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A UMNS Commentary
By M. Garlinda Burton*
7:00 A.M. ET March 7, 2013 | NASHVILLE, Tenn.
Bishop Joaquina Nhanala organizes Mozambican clergywomen at the February
2012 consultation at Africa University. Photo by Garlinda Burton.
View in Photo Gallery
I recently had coffee with a United Methodist clergywoman worn
bone-weary from battling the people in her congregation. Appointed
there last summer, she described an ongoing struggle between a new
pastor full of ideas and a congregation fearful of change.
Yet, it wasn’t managing institutional change that discouraged her.
Rather, she was stunned to discover that some members were kicking up a
fuss at having a woman as pastor, and that several laywomen were
leading the uprising.
Not a week later, I was in conversation with a group of laywomen whose pastor — a woman —
peppered her last sermon with derisive references to the “old-fashioned, fussy women’s organizations, like United Methodist Women.”
The laywomen were hurt that this clergywoman seemed unaware (or
unappreciative) of generations of UMW and forerunner agencies, whose
advocacy and action helped open doors and break through glass ceilings
for women clergy.
The national theme for Women’s History Month 2013 is “Celebrating Women in Science, Technology, Engineering and Math.” (Contact the United Methodist Commission on the Status and Role of Women for free, downloadable worship resources.) This theme got me thinking about interdependence.
In the world of biology and environmental science, interdependence
implies that each part of creation is vital and dependent on other
created entities to make the planet work well. Plants provide oxygen
for humans and animals. Rainwater from the sky nourishes living things
to grow and thrive. The land feeds us and offers space to live.
‘I need you to survive’
And so it is with we whom God created, including women of the
church. We are interdependent. The world works best when we interact
with respect and reverence for one another. The interdependence among
God’s people is summed up in the words of Hezekiah Walker’s gospel
ballad, “I Need You to Survive.”
God calls Christian laywomen and clergywomen, like all Christians,
to model the biblical reality that each of us has gifts. God calls all
of us to bring those gifts — and God’s people — together. Our
ministries and our message suffer when degenerated into misogynistic
clichés of backbiting and catfighting.
M. Garlinda Burton.
A web-only photo courtesy of
M. Garlinda Burton.
The good news is that many, many women do know how to work
together well, across lines of status, class and calling, and there are
sisters in The United Methodist Church who model interdependence at
its best.
Signs of hope are evident among sisters in the Philippines and many
parts of Africa. I recently attended the largest-ever gatherings of
United Methodist clergywomen from Africa and the Philippines — with
more than 300 women clergy and seminarians attending in each region.
Several women clerics from the South Congo Annual (regional) Conference
rose to thank then-laywoman Muginea Kainda, who made it her mission to
send as many South Congolese clergywomen as possible to the event by
spreading the word and soliciting funds from annual conferences.
In the Philippines, I talked to deaconesses and several laywomen
volunteers who had agreed to preach, teach and visit sick congregants,
so that their sister-pastors could attend the clergywomen’s
consultation. (The United Methodist Board of Higher Education and
Ministry sponsored recent regional gatherings of women in Africa,
Europe and the Philippines conferences).
The experience was especially meaningful for one Filipino laywoman
who visited a parishioner in the hospital. She told me, “I feel a
special call to support my pastor, who is a woman. Together,
clergywomen and laywomen will change the world!”
‘A threefold cord is not quickly broken’
Ecclesiastes 4:12 reminds us, “And though one might prevail against
another, two will withstand one. A threefold cord is not quickly
broken.”
I have a poster in my office that reads, “God has given us bread, wine and one another.”
The meaning of both bits of wisdom is clear: when we stand together
with each other and with the God who creates and sends us forth, we can
accomplish much more good than may be accomplished when we strive
against one another.
Justice and equal access for women — lay and clergy, in church and
society — have yet to be fully realized. Our goal of nurturing
disciples of Jesus Christ for the transformation of the world will not
happen until and unless women can strive together. It doesn’t mean
individuals won’t disagree or that all of us will think alike or act
alike. However, when we learn to respect and revere our interdependence
as sisters in Christ, we will move the church and the world that much
closer to valuing respect and justice for all women in all places.
A threefold cord is not easily broken. Together, with God nudging us
forward, laywomen and clergywomen, young women and old women, poor
women and rich women who are willing to transcend petty squabbles and
turf-tending will change the world.
May it be so.
*M. Garlinda Burton, a member of Hobson United Methodist Church in
Nashville, Tenn., retired last December as top executive of the United
Methodist Commission on the Status and Role of Women.
News media contact: Barbara Dunlap-Berg, Nashville, Tenn. (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.