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United Methodists Elect a Third Openly Gay, Married Bishop

(RNS) — The first two openly gay and married bishops in the United Methodist Church were elected to their positions contrary to the denomination’s guidelines. At the time, the UMC rulebook still held to a traditional view of gender and sexuality, and did not allow people who identify as LGBTQ to be ordained, much less consecrated as bishops.

Kristin Stoneking speaks after being elected bishop of the United Methodist Church’s Western Jurisdiction on July 12, 2024, in Spokane, Washington. (Video screen grab)

This time, the United Methodist Church has elected a third openly gay and married bishop unabashedly and with the denomination’s support.

Kristin Stoneking, an ordained pastor and the associate professor of United Methodist Studies and Leadership at Pacific School of Religion in Berkeley, California, was elected bishop last week in the Western Jurisdiction of the church. Her election comes three months after the United Methodists voted at their General Conference to eliminate all restrictions on members who embrace an LGBTQ lifestyle.

Stoneking will oversee some 300 churches in the denomination’s Mountain Sky Conference, which includes congregations in Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, Utah and a small part of Idaho. She will be based in Denver.

“We’re not done trying to make sure that the world is a welcoming and caring place for everyone, and that includes LGBTQ persons,” Stoneking said.

Following the departure of 25% of its U.S. churches who left over disagreements over gender and sexuality, the United Methodist Church agreed at its General Conference it would not add any more bishops over the next four years. But in the weeks following the convention, one bishop decided to retire and another took long-term disability, leaving two unexpected vacancies.

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The Western Jurisdiction of the church had two already planned bishop retirements in need of replacement and had hoped for a transfer of two bishops from other regions. But when it became apparent the denomination was down two additional bishops, the Western Jurisdiction decided to elect two new bishops: Stoneking and Sandra K. Olewine. Olewine will serve the California-Nevada Conference. Stoneking will replace Bishop Karen Oliveto, the denomination’s first openly gay married bishop, who, at age 66, is retiring.

Oliveto was elected to the Western Jurisdiction in 2016 in defiance of denominational rules that did not allow ordination of people who identify as LGBTQ. Then, in 2022, the Western Jurisdiction, the most liberal in the denomination, once again defied church rules and elected an openly gay married bishop — Cedrick D. Bridgeforth. He serves the Greater Northwest Conference that spans Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, Washington and small parts of Montana and Canada.

At April’s General Conference meeting in Charlotte, North Carolina, United Methodists voted to repeal their denomination’s condemnation of LGBTQ lifestyles from its rulebook. For 52 years, the rulebook had stated that the practice of homosexuality was “incompatible with Christian teaching.”

At that same meeting, it dropped a ban on the ordination of clergy who identify as LGBTQ and eliminated a provision that forbade its ministers from officiating at same-sex marriages.

Stoneking is among the first to benefit from the lifting of all those restrictions. An estimated 324 UMC clergy or candidates for ordination identify as gay. Of those, about 160 are in same-sex marriages — many of them performed outside the church and in private.

Stoneking is legally married to Elizabeth Campi, and they are raising two children. The two met at Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary in Evanston, Illinois, and have been together as a couple for 32 years.

She has worked as a local church pastor, district superintendent and campus minister. Most recently, Stoneking taught United Methodist students at Pacific School of Religion the denomination’s history, polity and doctrine. From 2013-2017, she was the national executive director of the Fellowship of Reconciliation, the oldest interfaith peace and justice organization in the United States.

Now as bishop, Stoneking said her first priority is to help the church restructure the worldwide denomination to give each region greater equity in tailoring church life to its own customs and traditions, a plan known as regionalization.

Regionalization would allow equal standing to its worldwide regions, including Africa, Europe, the Philippines and the United States to set their own rules on various issues, including issues of gender and sexuality.

Each conference or region must ratify the new regionalization plan in the coming year for it to formally pass. Many in the church believe regionalization is the last and best option to avoid further schisms on matters of same-sex marriage and ordination of people who identify as LGBTQ.

“There is a tremendous spirit of openness and possibility in the United Methodist Church right now,” Stoneking said. “I am very excited about that.”

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Yonat Shimron

Yonat Shimron is a North Carolina-based reporter who has written about religion for more than 17 years. She is a national reporter and senior editor for Religion News Service.

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