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A UMNS Report
By Kathy L. Gilbert*
3:00 P.M. ET July 18, 2012
More than 500 members of the 2012 Iowa Annual (regional) Conference
signed a “Do No Harm” covenant. Photo courtesy of the Iowa Annual
Conference, The United Methodist Church.
View in Photo Gallery
Rejecting the denomination’s stance on gay rights and same-sex
marriage were important issues for at least 15 United Methodist annual
(regional) conferences this summer.
United Methodists from Washington and the northern panhandle of Idaho approved legislation supporting the Marriage Equality Act.
The law was signed by the governor in February and would have made
Washington the seventh state to allow same-sex marriage. The law was
set to go into effect June 7 but Referendum 74, an anti-gay marriage
measure, got enough signatures to put the initiative on the November
ballot and put the law on hold.
During the June 21-24 meeting, delegates also approved a resolution
to address “a lack of congruence between the denomination’s hardened
stance against homosexuality and its historic affirmations of the
rights for all people.”
The Rev. Sandy Brown, pastor at Seattle First United Methodist Church, said the church’s stance is “wrong, stupid and evil.”
At the Iowa conference June 2-5,
more than 500 signed a “Do No Harm” covenant stating the
denomination’s top lawmaking body made decisions that violated John
Wesley’s first General Rule by failing to acknowledge that members of
The United Methodist Church are divided on homosexuality.
A second document, “Covenant of Conscience,” supports same-sex marriage.
Members of the Minnesota Annual (regional) Conference,
meeting May 30-June 1, voted to send a resolution opposing a proposed
amendment to the Minnesota state constitution that only a union of one
man and one woman will be recognized as marriage. The proposal will be on the November ballot.
“Hundreds of thousands of current and potential United Methodists in
Minnesota would benefit from equal protection of civil rights,” the
resolution’s sponsors said.
In the New York Annual (regional) Conference, some delegates were so
disappointed with the church’s decision not to change the Book of
Discipline that they were considering a study about leaving the
denomination. However, two proposals more welcoming to gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender persons were approved
in their June 2-6 meeting in Hempstead, N.Y. One calls for a study
committee for an inclusive conference and the other affirms the
conference’s historic commitment to the “rights and privileges of all
persons, including LGBT persons.”
The Rev. Mike Slaughter (front) and the Rev. Adam Hamilton speak in
favor of legislation that would have acknowledged that United Methodists
disagree on issues of sexuality during the denomination's 2012 General
Conference in Tampa, Fla.
A UMNS photo by Mike DuBose.
View in Photo Gallery
The Rev. Taka Ishii, a retired pastor in the conference, said the
basis of the New York petition was the amendment proposed to the 2012
General Conference by two megachurch pastors, which said the church was
in disagreement over the issue of homosexuality.
The proposal
by the Rev. Adam Hamilton, senior pastor of the United Methodist Church
of the Resurrection in Leawood, Kan., and Mike Slaughter, pastor of
Ginghamsburg Church, Tipp City, Ohio, was cited at
several conferences as a good compromise that failed during the 2012
General Conference in Tampa, Fla., April 24-May 4.
The United Methodist General Conference is the only entity that
speaks for the church and it meets only every four years in a global
gathering.
The United Methodist Church amended its law book in 1972, adding the
phrase “homosexuality is not compatible with Christian teaching.” At
every global gathering since, petitions to change that statement have
been offered and rejected.
“I was disappointed that General Conference could not even agree to
disagree,” said Bishop John Schol in his address to the
Baltimore-Washington conference. “I think there is a Christ-like path
that we, as The United Methodist Church, have failed to find.”
Differences on the ‘right thing’
The growing church in Africa had more delegates and added more
voices to the 2012 gathering than previous meetings. African delegates
joined with U.S. opponents to changing the church’s stance.
Representatives from Good News, an unofficial conservative caucus,
reviewing the 2012 meeting said, “It is grievous that General
Conference has become a place of such pain and protest. We do not take
their tears lightly. … We do not celebrate in their pain.”
Several weeks later, Good News took issue with a sermon by retired Bishop Melvin Talbert at the California-Pacific Annual Conference which he titled, “Do the Right Thing!”
Talbert, preaching the ordination sermon, recalled his own
experience as a young pastor as well as the recent history of the
church. He referred to a speech he gave at the 2012 United Methodist
General Conference where he encouraged 1,100 pastors who had signed
pledges to perform same-sex marriages in the normal course of their
pastoral duties to “stand firm.”
“In the name of Jesus Christ, I declare you to ‘take thou authority’
and ‘do the right thing.’ And remember this: You are called by God;
and you are confirmed and sent by your church. There will be times when
you will be called and challenged to choose between God and your
church because your church does not always ‘do the right thing.’”
In a June 29 editorial published by Good News, “The Sermon of
Division and Defiance,” the editors challenged Talbert’s
appropriateness to encourage new ordinands to defy church law.
“Friends it can grow tiring to hear the news that there are actually
United Methodist leaders who are actively being applauded for wanting
to instigate division and discord within our church. But we need you to
stand with us to do the right thing,” the article concluded.
California-Pacific, California-Nevada, Rocky Mountain, Desert Southwest and Oregon-Idaho conferences recommitted to their “We Will Not Be Silent” resolution made by the Western Jurisdiction in 2000 and updated in 2004.
The United Methodist Church is divided into five areas known as
jurisdictions in the United States while conferences outside the U.S.
are divided into similar areas known as central conferences. The seven
central conferences are Africa, Central and Southern Europe, Congo,
Germany, Northern Europe, Philippines and West Africa.
Three conferences in the North Central Jurisdiction — Illinois Great
Rivers, Northern Illinois and West Michigan — expressed sadness at the
actions of the 2012 General Conference.
In the Northeastern Jurisdiction, Greater New Jersey will have a
conference-wide “Day of Prayer & Healing” on Sept. 30 for those
hurt by conversations around human sexuality.
The Arkansas Annual Conference in the South Central Jurisdiction
committed “to approach with respect and humility the differences
faithful United Methodists have concerning the issue of homosexuality;
and to encourage a series of sacred conversations about human
sexuality, with a theologically diverse task force.”
* Gilbert is a multimedia reporter for the young adult
content team at United Methodist Communications, Nashville, Tenn.
Information for this report came from annual conference reports
submitted by conference communicators.
News media contact: Kathy L. Gilbert, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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