North Central elects Bigham-Tsai bishop in historic vote

The Rev. Kennetha Bigham-Tsai (right) and her husband, Kee, greet delegates at the North Central Jurisdictional Conference meeting in Fort Wayne, Ind., following her election as bishop. Photo courtesy of NCJ Communications.
The Rev. Kennetha Bigham-Tsai (right) and her husband, Kee, greet delegates at the North Central Jurisdictional Conference meeting in Fort Wayne, Ind., following her election as bishop. Photo courtesy of NCJ Communications.

The Rev. Kennetha Bigham-Tsai, chief connectional ministries officer for the Connectional Table, has been elected as bishop in The United Methodist Church’s North Central Jurisdictional Conference.

Bigham-Tsai’s election on Wednesday afternoon was a historic milestone, as she was the first to be elected on the first round of voting within the North Central Jurisdiction’s history. 

Delegates elected Bigham-Tsai on Nov. 2 at the jurisdiction’s meeting in Grand Wayne Convention Center in Fort Wayne, Indiana, on the first day of meetings. She received 106 votes out of 166 valid ballots cast. She needed 99 to be elected (60% of valid ballots).

Bigham-Tsai was also the first bishop elected among all five jurisdictional conferences simultaneously meeting in the United States. Episcopal voting will continue, with the goal of electing two more bishops before the North Central Jurisdictional Conference adjourns.

Speaking from the podium, Bigham-Tsai exuded joy and elation at the news: “I am overwhelmed. I am humbled. I am so very grateful.” She called on those listening to take hold of their identity as United Methodists, a worldwide connection grounded in a theology of grace, and to be bold in their storytelling.

“It’s possible to reclaim the narrative and the story about how we make disciples, how we’re relevant in our community, how we’re vital in our ministry,” Bigham-Tsai proclaimed. “Thank you so much, North Central, for seeing what is possible in me, but most of all, for seeing what is possible in our church.”

Bigham-Tsai went on to describe the vision that will guide her work as bishop within the North Central Jurisdiction when she begins her episcopal assignment. “I will prayerfully walk beside you to seek to live out our ‘Covenant to Build BeLoved Community,’ to dismantle racism, to open our doors and to be inclusive of all people, including our LGBTQIA+ siblings. It is possible.” 

Delegates to the November 2021 virtual special session of the North Central Jurisdiction overwhelmingly approved the “Covenant to Build BeLoved Community,” naming the jurisdiction’s commitment to the dismantling of racism and to the inclusion of LGBTQIA+ persons.

Bigham-Tsai was elected by the North Central Jurisdiction’s 167 voting delegates, an equal number of United Methodist clergy and laity, from the 10 annual conferences forming the North Central Jurisdiction: the Dakotas, East Ohio, Illinois Great Rivers, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Northern Illinois, West Ohio and Wisconsin.

The assignments of bishops in the North Central Jurisdiction will be announced on Saturday, with terms of service to begin Jan. 1. In the United States, bishops are elected to serve for life.

Bigham-Tsai was the Michigan Conference’s only endorsed episcopal candidate for election. Since 2018, she has served as the chief connectional ministries officer for the Connectional Table, which discerns and articulates the vision of The United Methodist Church and helps determine how finances are used for worldwide connectional mission. She has been a member of the Connectional Table since 2012 and has sharpened her skills in bridge building and communicating across a diverse, worldwide communion.

She has been actively involved as a delegate from the Michigan Conference at General Conference and North Central Jurisdictional Conference since 2012. She was co-chair of the 2022 delegation as a clergy delegate. She also serves as secretary of the North Central Jurisdiction Committee on the Episcopacy.

As superintendent of the Lansing District of the Michigan Conference for five years, from 2013 to 2018, Bigham-Tsai provided leadership and supervision for over 70 churches and their pastors. During that time, she developed a process for assessing the viability of local churches, with more than 40 district churches participating.

Ordained as a United Methodist elder in 2009, Bigham-Tsai served congregations in Portage and East Lansing, Michigan.

In The United Methodist Church, bishops are ordained elders who are called to “lead and oversee the spiritual and temporal affairs of The United Methodist Church.” Bishops, in consultation with district superintendents, are responsible for appointing clergy. They also preside at annual conferences, jurisdictional conferences and General Conference, the denomination’s top lawmaking assembly.

She and other new bishops are coming aboard as the denomination deals with the continuing fallout of the COVID-19 pandemic and rising congregational disaffiliations amid a denominational splintering. 

In her final post-election remarks, Bigham-Tsai concluded, “As we walk through all of the disruption that is happening, healing is possible. Reconciliation is possible. It is possible to tear down the dividing walls.”

Deaton is content editor of the Michigan Conference.

Find all of UM News’s coverage of the 2022 episcopal elections of The United Methodist Church on our landing page.

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