A UMNS Feature
By Linda Bloom*
7:00 A.M. ET, May 15, 2012 | TAMPA, Fla.
Bishop Rosemarie Wenner of the Germany Area accepts the gavel from
Bishop Larry M. Goodpaster in a “passing of the gavel” ceremony and
celebration on April 26 at the Embassy Suites in Tampa, Fla. UMNS photos
by Kathleen Barry.
View in Photo Gallery
Bishop Rosemarie Wenner grew up in a United Methodist congregation
so small that she was the only member of her confirmation class.
But the 50 or so members of that church in Eppingen, a village in
southwestern Germany near the border with France, also made her feel
welcome, even though most were the age of her parents.
“I was, from the very beginning, part of the church community,” she told United Methodist News Service.
Now 56, Wenner is not only the episcopal leader of of Germany's three
United Methodist annual conferences, but also the new president of the
denomination’s Council of Bishops. Bishop Larry M. Goodpaster, the
council’s immediate past president, passed the gavel to her for a
two-year term during an April 26 ceremony as the 2012 General Conference met in Tampa.
In confirmation class, her pastor had engaged her in theological
discussion. So when she began to consider a career path at the age of
17, that background and her faith in Jesus Christ led Wenner to consider
the ministry.
She hesitated, though, because she knew of only one female United
Methodist pastor in Germany at that time. “I was not sure the church
would accept me,” she recalled.
Bishop Wenner (left) receives roses from Bishop Peggy Johnson of the
Philadelphia Area in congratulations of becoming the new president of
the Council of Bishops.
View in Photo Gallery
Finally, Wenner decided to take “stepping stones” to determine whether it was God’s will that she be a pastor.
In the Germany conference, that meant starting with a year in a
local church, then theological education. She studied at the United
Methodist Theological Seminary in Reutlingen, was ordained in 1982, and
served as pastor of congregations in Karlsruhe-Durlach, Hockenheim and
Darmstadt-Sprendlingen before her appointment as superintendent of the
Frankfurt District in 1996.
When she was elected bishop of Germany
in February 2005, Wenner became the denomination’s first woman to be
named to the episcopacy outside the United States. In 2008, the Rev.
Joaquina Filipe Nhanala was elected in Mozambique as the first female
bishop for Africa and Wenner was re-elected that November for an
eight-year term.
The United Methodist Church in Germany is so small — only 60,000 out
of 80 million people — that it doesn’t even register as a percentage
of religious believers in a country where Lutherans, Roman Catholics and
the Reformed church dominates.
But, Wenner explained, United Methodists are known for their
ecumenical witness, which includes involvement in the German and
European council of churches. “Sometimes, we have to remind the bigger
partners that we want to cooperate,” she added.
She considers the reunification of Germany after the fall of the
Berlin Wall to be “one of the gifts from God.” The United Methodist
Church in East Germany is still quite strong, she noted, despite
economic struggles. But even before the wall came down, the work of
East German United Methodists demonstrated the church of Jesus Christ
“is not dependent on the political environment,” Wenner said.
The bishop and her husband, Tobias Wenner, a software engineer, live
in Nussloch. She said she depends upon him to keep her informed about
what is happening outside the church. “I appreciate that he supports me
in my ministry.”
She’s also appreciative of the denomination’s recognition of women’s
ministry and the work of the United Methodist Commission on the Status
and Role of Women.
But that recognition is not universal, Wenner said, noting that some
in Germany still say the Bible does not support leadership by women.
“We have to explain that we are called by God and how we experience how
we are called.”
*Bloom is a United Methodist News Service multimedia reporter based in New York. Follow her at http://twitter.com/umcscribe.
News media contact: Linda Bloom, New York, (646) 369-3759 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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