Elizabeth Eaton installed as ELCA presiding bishop

10/7/2013 12:00:00 AM

     CHICAGO (ELCA) -- Marking a new, historic season of ministry in the
life of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA), more than
1,500 people gathered Oct. 5 at Rockefeller Memorial Chapel here for the
installation of the Rev. Elizabeth A. Eaton as ELCA presiding bishop.
Eaton is the ELCA’s fourth presiding bishop and the first woman to lead
the 4 million-member church. She will assume office Nov. 1.
     “I found it beautiful and deeply moving that this new ministry was
begun in worship; that as a church, we were ‘lost in wonder, love and
praise,’” Eaton said of the installation service.
     The Rev. Mark S. Hanson, ELCA presiding bishop from 2001 to 2013,
was presiding minister of Holy Communion with the Installation of the
Presiding Bishop prior to the rite of installation, and the Honorable
Yolanda Tanner, vice president of the ELCA Delaware-Maryland Synod,
served as assisting minister. Eaton served as presiding minister after
the installation rite.
     The Rev. Jessica R. Crist, bishop of the ELCA Montana Synod and
chair of the ELCA Conference of Bishops, preached the sermon.
     “We are here today because somebody somewhere scattered a bunch of
seeds,” Crist told worshipers. “They didn’t all grow; they didn’t all
survive, but some did. That’s why we are here. Look around. Look at some
of the plants that have grown out of that random seed scattering. Look at
these people. Look at the congregations they come from. Look at the
ministries they represent. What a wild and wonderful community garden
that has grown up from those scattered seeds.”
     “We are called to be sowers. Scatterers of seeds,” she said. “We are
called on to be sowers -- all of us. And we have the promise of the
harvest to top all harvests. We may be out there seeing no hope of
return. It doesn’t matter. We may get our hopes up again and again, only
to be disappointed. It doesn’t matter. We may find that others are
interfering with what we are doing. It doesn’t matter. We may find that
we have been on the wrong track entirely -- we had been doing everything
exactly the wrong way. It doesn’t matter.”
     “What matters is that we sow. Bishop Eaton and the ELCA Church
Council. School children and pastors. Professors and missionaries.
Bishops and churchwide staff. Students and retired folks. Lifelong
Lutherans and new believers. We are all called on to sow seeds. And what
is that sowing of seeds, if it is not literally gardening?
     “It is sharing the good news of Jesus Christ in words and in
actions,” Crist preached. “We are not solo sowers. We are part of a
community. That’s what the church is, a community. We don’t all think
alike, we don’t all vote alike, we don’t all have the same problems (and)
we don’t all have the same gifts. But together we are the body of Christ.
And together we go out to sow. All over the place, and in all kinds of
ways.”
     Crist said that those gathered came “to install Bishop Eaton, and to
welcome her and empower her to sow in this wider field that she now gets
to traverse. And we are also here to pledge to Bishop Eaton and to one
another that we’re all grabbing a bag and heading out to sow, because
each of us is called through our baptism to share the good news. Each of
us is invited to be a part of the harvest. Each of us is called. Each of
us is empowered. Each of us is sent.
     “Whoever has ears to hear, let them hear,” she said. “So, go, sow!
Sow! Go!”
     In addition to those who gathered in person, more than 4,370 people
tuned in during the event to view a live video stream of the
installation. The recorded video of the installation is available at
http://www.ELCA.org/installation/live. View images at
http://www.livinglutheran.com/photos/installation-of-ELCA-presiding-bishop-elizabeth-a-eaton.html and on the ELCA’s Pinterest board at
http://www.pinterest.com/ELCAlutherans/installation-of-presiding-bishop-elizabeth-eaton.

About ELCA Presiding Bishop Eaton
     Eaton was elected Aug. 14 at the 2013 ELCA Churchwide Assembly in
Pittsburgh. She will serve a six-year term.
     Born April 2, 1955, in Cleveland, Eaton earned a Master of Divinity
degree from Harvard Divinity School in Cambridge, Mass., and a Bachelor
of Arts degree in music education from the College of Wooster in Wooster,
Ohio.
     Ordained June 4, 1981, Eaton served as assistant pastor of All
Saints Lutheran Church in Worthington, Ohio; interim pastor of Good Hope
Lutheran Church in Boardman, Ohio; and pastor of Messiah Lutheran Church
in Ashtabula, Ohio. She was elected bishop of the ELCA Northeastern Ohio
Synod in 2006 and re-elected in May 2013.
     Eaton is involved in a number of boards and committees. She is a
board member of Trinity Lutheran Seminary and Capital University, both
based in Columbus, Ohio. She is a member of the Lutheran Episcopal
Coordinating Committee and the ELCA Conference of Bishops Executive
Committee. She also serves on the Conference of Bishops Domestic Ready
Bench and serves in roles with the ELCA Malaria Campaign, the Lutheran
Metropolitan Ministry, PORTICO Philosophy of Benefits Task Force, Ohio
Council of Churches and Lutheran Planned Giving in Ohio.
     Prior to her election, Eaton was the liaison bishop to the ELCA
Church Council and a member of the ELCA Memorials Committee for the 2007,
2011 and 2013 ELCA Churchwide Assemblies. She served as a delegate to The
Lutheran World Federation Assembly in Budapest in 1984, on the review
team for Lutheran Episcopal dialogues in 1982, and she was a part of the
delegation from the ELCA’s predecessor church bodies to the German
Democratic Republic in 1982.
     Eaton’s husband, the Rev. T. Conrad Selnick, an Episcopal priest, is
pastor of St. Christopher’s-by-the-River in Gates Mills, Ohio. They
reside in Ashtabula and are parents of two adult children, Rebeckah, who
is married to Michael Ray, and Susannah.
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About the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America:
The ELCA is one of the largest Christian denominations in the United
States, with about 4 million members in nearly 10,000 congregations
across the 50 states and in the Caribbean region. Known as the church
of “God's work. Our hands,” the ELCA emphasizes the saving grace of God
through faith in Jesus Christ, unity among Christians and service in the
world. The ELCA's roots are in the writings of the German church
reformer, Martin Luther.

For information contact:
Melissa Ramirez Cooper, Manager of Public Relations
773-380-2956 or Melissa.RamirezCooper@ELCA.org
http://www.ELCA.org/news
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Living Lutheran: http://www.livinglutheran.com

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