The Diocesan Dialogue
Current Issue
November 2007
Dan Edwards Elected as Bishop
The
Very Rev. Dan Thomas Edwards was elected October 12 as bishop of the
Episcopal Diocese of Nevada.
Edwards, 57—rector of St.
Francis' Episcopal Church in Macon, Georgia (Diocese of Atlanta),
and dean of the region's convocation of congregations—was
elected on the second ballot out of a field of six nominees.
The election
took place during the diocese's annual convention, running October
12-14 at the South Point Hotel on the south end of the Las Vegas Strip.
Edwards
will succeed Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori, who was elected
presiding bishop on June 18, 2006 during the 75th General Convention
and left her Nevada ministry on October 25, 2006.
Edwards will be ordained
and consecrated Nevada's 10th bishop on January 5, 2008.
Upon receiving
the news of his election, Edwards said: "My sisters and brothers in
Christ, with utmost humility and deep joy, I accept this call to serve
as your bishop. Together we can engage in our many different ministries,
ever mindful that we are all essential parts of the one Body of Christ,
that all of our ministries serve one mission: to reconcile all people
to God and each other in Christ. For the love and glory of God, we
can build bridges across whatever divides us.
"Nevada
is already an exciting, creative, trail-blazing diocese," Edwards
continued.
Referring to the late Bishop Wes Frensdorff, Nevada's
diocesan from 1972 to 1985, Edwards added: "Together,
we can keep faith with Bishop's dream of the church, consolidate
Bishop Katharine's achievements, and share God's love with
more people than ever before. We can build a house where all are welcome.
We can support a rising generation of young Episcopalians who have
enough courage to shape the future with faith.
"With God's
help, the Church in Nevada will become ever more mission- minded and
spirit-filled, ministering to those in need and advocating for those
who are despised by the world but beloved of God. May the Lord strengthen,
inspire, and unite us to do the work God has given us to do."
Edwards
grew up in Texas and practiced law in Colorado and Idaho. After serving
as regional director of a Migrant Law program, he later became statewide
director of a Native American Law program.
According to a news release
from the Diocese of Nevada, "years of interfaith spiritual searching
finally brought" Edwards to the Episcopal Church. "What
began as an experiment turned into a lifelong love of meeting God in
the sacraments. His new faith led to study in Idaho's Deacon
Formation Program, then General Seminary (M. Div.; S.T.M.); Columbia
Seminary; and Harvard Divinity School. He trained in spirituality at
Shalem Institute, Omega Institute, and the Mercy Center (Colorado).
But the questions keep coming. The death of a 20-year-old parishioner
in the TWA 800 crash intensified his struggle to find God in human
suffering. The result was God of Our Silent Tears, a book he has recently
written."
Edwards' ministry has been in congregations large
and small, urban and rural, liberal and conservative, traditional and
contemporary. He was an intern at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine,
New York City, and with the FisherFolk. After serving as curate in
a large downtown church, he became rector of St. Francis', a
smaller congregation.
At St Francis', Edwards "promotes
servant leadership, Millennium Development Goals, and racial reconciliation… and
enjoys warm friendships with the people of his diverse, inclusive congregation,"
the Nevada diocese's news release notes.
An advocate for ministry
development, Edwards co-directed a diocesan program to train spiritual
directors, taught in St. Luke's Pastoral Institute, and supervises
aspirants in field placements. As convocation dean, he mentors other
clergy and coordinates regional church activities.
Edwards served on
Atlanta's diocesan Committee on Same Sex Blessings and promotes
interfaith/ecumenical dialogue in his role as diocesan ecumenical officer.
A former college chaplain, he has led retreats for church and college
groups.
Edwards and his wife, Linda, have two adult daughters and a
sonin- law.
Under the canons the Episcopal Church, a majority of bishops
exercising jurisdiction and diocesan standing committees must consent
to Edwards' election and ordination as bishop within 120 days
of receiving the consent request. The other five nominees were:
- the
Rev. Dr. Susan Burns, 60, rector, Episcopal Church of the Redeemer,
Bethesda, Maryland (Diocese of Washington);
- the Rev. Dr. Cathy
L. Deats, 57, rector, St. James Episcopal Church, Hackettstown, New
Jersey (Diocese of Newark);
- the Rev. Dr. Charles Eric Funston,
54, rector, St. Paul's Episcopal Church, Medina, Ohio (Diocese
of Ohio);
- the Rev. Albert John Keeney, 62, rector, St. John's Episcopal
Church, Canandaigua, New York (Diocese of Rochester); and
- the Rev.
Jeffrey D. Paul, 52, rector of St. Peter's Episcopal Church,
Carson City, Nevada.
The Diocese of Nevada comprises about 6,000 Episcopalians
worshipping in 34 congregations, including one in the neighboring state
of Arizona.
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