Stanovsky elected a bishop of United Methodist Church
Bishop Elaine J.W. Stanovsky
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By Marta W. Aldrich*
July 19, 2008 | PORTLAND, Ore. (UMNS)
The Rev. Elaine J.W. Stanovsky of Seattle has been elected a bishop by
the Western Jurisdictional Conference of The United Methodist Church.
Stanovsky, 54, a district superintendent in Seattle, was elected on July
19 on the 25th ballot. She is the last of eight new U.S. bishops
elected this week at five jurisdictional meetings across the United
States. She will fill one of two openings in the church’s Western
Jurisdiction. The Rev. Grant Hagiya, of Redondo Beach, Calif., will fill
the other after being elected on July 18.
Ordained as a United Methodist deacon in 1981 and as an elder in 1983,
Stanovsky has served Washington congregations in Renton and Seattle and
headed the Church Council of Greater Seattle from 1990 to 1995. She has
been a district superintendent in Puget Sound and in Tacoma, as well as a
director of connectional ministries for the Pacific-Northwest
Conference and assistant to the bishop.
She will become one of 50 active U.S. bishops, including six serving the
12-state Western Jurisdiction. The jurisdiction is home to 390,000
United Methodists in seven annual conferences that span Arizona,
California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah,
Washington and Wyoming, as well as one missionary conference in Alaska.
An episcopal assignment committee was to announce later on July 19 where
Stanovsky and other active bishops will serve for the next four years.
Their assignments will be effective Sept. 1. A consecration service was
scheduled for 2 p.m. PT at First United Methodist Church of Portland.
Endorsed by the Pacific Northwest Annual (regional) Conference,
Stanovsky was elected after receiving 53 votes cast by 80 delegates.
She has a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Puget Sound and a Master of Divinity from Harvard Divinity School.
“I claim my baptism this day and the special callings to which God has
called me,” said an emotional Stanovsky after her election was
announced. “… May God lead us faithfully forward in the name of Jesus
Christ.”
Surrounded by her husband, Clinton Stanovsky, and their three grown
sons, she said she has thought a lot about family as of late. “I am so
grateful for a family that brought me into the church,” she said.
Stanovsky and Hagiya will fill two vacancies created in the Western
Jurisdiction College of Bishops by the retirement of Bishop Beverly
Shamana and the resignation of Bishop Edward Paup. Paup has been elected
to lead the United Methodist Board of Global Ministries, the church’s
mission agency, effective Sept. 1.
The Western Jurisdiction, convening once every four years, conducted its business July 16-19.
In addition to electing bishops, a jurisdictional conference has the power to:
- Promote the evangelistic, educational, missionary and benevolent
interests of the church and to provide for interests and institutions
within their boundaries;
- Establish and constitute jurisdictional conference boards as auxiliaries to the general boards of the church;
- Determine the boundaries of annual conferences;
- Make rules and regulations for the administration of the church's work within the jurisdiction; and
- Sppoint a committee on appeals.
The United Methodist Church was created in 1968 by a merger of the
Evangelical United Brethren and Methodist churches. Methodists elected
their bishops at one national gathering until 1940, when the
jurisdictional system was instituted. Bishops in the EUB church were
elected at one national gathering until 1968.
*Aldrich is news editor of United Methodist News Service.
News media contact: Marta Aldrich, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org |