Gayle Harris Explained

Type:Bishop
Honorific Prefix:The Right Reverend
Gayle Harris
Suffragan Bishop of Massachusetts
Church:Episcopal Church
Diocese:Massachusetts
Elected:June 1, 2002
Term:2003–2022
Retired:-->
Predecessor:Barbara Harris
Ordination:June 1982
Ordained By:John Shelby Spong
Consecration:January 18, 2003
Consecrated By:Arthur Benjamin Williams Jr.
Birth Date:12 February 1951
Birth Place:Cleveland, Ohio, United States
Tomb:-->
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Gayle Elizabeth Harris (born February 12, 1951)[1] was ordained as Bishop Suffragan of the Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts in 2003, succeeding Barbara Harris (no relation). This was the first time in the Episcopal Church in the United States that a woman was succeeded as bishop by another woman.

Early life and ministry

Harris was born on February 12, 1951, in Cleveland, Ohio. She studied at the Lewis & Clark College and then at the Church Divinity School of the Pacific, from where she earned a Master of Divinity. She was awarded an honorary Doctor of Divinity by the Church Divinity School of the Pacific in 2002, and an honorary Doctor of Humanity from the New England Law Boston.

Harris was ordained as a deacon in June 1981 and as a priest in February 1982.[2] She served as assistant to Grace Church Van Vorst in Jersey City, New Jersey, and as diocesan Urban Resident at St. Philip's Church in Washington, D.C., from 1982 to 1984. In 1984, she became priest-in-charge of Holy Communion Church in Washington, D.C., and simultaneously as a member of the clergy at Washington National Cathedral. She left Washington for Rochester, New York, in 1992, to become the rector of St. Luke and St, Simon Cyrene's Church, where she remained until 2002.

She was elected Suffragan Bishop of Massachusetts on June 1, 2002, and was consecrated on January 18, 2003, at Trinity Church, Boston, by Bishop Arthur Benjamin Williams Jr. She chairs the House of Bishops Pastoral Development Committee and is the convenor of the Episcopal Bishops of African Descent.

In 2022, she retired as Bishop Suffragan of Massachusetts. In April 2023, she became the Assistant Bishop of the Diocese of Virginia.

Accusations and apology

In 2018, Harris said that she personally saw Israeli security personnel arrest a 3-year-old on the Temple Mount for bouncing a ball that fell among worshipers at the Western Wall, and also saw Israeli soldiers respond to a comment by a 15-year-old boy by shooting him 10 times in the back.[3] Harris was accused by the Simon Wiesenthal Center and other Jewish organizations of fabricating "defamatory and incendiary" stories of "Israeli heartlessness and criminality" in support of an Episcopal Church General Convention resolution condemning Israel. The Simon Wiesenthal Center said that her "anti-Israel rhetoric borders on a 'blood libel'"[4] [5] Several weeks later, Harris apologized, stating that "I now acknowledge that I reported stories which I had heard and unintentionally framed them as though I had personally witnessed the alleged events." She added, "I did not take the opportunity to verify these stories. ... I was ill-advised to repeat the stories without verification, and I apologize for doing so."[6] [3]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Episcopal Clerical Directory 2013 (2013). New York: Church Publishing Inc., p. 405.
  2. Web site: Rt. Rev. Gayle Elizabeth Harris. Bishop Suffragan Elect of Massachusetts. . Louie Crew . Unofficial Anglican Pages of Louie Crew . https://web.archive.org/web/20100812181715/http://andromeda.rutgers.edu/~lcrew/bishops//0407.html . August 12, 2010 .
  3. News: Episcopal bishop apologizes after sharing false stories about Israeli atrocities . 22 August 2018 . Jewish Telegraphic Agency . 21 August 2018.
  4. News: Simon Wiesenthal Center protests Episcopal Church bishop's anti-Israel stance . 10 August 2018 . Times of Israel . 28 July 2018.
  5. News: Jewish groups slam episcopal church for "Blood Libel" . 19 August 2018 . Cleveland Jewish News . 3 August 2018.
  6. Web site: Statement from Bishop Gayle E. Harris . Harris . Gayle . 17 August 2018 . Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts . 19 August 2018.