The
delegates to the 202nd Annual Meeting of the Massachusetts Conference
enthusiastically voted to call Rev. Dr. Nancy S. Taylor as the next
Minister and President, approving her selection by a unanimous vote
that was followed by a five-minute standing ovation.
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Rev.
Dr. Nancy Taylor addresses the 202nd Annual Meeting before being
elected Conference Minister and President.
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Taylor,
previously a church pastor and human rights activist in Idaho, will
begin on Sept. 1st.
Taylor
preached at Friday’s worship and then was introduced to the Meeting
by the Board of Directors and the search committee.
She
spoke about what skills she could bring the Conference, and emphasized
her faith. “I have been told you are looking for a person who is, above
all else, a person of faith,” Taylor said. “This is my life. This is
who I am. I am a person who seeks to live in the presence of God. God
informs my life and my work.”
Taylor
talked about her respect for both the congregational roots of the Conference
and the forward looking direction of the United Church of Christ, and
also talked abut her dedication to ecumenism. And, she emphasized her
experience working with the media, delivering speeches, speaking at
press conferences and addressing the political establishment on issues
of conscience.
“I
have been informed that you are seeking a person who has a public voice,
someone willing and able to speak publicly on behalf of the United Church
of Christ,” she said. “As a disciple of Jesus, I take seriously the
call to handle aright the Word of God, whether from a pulpit, in a meeting,
or at a press conference. Words are powerful.”
Taylor also said that while she values the importance of administration,
her main role is to be a pastor.
“I am first and foremost a pastor, one who understands and honors the
work of the local church, and who believes – deeply believes – that
the local church is the primary location of ministry in the UCC,” she
said.
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| Newly
elected Conference Minister and President Nancy Taylor (right) and
outgoing Interim Minister and President Erwin Bode serve communion
during worship at Mount Holyoke College's Abbey Chapel. |
Throughout
the evening, Taylor displayed a keen sense of humor that kept the crowd
laughing and engaged. Asked why she was interested in coming to the
Conference, she replied: “it’s the best Conference, isn’t it?” and then
said “When one receives a letter from the flagship Conference, one pays
attention.” She then added that her feeling of call developed over the
course of the search process.
Christina Braudaway-Bauman, chair of the search committee, introduced
Taylor, and said her committee’s decision was clear and made with joy.
“It was her voice – her speaking, her writing, her praying and her preaching
– that particularly moved us,” she said. “Nancy’s voice is not only
clear, it is courageous. What she says and does changes the world.”
Taylor has just finished serving as senior pastor of the First Congregational
Church, UCC, in Boise, Idaho, where she is known for her work on social
justice issues. She also just completed a term as the Moderator of General
Synod.
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