- Hazen Graff Werner
Hazen Graff Werner (
29 July 1895 –5 September 1988 ) was aBishop of The Methodist Church and TheUnited Methodist Church , elected in 1948.Birth and Family
Hazen was born in
Detroit, Michigan , the son of Samuel Edgar and Emma (Graff) Werner. Hazen married Catherine Stewart, 22 May 1924. They had a daughter, Joy Ann, and a son, Stewart Hazen.Education
Hazen earned the
A.B. degree fromAlbion College in 1920. He was a member of theAlpha Tau Omega fraternity. Hazen then attendedColumbia University , and earned theB.D. degree fromDrew Theological Seminary in 1923.Ordained and Academic Ministry
He was ordained to the ministry of the
Methodist Episcopal Church in 1924. He served the following pastoral appointments inMichigan : Westlawn and Cass Ave. M.E. Churches inDetroit and the Court Street Methodist Church in Flint. At thesedowntown Detroit churches he first developed what he called a "Personal Trouble Clinic." This clinic was developed and operated in collaboration with apsychiatrist and a family visitor, and in co-operation with the Public Health Department, thePolice Department, a Medical Center, and other public agencies. Much of his subsequent writing was drawn from his experiences in that work. Rev. Werner was lastly appointedPastor of the Grace Methodist Church located at 1029 Harvard Blvd.,Dayton, Ohio .In 1945 Werner became the
Professor ofPractical Theology at Drew Theological Seminary,Madison, New Jersey . There he taught seminary students the principles of counseling and the basic truths of the emotional life. He also contributed articles on counseling and personal problems to leading religious magazines of his day.The Rev. Dr. Werner was elected a
delegate to General and Jurisdictional Conferences of The Methodist Church, 1944-48. He also was theChairman of the General Commission onWorld Peace and aNew world order , and was a member of the General Commission ofEvangelism and the State of the Church, both of the Methodist Church.Warner was married to the former Helen Elsea and had a son, Stewart.
Episcopal Ministry
Upon his election as a Bishop he was assigned to the Ohio Episcopal Area, where he served as
Resident Bishop from 1948 to 1964. From 1964 until hisretirement in 1968 he was based inManhattan as bishop of the church forHong Kong andTaiwan .Bishop Werner was a Mason and a member of
Kiwanis . He enjoyedhorseback riding as aleisure activity. He died ofheart failure at hisSaint Petersburg, Florida home.elected writings
* And We Are Whole Again.
* Real Living Takes Time, Nashville, Abingdon-Cokesbury Press, 1948.
* No Saints Suddenly, Nashville, Abingdon Press, 1963.References
* Howell, Clinton T., Prominent Personalities in American Methodism, Birmingham, Alabama: The Lowry Press, 1945.
* Short, Roy Hunter, Bp., History of the Council of Bishops of The United Methodist Church 1939-1979, Nashville, Abingdon, 1980.ee also
*
List of Bishops of the United Methodist Church
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