[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 105 (Thursday, July 14, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Page S4567]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
WELCOMING THE GUEST CHAPLAIN
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Mr. President, I am delighted to be here with my
senior colleague, Senator Jack Reed, to welcome Geralyn Wolf, the
Bishop of the Episcopal Archdiocese of Rhode Island, who shared with us
the prayer this morning.
I wish to share with my colleagues what a wonderful addition she is
to our Rhode Island community. She has served in Kentucky and in
Pennsylvania, but she has been in Rhode Island for many years and has
been devoted to our community, particularly to the needy in our
community, to the point where at one point she spent 30 days living as
a homeless person in order to see firsthand what the resources were to
support people when they faced the burden and the sorrow of
homelessness and to inform her actions as the bishop of our diocese.
She is keenly interested in the Sudan and works with priests who are
helping to bring Christianity to those areas as the vehicle for peace
amidst some of the worst and most horrific violence on the face of our
planet.
It gives both Senator Reed and myself great pride that she has come
down to Washington today to open the Senate. It is my hope, and I am
sure Senator Reed's as well, that during the course of our
deliberations today we will be informed by the hopes and the sentiments
and the confidence and the blessings she expressed.
I thank the Chair.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Rhode Island.
Mr. REED. Mr. President, I join my colleague Senator Whitehouse in
welcoming Bishop Wolf to the Senate today. I commend Senator Whitehouse
for his invitation. Bishop Wolf is not only a pastoral leader in our
community, she is also a great community leader. She not only preaches
the gospel, she lives the gospel.
As Senator Whitehouse indicated, she went on the mean streets of
Providence, and there are such streets in every town in this country,
to experience firsthand the travails and the troubles of people just
trying to get by. That experience informed her ministry and informed
her public positions, and we thank her for that. She has a global
vision as well as a vision in Rhode Island. That global vision is a
world inspired by American actions that is peaceful and progressive and
finds opportunity for all.
So on behalf of the people of Rhode Island, I wish to thank her for
her service, and I thank her especially for the grace she has brought
to us today and has brought the State of Rhode Island as a result of
her service.
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