission for Women;
 + Katie Sorenson, youth and family ministry student, Augsburg College,
Minneapolis;
 + the Rt. Rev. Catherine M. Waynick, bishop, Episcopal Diocese of
Indianapolis;
 + Christine H. Grumm, executive director, Women's Funding Network, San
Francisco; and
 + Amy Grumm Friedrich, national policy associate, Lutheran Volunteer
Corps, Washington, D.C.
     Miller said she hopes women will leave the event with a renewed
sense of their calling and "a restored commitment to uplift women in
leadership."  She said she hopes participants learn new leadership
skills, reconnect with friends and build new relationships.
-- -- --
     The Commission for Women maintains information about the Women's
Leadership Roundtable at http://www.elca.org/cw/roundtable/index.html on
the ELCA Web site.

For information contact:
John Brooks, Director (773) 380-2958 or NEWS@ELCA.ORG
http://listserv.elca.org/archives/elcanews.html


Browse month . . . Browse month (sort by Source) . . . Advanced Search & Browse . . . WFN Home