From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


[UMNS-ALL-NEWS] UMNS# 625-Bishops elect Huie president,


From NewsDesk <NewsDesk@UMCOM.ORG>
Date Mon, 7 Nov 2005 16:26:15 -0600

Bishops elect Huie president, Palmer president-designate

Nov. 7, 2005

NOTE: Photographs, audio and related coverage are available at
http://umns.umc.org.

By Tim Tanton*

LAKE JUNALUSKA, N.C. (UMNS) - Bishop Janice Riggle Huie of Texas will
take office as president of the United Methodist Council of Bishops
during a milestone year in which the church marks the 50th anniversary
of full clergy rights for women.

The council elected Huie as its next president and Bishop Gregory V.
Palmer of Iowa as president-designate, effective in May.

Taking office during the 50th anniversary year of full clergy rights for
women puts "an additional dimension to this office," Huie said Nov. 3,
in an interview after the election.

"I find myself grateful for the women who went before me that paved the
way for me to receive this gift and responsibility," she said. "I'm
strengthened by their witness because they charted new territory too,
and they did it with God's strength, and if there's a lesson ... for me,
that's the strength I need to rely on as well."

Huie, 58, will succeed Bishop Peter D. Weaver of the Boston Area as
president for a two-year term. Palmer, 51, is in line to succeed her.
The council, with offices in Washington, comprises 69 active bishops and
100 retired bishops; they are the clergy leaders of the nearly 11
million-member church in the United States, Africa, Europe and Asia.

Palmer and Huie were elected during the council's Oct. 30-Nov. 4 meeting
in Lake Junaluska. Though the leadership change occurs in May, a formal
ceremony probably won't be held until the full council meets again in
fall 2006. The bishops are forgoing their regular spring meeting because
their fall gathering will be in Mozambique.

Bishop Ernest Lyght of the West Virginia Area was re-elected secretary
of the council during the weeklong meeting. He took office in September
2004.

Elected as a bishop in 1996, Huie served in Arkansas for eight years
before being assigned to lead the Houston Area in 2004.

"I still am deeply honored and feel a profound sense of humility that
the Council of Bishops would elect me to this position," Huie said after
the vote Nov. 3. "This is both a gift and an enormous responsibility. I
certainly will do my best to be faithful to what the council needs, but
most important, faithful to God."

Palmer has led the Iowa Area since being elected to the episcopacy in
2000. He said he felt overwhelmed, humbled and honored by his election
as president-designate.

The election is important, he said, "because I believe among the deepest
hungers of the church is (the hunger) for leadership in the church. ...
It's a crucial time for the Council of Bishops to continue to offer
strong corporate leadership to the church."

Both bishops described their commitment to the council's emphasis on
"Making Disciples of Jesus Christ for the Transformation of the World."

"That's very personal with me as well as (being) what the council
believes is the mission of the church," Huie said.

"I believe that this is our mission into God's future," she said. It is
a mission that extends beyond the 2005-08 quadrennium. "...What we've
done here in this quadrennium is to reclaim our historic mission, and
therefore I don't see this as a quadrennial focus. We're living into the
mission of the church. This is much deeper than a quadrennial focus."

"The making of disciples has always been key and central to what is the
heart of the mission of the church," Palmer said.

He is pleased the council is leveraging its resources to lead the church
in that way, he said. "We lead the church by saying, 'This is our
mission, and this is what's important.'"

Weaver, who remains president of the council for six more months, is the
first person to serve in that post for a two-year term under the
council's new leadership structure. Previously, bishops served one-year
terms. The council also has placed its leadership in the hands of a team
comprising the president, past president, president-designate,
secretary, executive secretary and ecumenical officer.

The elections of Huie and Palmer represent the first time there has been
continuity in the new leadership structure, Weaver said. Through a
discernment process, the council tries to understand the complementary
gifts that people would bring to create a leadership team that works
well.

"Bishop Huie and Bishop Palmer both have extraordinary gifts," he said,
"and I'm looking forward to what God will do through them as they help
that leadership team serve the church as it serves the world."

The council gave Weaver a standing ovation during the closing session of
its meeting.

Huie told Weaver the council was grateful for his leadership, sense of
humor, the ways in which he helped the group "sing our faith," the
amount of travel he has borne, and for his spiritual depth and ability
to lift the bishops "to a higher plane."

"I've just been blessed to serve as a part of this" council, Weaver
said. The discernment process has enabled the council to put together an
incredible leadership team, he said, "... and to God be the glory."

*Tanton is managing editor for United Methodist News Service

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

********************

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

----------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe from this group, go to UMCom.org, log in to your account,
click on the My Resources link and select the Leave option on the list(s)
from which you wish to unsubscribe. If you have problems or questions, please
write to websupport@umcom.org.

Powered by United Methodist Communications http://www.UMCom.org


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