December 5, 2009 2:00 AM

L.A. Elects First Female Episcopal Bishop

(AP)  The Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles elected the first female bishop in its 114-year history Friday but ended voting for the day with one of two openly gay candidates still vying for the second bishop's position.

Rev. Diane M. Jardine Bruce, rector of St. Clement's-By-The-Sea Episcopal Church in San Clemente, was elected Friday at the diocese's annual convention to replace one of two retiring assistant bishops.

Bruce, who was elected in the convention's third ballot, is a former bank executive who has spent the past 12 years working as a priest in Orange County.

Voting for the second spot did not produce a winner Friday and balloting will continue Saturday.

The election has garnered national attention because two of the six candidates vying for the vacant positions are openly gay. One of those candidates, the Rev. John L. Kirkley of San Francisco, withdrew late Friday.

The other, the Rev. Mary D. Glasspool, of Baltimore, was one of the top two vote-getters in the first two rounds of balloting for the second position and is considered a favorite.

If elected, she would be the first openly gay bishop since Bishop V. Gene Robinson was chosen in New Hampshire in 2003. Robinson's win six years ago led dozens of conservative parishes and four dioceses to vote to leave the 2.1-million member U.S. denomination and pushed the 77 million-member Anglican fellowship to the brink of schism.

It is hard, however, to know what impact the selection of a second gay bishop would have on the church today. The Episcopal Church is the U.S. branch of Anglicanism.

The majority of Anglicans outside the United States are theological conservatives.

Within the United States, breakaway traditionalists have formed the Anglican Church in North America as a rival to the Episcopal Church.

Episcopalians have made clear to the rest of the Anglican family, however, that they will not roll back their support for same-sex couples.

Last July, the Episcopal General Convention, the church's top policy-making body, effectively lifted a moratorium on electing another gay bishop. The temporary ban had been requested by Anglican leaders seeking to prevent a permanent break in the communion.

The Los Angeles diocese has 70,000 members and covers six Southern California counties.

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On the Web:

Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles: http://www.ladiocese.org

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by armyoftwelve December 5, 2009 9:05 PM EST
The future of American Christianity is DEFINITELY NOT in the Episcopal "church." Episcopals of late have shown again and again that they are out of touch with their own past and they aren't listening to God or each other right now.
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by bradkt1 December 6, 2009 3:52 AM EST
Episcopalians are no less religious than you are and our church is no less "Christian" than yours.

That's what freedom of religion means. Deal with it.
by armyoftwelve December 6, 2009 2:20 PM EST
Like I said : Epsicopals of late have shown again and again that they are out of touch with their own past and they aren't listening to God or each other right now.

Apparently, some of them can't read either.
by Overruled1 December 5, 2009 11:32 AM EST
The power struggle continues...
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by bradkt1 December 5, 2009 12:06 AM EST
As an Episcopalian in Los Angeles, I am very pleased with this development. My Church had a female priest at that time and she conducted my father's funeral mass in 2001. Many of my friends who attended were Roman Catholics. They told me that that was the first time they had ever seen a mass conducted by a female priest. I asked them what they thought of it and they all strongly approved...especially the women. It's not that I believe that this way is better than what practice of another religious group is or anything like that. As far as I am concerned, it's fine for us.
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