fbpx
31.3 F
Spokane
Wednesday, January 8, 2025
spot_img
HomeNewsEpiscopal Church elects Michael Curry as first black presiding bishop

Episcopal Church elects Michael Curry as first black presiding bishop

Date:

Related stories

‘We’re dying, but they’re rising’: Spokane Lutheran church sells to Ethiopian Orthodox congregation

Witness the power of faith and community in Spokane. St. Mary Ethiopian Orthodox Church acquires a new place of worship, while Messiah Evangelical Lutheran Church gracefully bows out.

Spokane soccer teams add team chaplains to support players’ mental, spiritual health

Discover the importance of soccer chaplains in the professional soccer world. Learn how Spokane's chaplains provide holistic support for athletes' physical, emotional and spiritual needs.

Former North Idaho Church Members Face Sexual Abuse Investigations

Two Trinity Church members face child sex abuse charges as police records reveal pattern of handling abuse allegations internally. Former deacon and pastor's son arrested.

Spokane NAACP Alerts Police After KKK-Robed Figure Caught on Security Camera

Spokane NAACP responds to surveillance footage of KKK-robed figure in Colbert, WA. Local authorities seek information as MLK Unity Rally approaches. Security measures increased.

119th Congress adds 2 Hindus, 2 nones, remains mostly Christian

New Pew Research report reveals 87% of the 119th Congress identifies as Christian, while religious 'nones' remain underrepresented despite growing US population trends.

Our Sponsors

spot_img
Michael Curry
Michael Curry

SALT LAKE CITY – Episcopal bishops have made history again.

On Saturday (June 27), during a private meeting at St. Mark’s Cathedral in downtown Salt Lake City, they elected Bishop Michael Curry as the first African-American presiding bishop of the 2.5 million-member faith.

Curry won in a landslide vote in a race against three other candidates. The vote came nearly a decade after the bishops chose their first female leader.

Leading up to Saturday’s selection, Curry who has served as bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of North Carolina since 2000, said he envisioned a church committed to being part of the “Jesus movement.”  He said he would focus on evangelism and acts of service, along with a “churchwide spiritual revival.”

While he must lead and tend to day-to-day functions as the faith’s chief executive officer, Curry said his job is more than that.

“In this mission moment of the church’s life,” he said, “the primary role of the presiding bishop must be CEO in another sense: Chief Evangelism Officer, to encourage, inspire and support us all to claim the calling of the Jesus movement.”

Curry, 62, spent 12 years as rector of St. James Church in Baltimore before his election as bishop of the N.C. Diocese. He and his wife, Sharon, have two grown daughters, Rachel and Elizabeth.

He will succeed Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori, the faith’s first female presiding bishop, who completes her nine-year term Nov. 1.

The U.S. Episcopal Church is a branch of the 80 million-member Anglican Communion, with churches across the globe and its origins in the Church of England.

About 9,000 people have come to Salt Lake City for the Episcopal General Convention, held every three years, where leaders and lay followers vote on proposals about the direction for the church.

On Friday, the convention reportedly erupted into applause when the Supreme Court’s ruling was announced legalizing same-sex marriage across the U.S. The Episcopal Church has advocated for equal rights for gays and lesbians since 1976.

Curry has been a supporter of LGBT rights and was among the first group of bishops to allow same-sex marriages to be performed among the NC diocese’s 112 congregations.

Outspoken on social issues, including race and gender issues, he has spoken out at Moral Monday demonstrations in Raleigh, the state capital, challenging local and state governments to lift up the poor and marginalized.

But he may be best known for his energetic African-American preaching style that mixes a down-home flavor with a distinct emphasis on what he calls “radical hospitality” and the Christian message of God’s grace and love.

“He talks about being called to be relationship with God that’s not just about your own personal  piety, but about changing people’s lives and changing the world for the good,” said the Rev. Jim Melnyk, president of the N.C. diocese’s standing committee and rector at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in Smithfield, N.C.

A Chicago native, Curry graduated from Hobart College in Geneva, N.Y.,  and received a masters of divinity from Yale Divinity School.

Melnyk said Curry will be known as a bridge-builder who recognizes that people may not always agree.

“Rather than being divided by people who differ, he believes we’re called to love one another and work together to transform the world,” Melnyk said.

(Yonat Shimron contributed to this report.)

Our Sponsors

spot_img
spot_img
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x