Two women, so
intelligent, competent and passionate, Elizabeth Warren and Rachel Maddow, sat
in Elizabeth’s home last night talking about her taking her name out of the
running for the Democratic nomination for President of the United States.
Elizabeth
was thinking about all the little girls who would have to wait to see a woman
as president. So many millions of us have had to wait since Hillary was
defeated, not in the popular vote, but in the Electoral College. So many women
and men saw such promise in their being six women candidates, and people of
color, and a gay man among the 2020 candidates.
As I watched
Elizabeth, my mind went back thirty years, to 1990, when there were no women Lutheran bishops in
the world. A number of us women had been willing to be candidates in various
ELCA synods, so at least people could envision the possibility. I was nominated
in a synod in Minnesota; so many people from across the country sent
encouraging support. As the balloting drew close, and there was a very real
chance I would be elected, with much prayer and discernment, I took my name out
of the running, telling the assembly, “I feel clear that I am to continue my
calling to be a teaching theologian of the church as a professor at Wartburg
Seminary. . . I don’t like to disappoint people. . . There are many extraordinarily
gifted women in this church ready and capable of being bishop today.”
I do not
mean to equate my situation with that of Elizabeth Warren, except with that
piercing empathy I felt for her. Women
and girls would have to wait.
However,
soon after my vocational decision, a Lutheran woman was elected bishop in
Germany, and in 1992, April was elected in the ELCA, followed by Andrea, and
more, and women of color and then Elizabeth as Presiding Bishop of the ELCA. And I count it a great joy that some women
whom I had been privileged to teach at Wartburg are now synodical bishops.
As Elizabeth
Warren and Rachel Maddow talked last night, almost sister to sister, it was
clear to me that their gifts will continue to be used. Their persistent voices will continue to be
heard.
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