May 15, 2025
Emmanuel Church dedicated its third pulpit statue this past Sunday to the Reverend Dr. Suzanne Radley Hiatt, priest, theologian, prophet, professor, and advocate. Sue Hiatt was ordained as one of the Philadelphia 11 (July 29, 1974), and served as an inspirational mentor to many, including our rector.
Pam’s sermon on Sunday included examples of Hiatt’s devotion to equality and justice; as “bishop to the women,” Pam said that she was “pressing the Church to deeper inclusion and fuller love.”
It was interesting to learn that Suzanne Hiatt wrote about her connections to Pauli Murray, who discerned from our parish and became the first African American woman to be ordained in the Episcopal Church in 1977. In April 1970, they attended the Graymoor Conference, an important event in the history of women’s ordination, attended by about 60 women and numerous male supporters. Hiatt was one of the organizers and stalwart in her advocacy of the movement. Murray attended Graymoor after years of experiences as a civil rights lawyer, professor, and Women’s Movement activist. After the conference, Murray and Henry Rightor, a former lawyer and professor of pastoral care at Virginia Theological Seminary, studied the Church’s Canons and Constitutions. Their report presented their findings after the conference set the stage for persuasive arguments for women’s ordination.
Sue Hiatt’s admiration for Pauli Murray was expressed in an article she wrote in the Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion.* She noted that she learned a lot from delving into Pauli Murray’s writings about Pauli’s unceasing dedication to the pursuit of justice. Hiatt considered Murray a “foremother, not only to be proud of, but also to learn from and emulate.” Those who came before Hiatt’s generation “shook the foundations so that we could topple the walls.” Hiatt deeply admired Murray’s contributions: “Pauli believed above all in justice, and despite a lifetime of disappointments and tragedies, she never stopped seeking it. She just never quit.”
May we be inspired by the women who now live on in our sanctuary, and, as Pam said in her Eastertide sermon: “Arise, wake up, come alive to become who and whose you are called to be.”
*Hiatt, Suzanne, “Pauli Murray (1910-1985): May Her Song Be Heard at Last,” Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion 4 (Fall 1988), 69-73.
See also the chapter of the same title in The Spirit of the Lord is Upon Me: The writings of Suzanne Hiatt, ed. Carter Heyward and Janine LeHane (New York: Seabury, 2014) This compilation of Hiatt’s writings is a wonderful tribute to her.
—Mary Beth Clack, Mary Blocher, Cindy Coldren, Pat Krol, Liz Levin