Leroy Charles Hodapp
Leroy Charles Hodapp distinguished himself as a Methodist pastor, district superintendent, Annual Conference official, and bishop of the United Methodist Church who was elected in 1976.
Birth and family
Bishop Hodapp was born in Seymour, Indiana, to Linden Charles and Mary Marguerite Miller Hodapp. Leroy Hodapp married Polly Anne Martin in June 1947; they have two daughters.Education
Leroy earned his B.A. degree from the University of Evansville, and his Bachelor of Divinity degree from Drew Theological Seminary. Bishop Hodapp also received several honorary doctorates.Ordained ministry
Leroy was ordained deacon in 1945 by Bishop Titus Lowe, joining the Indiana Annual Conference of The Methodist Church. Bishop Lowe ordained him elder the summer of 1947.Rev. Hodapp served pastoral appointments at the Orleans, Indiana Methodist Church; the Heath Memorial and Meridian Street Methodist Churches in Indianapolis, Indiana, and the First Methodist Church in Bloomington, Indiana. Between 1965 and 1970, Rev. Hodapp served as the superintendent of the Bloomington District, the Indianapolis West District, and the Indianapolis Northeast District. He then became director of the Conference Council of Ministries of the South Indiana Annual Conference of the U.M. Church.
Rev. Hodapp was a delegate to the North Central Jurisdictional Conference of The Methodist/United Methodist Church, and to the General Conference of the same. He held responsible positions in conference agencies, including chairperson of the Conference Board of Ordained Ministry. He was also a member of the Commission to Study the Superintendency during the 1972-76 quadrennium.
Episcopal ministry
Leroy Hodapp was elected bishop by the 1976 North Central Jurisdictional Conference. He was assigned to the Illinois episcopal area, where he served 1976–1984. He then became bishop of the Indiana Episcopal Area, where he served until his retirement in 1992.During his tenure as an active bishop, Hodapp served as president of the General Board of Church and Society of the U.M.C., and later as the president of the General Board of Global Ministries. The Hodapps retired to Evansville, Indiana, where they lived for several years, before moving to the Franklin United Methodist Community Home in Franklin, Indiana.
Hodapp served as the trial officer in church trials involving sexual misconduct. He presided over a famous trial involving then-pastor Jimmy Creech, who was eventually stripped of his clergy credentials for performing a same-gender union service.