DAILY NEWS

Focus – A first : C of E ordained priest becomes third woman bishop in New Zealand

The Diocese of Waikato and Taranaki in New Zealand has announced the election of the Revd Dr Helen-Ann Hartley as the next bishop of Waikato. She is the first woman ordained in the C of E to have been elected as a bishop.

The Rev Dr Helen-Ann Hartley has been elected the next Anglican Bishop of Waikato.

Helen-Ann, who is 40, will become the 7th Bishop of Waikato – and the first woman to hold the office. She succeeds Archbishop David Moxon, who is now the Anglican Communion’s ambassador to Rome.

Bishop-elect Helen-Ann is at present Dean of Tikanga Pakeha students at St John’s College in Auckland.

She was born in Edinburgh and grew up in north-east England. She is the fourth generation of her family to be ordained, and was priested in 2005 in the Diocese of Oxford.

ACNS reports that Church of England female priest elected as NZ bishop.
An English priest, the Revd Dr Helen-Ann Hartley, has been elected as the new Bishop of Waikato Diocese in the Anglican Church in Aotearoa, New Zealand & Polynesia.

Dr Hartley, 40, has been living and working in the country since 2011 as the Dean of Tikanga Pakeha students at St John’s College in Auckland. She will be the 7th Bishop of Waikato and the first woman to hold the office.

In a statement released today Bishop-elect Hartley said she was looking forward to travelling around the diocese and learning more about its people and places.

A fourth generation priest she will be the first woman priest ordained in the Church of England to be a bishop. “I hope my election as a bishop will be a sign of encouragement for supporters of the ordination of women to the episcopate,” she said.

“All, irrespective of gender, are able to witness to the gospel, both women and men are entrusted with that sacred task.”

Dr Hartley was ordained in 2005 and began her ministry working in 12 rural parishes near Oxford. She also brings years of experience in theological education to her new role. Before moving to New Zealand, she was Director of Biblical Studies and lecturer in the New Testament at Ripon College Cuddeston in the UK.

“My first task is to listen to what has been achieved in the Diocese so far and its potential,” she said. “Being a disciple of Christ is about learning alongside others. Education has, at its heart, the idea of ‘drawing out’, of enabling everyone to fulfill their potential and so will be a strong foundation for my work.”

Dr Hartley, will lead the Diocese with Philip Richardson, the Bishop of Taranaki and also the Archbishop of the New Zealand dioceses. He described the election as “an exciting moment for the Diocese”.

ANZP’s other female bishop, the Rt Revd Victoria Matthews said of today’s announcement, “The election of Helen-Ann adds a new strength to this conversation in the House of Bishops. Helen-Ann also brings a perspective that is Communion wide, working with students from across the world in her teaching and administrative roles. I warmly anticipate and welcome her presence as an episcopal colleague in the House of Bishops.”

Dr Hartley was featured in an article published by The New Yorker in 2010 before she moved to New Zealand – A Canterbury Tale: The battle within the Church of England to allow women to be bishops by Jane Kramer. See –
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2010/04/26/100426fa_fact_kramer