General Conference 2012

Young adults + social media = future UMC

3:00 P.M. ET Monday, May 21, 2012



Technology was evident everywhere at the 2012 United Methodist General Conference in Tampa, Fla. A visitor uses her iPad to catch the action on the floor. A UMNS photo by Kathleen Barry.
Technology was evident everywhere at the 2012 United Methodist General Conference in Tampa, Fla. A visitor uses her iPad to catch the action on the floor. A UMNS photo by Kathleen Barry. View in Photo Gallery

In the twittersphere, young adults are holy conferencing and dreaming of a better church in the aftermath of The United Methodist 2012 General Conference — all in 140 characters or less.

A tweetup to chat about the worldwide assembly happened May 14. More than 150 people came up with more than a thousand dreams for the future of the denomination.

Two young pastors under 35 organized the social media chat. They were Rev. Becca Clark, an ordained elder in the New England Annual (regional) Conference and pastor of Trinity United Methodist Church in Montpelier, Vt.; and the Rev. Jeremy Smith, an ordained elder in the Oklahoma Annual Conference and associate pastor of First United Methodist Church in Checotah, Okla.

Both Smith and Clark attended General Conference, and both had some positive and negative experiences.

Smith said #DreamUMC is a grassroots effort to engage young adults and others who felt disenfranchised by the actions/inaction of the denomination’s top lawmaking body April 23-May 4 in Tampa, Fla. The next tweetup is scheduled at 9 p.m. EDT May 28.

“We heard a lot of doom and gloom at General Conference, and in the world at large, about the decline of the UMC and mainline Christianity in general, and how the church is no longer relevant to a ‘new generation’ of young people,” Clark said. “DreamUMC proves that this is simply untrue.”



The Rev. Becca Clark participates in communion May 3 during the 2012 General Conference as part of a protest demanding a more inclusive church. A UMNS photo by Paul Jeffrey.
The Rev. Becca Clark participates in Communion May 3 during the 2012 General Conference as part of a protest demanding a more inclusive church. A UMNS photo by Paul Jeffrey. View in Photo Gallery

Still ‘pain, confusion’

Smith said he was surprised by the raw nature of the comments.

“There’s still a lot of pain, confusion and dissonance even 10 days after General Conference. But there is also a lot of resilient hope that refuses to stop loving a church that in some areas seems out of touch with reality. This interplay of fidelity with accountability will be a dynamic part of young people’s experience in the coming four years,” he said.

Participants at the tweetup were asked three questions:

  • What did you learn/take away from GC2012?
  • How has this new knowledge changed your Dream (vision or hope) for the UMC?
  • What’s one achievable change that would make the UMC a bit closer to the church you dream about?

A compilation of responses are posted on DreamUMC’s Facebook page.

The answers ranged from optimism to disappointment to love for the church.

Answers to the first question: What did you learn?

  • That we aren’t as divided as we think (or even previous GCs), I was amazed at how many great people there were! :)
  • I learned that code words and christianese (holy conferencing, etc) mask some pretty horrifying ideas.
  • I learned that even if the UMC never changes, I will be completely content spending my life fighting for it to do so.

Answers to the second question: How or have your dreams for the church changed because of GC2012?

  • I dream of a church that is not a lie, truly opendoors, openminds, openhearts.
  • I also learned in order to move forward we have to be able to discuss w/o feeling the need to “change” the other person
  • Motivated me to work harder, be involved, get off the sidelines, stand up with all of my brothers and sisters.

Answers to the third question: What can the church do to be your “dream church?”

  • Launch hundreds of progressive new churches and change UMC demographics (OK, may take more like 8 years)
  • Cookies during Plenary
  • GC2016 via Twitter!
  • We need to sadly acknowledge our differences, part amicably.


Young clergy members take part in a question-and-answer session during the 2012 General Conference to express their concerns over young adults being excluded from discussions about proposed church restructuring. A UMNS photo by Mike DuBose.
Young clergy members take part in a question-and-answer session during the 2012 General Conference to express their concerns over young adults being excluded from discussions about proposed church restructuring. A UMNS photo by Mike DuBose. View in Photo Gallery

“I was pleasantly surprised that many of the comments were not just generally passionate, but some pointedly prophetic, and many practical and doable as action moving forward (looking toward networking, deepening connections, or drafting proposals and perhaps future legislative actions),” Clark said.

Clark and Smith said they hope for more ethnic and geographic diversity in the May 28 and following tweetups.

“Expansion of outreach to young adults in the central conferences is a high priority, and we are committed to involving the worldwide UMC from the beginning, not just tagged onto the end,” Smith said.

“Staying connected and focused keeps us practical and attentive to what can be done. I don't want to just talk about changing the church; I intend to do it!” Clark said.

*Gilbert is a United Methodist News Service news writer based in Nashville, Tenn.

News media contact: Kathy L. Gilbert, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.

© 2012 United Methodist Church
Follow us:

Original text