United Methodist clergywoman serves Baptist congregation
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A UMNS photo by Annette Bender The Rev. Betty Shirley, a United Methodist, is serving as associate pastor of Rutledge (Tenn.) Baptist Church.
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The
Rev. Betty Shirley, a local United Methodist pastor, is serving as
associate pastor of Rutledge (Tenn.) Baptist Church under the "extension
ministries" category. The 2004 General Conference permitted appointment
of local pastors to extension ministries for the first time. A UMNS
photo by Annette Bender. Photo #05-716. Accompanies UMNS #599. 10/24/05 |
Oct. 24, 2005
By Annette Bender*
KNOXVILLE,
Tenn. (UMNS) — The Rev. Betty Shirley uses the word “ironic” to explain
how she, a United Methodist, became associate pastor of a small-town
Baptist church.
Last
spring, the local pastor was projected for an appointment within the
United Methodist Church’s Holston Annual (regional) Conference, but the
appointment didn’t work out. Since all the other appointments had been
made, Shirley found herself without a church.
When
the senior pastor of Rutledge (Tenn.) Baptist Church asked if she would
consider joining the church staff, eyebrows surely lifted. The
significance was heightened when the Baptist congregation voted
unanimously to extend a call to Shirley, and Holston Bishop James
Swanson appointed her to the church under the “extension ministries”
category.
“It’s
rare,” says the Rev. Robert Kohler, a staff member of the Division of
Ordained Ministry at the United Methodist Board of Higher Education and
Ministry, in Nashville, Tenn.
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The Rev. Robert Kohler |
Although
the United Methodist Church has a long history of appointing ministers
to ecumenical, shared ministries, Kohler says he is unaware of any other
United Methodist clergywomen serving as pastors in Baptist churches.
“This may not be the only occurrence, but it’s fairly unique,” he says.
Shirley’s
appointment wouldn’t have been possible before the 2004 General
Conference, which permitted appointment of local pastors to extension
ministries for the first time.
“Prior
to that, you had to be an elder to be appointed to an extension
ministry,” Swanson says. The Holston Conference comprises east Tennessee
and parts of Virginia and Georgia.
Swanson
says he made the historic appointment because the Baptist congregation
asked, and because “I know (Shirley) wants to serve the church as best
she can.
“Not
only is this an affirmation of Betty Shirley, but an affirmation of the
quality of clergy that we give birth to in the United Methodist
Church,” Swanson says. “The barriers to progress in other denominations
are not as formidable as you might think. We can work together across
other denominations.”
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A UMNS photo by Annette Bender The Rev. Betty Shirley visits with Rutledge Baptist Church members at a covered dish luncheon.
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The
Rev. Betty Shirley visits with Rutledge (Tenn.) Baptist Church members
at a covered dish luncheon. Shirley, a local United Methodist pastor, is
serving as associate pastor of Rutledge Baptist Church under the
"extension ministries" category. The 2004 General Conference permitted
appointment of local pastors to extension ministries for the first time.
A UMNS photo by Annette Bender. Photo #05-717. Accompanies UMNS #599.
10/24/05 |
Shirley
greets worshippers as they arrive at the 11 a.m. Sunday service. She
prays during worship and visits parishioners on Tuesdays.
She’s clearly at home in Rutledge Baptist Church, because as she says, “I’m a hometown girl.”
“These are friends of
mine,” she says. She has lived in Rutledge since 1965, when she married
Wayne Shirley. Her husband has been a banker in town for many years, and
her son, George, is president of Citizen’s Bank and Trust.
Shirley
believes she is accepted in the Baptist congregation because of her
family’s long residence within the community. The Shirleys attended
Rutledge United Methodist Church for 34 years, until Betty entered the
ministry. She took her first appointment at Fowler’s Grove United
Methodist Church in June 2002. Rutledge Baptist is her second
appointment.
“They
know I am not there to make Methodists of them,” she says of her
current congregation. “We can do ministry together without being
identical.
“I
do watch myself,” she adds. “You won’t catch me preaching doctrine. I
am not going to preach that they’re missing the point on infant baptism.
