HomePress ReleasesJennifer Baskerville-Burrows elected bishop of Indianapolis

Jennifer Baskerville-Burrows elected bishop of Indianapolis

Published on

Please Help Anglican.Ink with a donation.

Chicago priest elected 11th bishop of Indianapolis on the second ballot on 28 Oct 2015 at Christ Church Cathedral Indianapolis.

The Rev. Jennifer Baskerville-Burrows was elected 11th bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Indianapolis on the second ballot Oct. 28 at Christ Church Cathedral Indianapolis.

Baskerville-Burrows, 50, is the first African-American woman elected to be a diocesan bishop in the Episcopal Church.

She was elected with 67 votes in the clergy order and 82 in the lay order.

Her election culminated a nearly two-year discernment and search process by the diocese at the 179th diocesan convention. The Rt. Rev. Catherine M. Waynick plans to retire in the spring of 2017.

The other four nominees were:

  • The Rev. Grace Burton-Edwards, rector, St. Thomas Episcopal Church, Columbus, Georgia;
  • The Rev. Canon Bruce Gray, canon to the ordinary, Diocese of Indianapolis;
  • The Rev. Canon Patrick Lance Ousley, priest in charge and headmaster, St. John’s Episcopal Church, Parish & Preschool, Kirkland, Washington; canon for stewardship & development, Diocese of Olympia; and
  • The Rev. Dina van Klaveren, rector, St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church, Glenwood, Maryland.

Further information about the bishop search and the nominees is available here.

Baskerville-Burrows currently serves as director of networking for the Episcopal Diocese of Chicago, nourishing partnerships and connections for church revitalization.

“In 19 years of ordained ministry, and especially in the past five helping to oversee and restructure the Diocese of Chicago, I’ve supported communities of transformation, communicated a vision of hope and gathered and networked God’s people across distance and difference,” Baskerville-Burrows said. “I believe these experiences have prepared me to lead and serve in the particular place that is the Diocese of Indianapolis.”

She is from New York, ordained by the Diocese of Central New York, and a graduate of Smith College, Cornell University and the Church Divinity School of the Pacific. She has expertise in historic preservation and a passion for issues including gun violence, social justice, and racial and class reconciliation. She also maintains a strong focus in guiding others through the practice of spiritual direction.

One of the defining experiences of her ministry came when she found herself near the World Trade Center the morning of September 11, 2001. In the midst of a fearful situation, her own faith and the faith of others who sought shelter alongside her gave her a renewed perspective of faith vanquishing fear.

“The Episcopal Church is where I found my relationship with Jesus some 30 years ago, “she said. “It teaches me that the world is filled with incredible beauty and unspeakable pain and that God is deeply in the midst of it all loving us fiercely. So each day, nourished by the sacraments and stories of our faith, the beauty of our liturgical tradition, the wide embrace of this Christian community, I learn over and over again how to live without fear.”

Pending the canonically required consent of a majority of the Episcopal Church’s diocesan standing committees and bishops with jurisdiction, Baskerville-Burrows will be ordained and consecrated as bishop of the Diocese of Indianapolis on April 29, 2017, at Clowes Hall at Butler University.

Latest articles

How should a parish priest respond if Tucker Carlson asked for counsel on a “demon-attack”?

How the four strands of Anglicanism might respond to a Carlson‑style “demon attack” in...

Did a Demon Maul Tucker Carlson? Four Anglican Answers

https://youtu.be/LDIqoPKNhgo Tucker Carlson says a demon clawed him in his sleep. Anglicans should pause before...

Pittsburgh dean resigns as new charges filed

A Statement from Bishop Ketlen Solak Dear friends at Trinity Cathedral, I am writing with an...

Diocese of Bangor publishes independent governance review

The Bangor Diocesan Board of Finance and the Bangor Diocesan Trust have today published...

Bishop of Michigan writes in response to synogogue terror attack

March 12, 2026 Dear Friends, I write to share my outrage and sadness over the attack...

More like this

How should a parish priest respond if Tucker Carlson asked for counsel on a “demon-attack”?

How the four strands of Anglicanism might respond to a Carlson‑style “demon attack” in...

Did a Demon Maul Tucker Carlson? Four Anglican Answers

https://youtu.be/LDIqoPKNhgo Tucker Carlson says a demon clawed him in his sleep. Anglicans should pause before...

Pittsburgh dean resigns as new charges filed

A Statement from Bishop Ketlen Solak Dear friends at Trinity Cathedral, I am writing with an...