Antje Jackelen, Bishop of Lund,
won 55.9% of the vote from the ecclesiastical college of the Church of
Sweden, which has 324 members. She will be the first female bishop of
the Lutheran church that calls about 2/3 of Sweden's population members.
She told news agency TT, "I'm a little dazed and grateful for the support I got."
Ordained in 1980, Jackelen noted that it wasn't that shocking for the
Church of Sweden to elect a woman to lead, as "We have had female
priests for over 50 years."
She's married to a priest, and has two
children.
"I've been out on the international scene a lot and I can see that
there is a curiosity about female church leaders. I have confidence and
that is also an asset," she told the BBC.
The new Swedish Bishop will have good company in the United States as
in August the Evangelical Lutheran Church of America (ELCA) elected Rev. Elizabeth Eaton as the first female Presiding Bishop.
Bishop Antje Jackelen will replace the current archbishop Anders Wejryd, who told TT, "It was about time."