Methodist Church’s First Lesbian Bishop Set To Retire After 8 Years

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United Methodist Church Bishop Karen Oliveto preaches a sermon at First United Methodist Church of Charlotte, North Carolina, on April 28, 2024, during the UMC General Conference.
United Methodist Church Bishop Karen Oliveto preaches a sermon at First United Methodist Church of Charlotte, North Carolina, on April 28, 2024, during the UMC General Conference.

The first bishop to be in a same-sex marriage in the United Methodist Church (UMC) will be retiring in September, eight years after being elected in defiance of the denomination’s rules at the time.

Bishop Karen Oliveto of the Mountain Sky Conference, who was elected to her position in 2016 by the UMC Western Jurisdiction, will officially retire September 1, 2024. The retirement was reported last week by Western Jurisdiction.

Bishop Minerva Carcaño, head of the California-Nevada Conference and outspoken progressive activist, will also be retiring in the fall.

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The two bishops were honored at the Western Jurisdiction’s official meeting last week, which was held in Spokane, Washington, and centered on the theme of “Love Without Limits.”

“Every pore, every cell in my body has loved, loved, loved my ministry and the places it took me,” Oliveto told those gathered, as quoted in the report.

“So may you continue to follow God’s leading, to take risks, to open doors that no one else is going to open, to stand with people that no one else stands for, to make space for voices that have to be heard, so that beloved community can truly emerge.”

Oliveto was elected bishop by the jurisdiction in 2016, at a time when the UMC Book of Discipline officially prohibited the ordination of noncelibate homosexuals.

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The United Methodist Judicial Council, the denomination’s highest court, ruled 6-3 in 2017 that Oliveto’s election was invalid and called for a process to begin to remove her from office, The Christian Post reports.

“It is not lawful for the college of bishops of any jurisdictional or central conference to consecrate a self-avowed practicing homosexual bishop,” the Judicial Council stated at the time.

“Under the long-standing principle of legality, no individual member or entity may violate, ignore or negate church law.”

Nevertheless, Oliveto remained in office, with reports surfacing that claimed many members of her regional body were leaving in protest or, at the least, dropping their financial support because she was a bishop.

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In September 2018, a complaint was filed against Oliveto over a 2017 sermon in which she claimed Jesus Christ had bigotries and spoke with concern about turning Jesus into “an idol.”

“If Jesus can change, if He can give up His bigotries and prejudices, if He can realize that He had made His life too small, and if, in this realization, He grew closer to others and closer to God, then so can we,” Oliveto stated in 2017.

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