I’m not trying to prove that women should be in the pulpit. That serves
no purpose. I’m here to preach the gospel of Jesus Christ.”
In fact, Shirley says she’s less willing to “push the envelope” than her senior pastor, the Rev. Kerry Layne Bond.
“It’s
true that few Southern Baptist congregations would have a female
pastor,” says Bond, who has a doctorate from Memphis Theological
Seminary and has served Rutledge Baptist for 19 years. “I suppose
churches in east Tennessee — both Methodist and Baptist and others — are
fairly conservative. There probably are few opportunities for women in
ministry. Our church happens to be one that’s open to women in the
ministry.”
‘Our own decisions’
While
some Holston Conference congregations still resist the appointment of
female pastors, the United Methodist Church has nearly 50 years of full
clergy rights for women under its belt. Baptist clergywomen do exist,
says Bond — primarily in large, city-based congregations — but they’re
the exception rather than the rule.
Rutledge
Baptist is not large or city-based. Founded in 1892, it has 30 to 50
people in worship each Sunday. The church is located behind the
courthouse in this small Grainger County town, within Holston’s
Morristown District.
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A UMNS photo by Annette Bender The Rev. Betty Shirley enjoys fellowship with her congregation.
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The
Rev. Betty Shirley, a United Methodist local pastor, enjoys fellowship
with members of the Rutledge (Tenn.) Baptist Church. Shirley was
appointed associate pastor under the United Methodist Church's
"extension ministries" category. The 2004 General Conference permitted
appointment of local pastors to extension ministries for the first time.
A UMNS photo by Annette Bender. Photo #05-718. Accompanies UMNS #599.
10/24/05. |
The
difference between Rutledge Baptist and many other Southern Baptist
congregations, Bond says, is Rutledge’s interpretation of Scripture. He
cites Galatians 3:28. “We believe in ordaining people who have been
called to ministry by God, whether male or female,” he says. “God
doesn’t make the distinction.”
Southern
Baptist churches call and ordain their own pastors, Bond explains.
“Baptist churches are autonomous. We make our own decisions.”
Although
he contacted Shirley after hearing that she wasn’t appointed to a
United Methodist church this summer, he emphasizes that calling her to
Rutledge Baptist was not his decision, but the church’s.
Bond
has only heard a couple of dissenting voices within his denomination. A
Mountain City, Tenn., congregation sent an e-mail to the Tennessee
Baptist Convention, complaining that Rutledge was “in error” for having a
female pastor.
A
fellow Baptist preacher later questioned Bond about having a United
Methodist clergy person on staff, but his question was based on a
misunderstanding that United Methodists receive salvation through works
rather than by grace, Bond says. “I corrected him on that.”
Bond
says he doesn’t expect any follow-up on the complaints. “The Tennessee
Baptist Convention and the Southern Baptist Convention are not in
authority over us,” he says. “They don’t make our decisions. It’s up to
us.”
A tremendous witness
Shirley
acknowledges that her appointment is a “wonderful opportunity,” but “I
have to be very careful,” she says. “I feel a heavy responsibility to
represent both my denomination and women at large.”
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Bishop James Swanson |
Although
she is serving a Baptist congregation, she remains “under the auspices
of the United Methodist Church,” Bishop Swanson says. “She is still
accountable to her district board of ordained ministry.”
Shirley
is serving as a “tremendous witness” for the United Methodist Church,
Swanson adds. “When people see quality ministry being done by our United
Methodist clergy, they want them to be part of their churches.”
Rutledge Baptist Church seems to agree.
“We’ll
try anything new,” a parishioner says good-naturedly, during a recent
Sunday covered-dish luncheon. “Betty is the best thing we’ve tried yet.”
“Betty
has an excellent reputation in Grainger County,” Bond says, over a
spread that includes the tomatoes for which Grainger County is famous.
“She has been faithful in her church work. She is a very giving person.
Now she feels called to join us.
“Even though Betty is United Methodist and we’re Baptist, we have enough in common to work together.”
The topic of Bond’s sermon that day: “unity.”
*Bender is editor of The Call, the newspaper of the Holston Annual Conference.
News media contact: Linda Green, (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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