“Shalom” –
peacemaking defined by the Prophet Isaiah and reiterated by Jesus in
Luke’s gospel – is a ministry priority for Katharine Jefferts Schori,
who takes office November 1, 2006, as 26th Presiding Bishop and Primate
of the Episcopal Church.
Bishop Jefferts Schori was elected to this office on June 18, 2006 by vote of the 75th General Convention, in Columbus, Ohio. This Convention also set the United Nations Millennium Development Goals
as the Episcopal Church’s top mission priority. In her full
endorsement of these goals, Bishop Jefferts Schori calls upon
Episcopalians and the wider global community to work together for their
implementation.
Bishop Jefferts Schori’s career as an oceanographer preceded her
studies for the priesthood, to which she was ordained in 1994. She
remains an active, instrument-rated pilot – a skill she applied when
traveling between the congregations of the Diocese of Nevada,
where she was elected bishop in 2000 and ordained to the episcopate
February 24, 2001. At the time of her election as bishop of Nevada, she
was assistant rector of the Church of the Good Samaritan in Corvallis,
Oregon.
Bishop Jefferts Schori, 52, holds a B.S. degree in biology from
Stanford University (1974), an M.S. (1977) and Ph.D. (1983) in
oceanography from Oregon State University, an M.Div. from Church Divinity School of the Pacific (1994), and an honorary D.D. (2001) also from CDSP.
Bishop Jefferts Schori was born March 26, 1954, in Pensacola,
Florida. She grew up in the Seattle area and later moved with her
family to New Jersey. Bishop Jefferts Schori and her husband, Richard
Miles Schori, a retired theoretical mathematician (topologist), were
married in 1979. They have one daughter, Katharine Johanna, 25, who is
a first lieutenant and pilot in the U. S. Air Force.
Bishop Jefferts Schori brings to her ministry emphases on baptismal
ministry and adult education. As Presiding Bishop, she will serve as
chief pastor to the Episcopal Church’s 2.4 million members in 16
countries and 110 dioceses. As Primate, Bishop Jefferts Schori will
join in consultation with other principal bishops of the 38 member
Provinces of the worldwide Anglican Communion, seeking to make common cause for global good and reconciliation.