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Nadia Bolz Weber

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Full Name
  
Nadia Bolz

Spouse(s)
  
Matthew Weber (1996-2016)

Education
  
Pepperdine University

Nationality
  
American

Citizenship
  
American

Name
  
Nadia Bolz-Weber

Siblings
  
Gary Bolz

Occupation
  
Role
  
Pastor


Nadia Bolz-Weber sitting down with her tattoos visible and wearing a black sleeveless shirt and eyeglasses.

Religion
  
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America

Books
  
Pastrix: The Cranky, Beautiful Faith of a Sinner & Saint, Cranky, Beautiful Faith: For Irregular (and Regular) People

Similar People
  
Rachel Held Evans, Phyllis Tickle, Brian McLaren, Krista Tippett, Tony Jones

Profiles


Children
  
Harper Weber, Judah Weber

Nadia bolz weber on faith


Nadia Bolz-Weber ( Born 1969 (Age 50) ) is a Lutheran minister and public theologian. She serves as the founding pastor of House for All Sinners and Saints, a congregation of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America in Denver, Colorado. She is also a two-time New York Times bestselling author.

Contents

Nadia Bolz-Weber explaining something while having a standing hairstyle and wearing a sleeveless shirt and a thick scarf.

Bolz-Weber is known for her unusual approach to reaching others through her church. Heavily tattooed, she is considered a "perfomative pastor". Her work in the church is considered part of "a new Reformation" by scholar and writer Diana Butler Bass.

Nadia Bolz-Weber posing inside a confession room wearing a black pastors outfit, a headband and a rosary.

Facts

She is a two-time New York Times bestselling author.

She grew up in Colorado Springs with a fundamentalist Christian family.

She started her own church in 2008.

She serves as the founding pastor of the House for all sinners and saints.

Nadia bolz weber accidental saints finding god in all the wrong people


Biography

Nadia Bolz-Weber posing while having a standing hairstyle and wearing a sleeveless shirt and a thick gray scarf.

Bolz-Weber grew up in Colorado Springs with a fundamentalist Christian family.

Nadia Bolz-Weber posing with her arms crossed and wearing a black pastors outfit, jean pants and a rosary.

In 1986, at age 17, Bolz-Weber started getting tattoos, and the ones on her arms mark the liturgical year and the story of the Gospel. Bolz-Weber briefly attended Pepperdine University before dropping out and moving to Denver. She says that she became an alcoholic and drug abuser and often felt like one of "society's outsiders".

By 1996, after 10 years, Bolz-Weber became sober and, as of 2016, has remained so for twenty years. Prior to her ordination, she was a stand-up comedian and worked in the restaurant industry.

In 1996, Nadia married Matthew Bolz-Weber, whom she had met while in recovery. They divorced in 2016. Together, they have two children, a daughter and a son.

Bolz-Weber felt that she heard the call to service in 2004 when she was asked to eulogize a friend who had committed suicide. In 2008, Bolz-Weber was ordained as a pastor. She started her own church, the House for All Sinners and Saints, which is often shortened to just House. One third of her church is part of the LGBT community, and she also has a "Minister of Fabulousness", Stuart, who is a drag queen. Her church is also very welcoming to people with drug addiction, depression, and even those who are not believers of her faith. Bolz-Weber spends nearly twenty hours each week to write her weekly ten-minute sermon.

Bolz-Weber speaks at religious conferences and is a guest speaker at other churches.

Books and writings

Bolz-Weber writes for Christian Century and Sojourners. In addition her books include Salvation on the Small Screen? 24 Hours of Christian Television, reviewed in Christian Century and The Daily Sentinel (TX), and Pastrix: The Cranky, Beautiful Faith of a Sinner & Saint reviewed in Publishers Weekly, Booklist, and Sojourners Magazine. In 2015 she released Accidental Saints: Finding God in All the Wrong People.

Media coverage

Bolz-Weber was profiled in a 2014 article in More magazine written by Julia Duin, which received a Wilbur Award from the Religion Communicators Council.

References

Nadia Bolz-Weber Wikipedia


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