Goodpaster was elected to the
episcopacy 13 July 2000 by the Southeastern Jurisdictional Conference of the U.M.C., the first U.M. bishop elected that year. He was assigned to the
Alabama-West
Florida Episcopal Area (the Alabama-West Florida Annual Conference) 14 July 2000. He was consecrated a bishop at a Service of Consecration held at
Lake Junaluska, North Carolina, 15 July 2000. As a bishop he served on these U.M. General Agencies: General Board of Church and Society (2000–04), General Board of Global Ministries (2004–08), and as president of the U.M. Development Fund Board of Directors. He also serves as president of the board of JustPeace: Center for Mediation and Conflict Transformation,
Washington, D.C. Goodpaster is on the board of trustees of Huntington College, Birmingham-Southern College, and
Emory University (
Atlanta, Georgia). Additional interests include service as with
United Methodist Volunteers in Mission in trips to
Jamaica and
Russia;
Habitat for Humanity, and
Rotary International. Goodpaster was unanimously elected April 19, 2008 to lead the United Methodist Church's Council of Bishops in two years. His tenure will begin in 2010 at the conclusion of the presidency of Iowa Bishop Gregory Palmer, who will assume the presidency from Bishop Janice Riggle Huie during the 2008 General Conference this spring. Goodpaster was the bishop for the
Western North Carolina Conference of The United Methodist Church. The assignment was announced Friday evening July 18, 2008, at the Southeastern Jurisdictional Conference meeting at Lake Junaluska, N.C. He succeeded Bishop J. Lawrence McCleskey, who retired August 31, 2008. Goodpaster returned to Candler School of Theology in September of 2016 to serve as the Bishop-in-Residence, following Bishop Woodie W. White. He retired from this position at the end of the 2023-2024 academic term. ==Political activity==