For more than 20 years, Dr. Marisa Werner has cared for bodies as a pediatrician.
Last month, she was appointed to care for souls, too.
On July 22, Werner, 53, became the Rev. Marisa Werner, a priest for Saint Michael the Archangel, a local parish that is part of the Ecumenical Catholic Communion.
鈥淚 grew up with a sense of vocation,鈥 the new priest says. 鈥淚 grew up in a family with lots of vocational and religious life.鈥
Growing up in Maryland, she served as an acolyte in the Roman Catholic Church, aware of the tension between the church鈥檚 prohibition of female priests and her own growing interest in religious service. As a young girl, she wrote the bishop of her diocese to ask that girls be allowed to serve as acolytes. She remembers five girls, including herself, in the acolyte class.
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Still, she was not allowed to serve as an acolyte for her uncle鈥檚 deacon ordination because she was a girl. That did not sway her from service, and she began volunteering as a lector at the age of 13 when she aged out of the acolyte role.
Because of her awareness of the conflict between calling and convention, it wasn鈥檛 until around 2009 that she decided to heed the call.
鈥淚 became a pediatrician, but this sense of vocation has stayed with me, and I decided at some point to say yes to it instead of continuing to struggle with the incongruence of it,鈥 she says.
Bishop Francis Krebs, presiding bishop of the Ecumenical Catholic Communion, says the communion is part of a strain of Catholicism that broke off from Rome. While the liturgy may be familiar to Roman Catholics, the ECC differs in other ways.
It respects the pope but doesn鈥檛 consider him infallible, emphasizes lay people in church governance and takes a different stance from Roman Catholicism on what Krebs calls 鈥渋nclusion issues.鈥
鈥淲e include women, we include gays and lesbians and divorced and remarried persons,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e have married priests.鈥
Before finding the ECC, Werner spent time in other denominations, including the Episcopal Church and the United Church of Christ. But always, she held Catholicism dear.
Werner graduated from medical school at the University of Maryland in 1990. During her residency, she became connected with the Indian Health Service, a link that would bring her to work with the San Carlos Apache Nation in 蜜柚直播 in 1994. That connection with the Indian Health Service eventually brought her to 蜜柚直播 in 2001 to work with the Tohono O鈥檕dham Nation as a pediatrician in Sells, now mostly in outpatient clinics.
鈥淭he challenges there are the challenges that the people you are working with are facing,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey are challenges common to rural health, things like internet access and access to transportation.鈥
Dr. Stephen Metz, a pediatric hospitalist at Banner-University Medical Center 蜜柚直播, has known Werner since her Baltimore days.
鈥淚 think that what people notice about her is that she鈥檚 very caring,鈥 Metz says. 鈥淪he鈥檚 not rushed. She doesn鈥檛 get angry. She listens and she really gets to know the full scope of patients, and that鈥檚 really important in Indian Health Service.鈥
Werner says she mostly works 10-hour shifts, four days a week, allowing her to also raise her teenage daughter.
Her work as a pediatrician will continue even as she steps into the priesthood, which is a volunteer position.
Having another priest at the church means that the Rev. Delores Kropf, the pastor at Saint Michael the Archangel, will be able to step away, leaving the congregation with continuity, especially when she retires, 鈥渉opefully down the road a long ways.鈥
鈥淲hen anybody comes to church for the first time, she鈥檚 probably one of the first ones at the door to say welcome,鈥 Kropf, 73, says. Currently, there are about 15 registered parishioners at the church that meets in the chapel of First Christian Church at 740 E. Speedway.
The ECC has about 40 communities, including a few in Poland and Belgium, Krebs says. There are also parishes in Tempe and Phoenix.
For Werner, working with sick kids and caring for a religious community aren鈥檛 so different.
鈥淚n Christianity, we say we are the body of Christ, and so both (jobs) are taking care of the body,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 work in a setting where there is an understanding of spirituality being part of wholeness.鈥
Krebs agrees.
鈥淪he鈥檚 a pediatrician who works with the native population, and so that just really is something that fits right in with our understanding of our mission, to be very social-justice oriented,鈥 Krebs says.
鈥淭he fact that she has taken her education and directed it toward people that many consider in the margins is inspiring.鈥
Werner has served as a deacon at the church for about two years. This year, she earned her master of divinity degree from Iliff School of Theology in Denver after starting the program in 2011.
鈥淚t鈥檚 coming home,鈥 she says of the ordination, pausing as emotion swells. 鈥淚 say it鈥檚 coming home to myself, but it鈥檚 more like coming home to who God calls me to be.鈥