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By Heather Hahn*
6:00 P.M. EST May 2, 2011 | ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. (UMNS)
Bishop Larry M. Goodpaster urges the Council of Bishops to take a greater role in shaping the denomination’s future.
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United Methodist bishops must take a greater leadership role in shaping
the church’s future, the president of the Council of Bishops said today.
“Today, I want to invite you, my sisters and brothers, not simply to
lean but to lead into the future,” said Bishop Larry M. Goodpaster,
referring to his comment at a previous meeting that the bishops should
lean forward into the future, “to seize this moment to exercise our
corporate leadership to make a difference in the world – and in this
denomination we care so deeply about.”
But he acknowledged church leaders face a challenge in gauging what sort of guidance United Methodists need.
“No one wants autocratic leaders, but at the same time no one wants
indecisive leaders,” said Goodpaster, who leads the denomination’s
Charlotte (N.C.) Area. “No one wants leaders who have an agenda that may
drive an organization toward destruction, and yet everyone wants
leaders who cast a vision. How then shall we lead?”
He delivered his presidential address
to 113 of the denomination’s 230 active and retired bishops at the
United Methodist retreat center Epworth By The Sea, where John and
Charles Wesley once tried to minister to Georgia colonists. The future
founders of Methodism had a hard time in the New World.
Goodpaster was speaking during another challenging time, as
denominational leaders seek to address the impact of the world’s
economic crisis and The United Methodist Church’s decades-long
membership decline in the United States. Church leaders denominationwide
are discussing implementing recommendations from a Call to Action proposal that would restructure the church and increase accountability for greater congregational vitality.
Early bishop’s example
During this tumultuous period for the church, Goodpaster suggested
bishops use as their leadership model the first Methodist bishop in the
United States, Francis Asbury.
Asbury, Goodpaster said, exemplified piety, perseverance, servant leadership, pop-culture savvy and “brilliant” administration.
The Rev. Karen Greenwaldt (left), Board of Discipleship, and Nebraska
Bishop Ann Brookshire Sherer-Simpson use tablets to download material at
the bishops’ meeting – the group’s first paperless gathering. UMNS
photos by Heather Hahn.
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The pioneering bishop, who helped spread Methodism in the late 1700s and
early 1800s, knew how to connect with ordinary people and bring them
into Christian discipleship.
Goodpaster pointed to Asbury’s emphasis on people in addressing critics
who say Call to Action team members and other advocates of church
metrics “have crossed over to the idol worship of numbers.”
“We must constantly remind ourselves that it is not just about numbers,”
Goodpaster said, “but always about people, and about inviting and
nurturing them into a vibrant relationship with Jesus the Christ.”
As the council meets this week, Goodpaster said, “we will be invited to
think, talk, discern and perhaps even decide about an alternative design
for leading this branch of God’s church.”
Denver Area Bishop Elaine J. W. Stanovsky appreciated Goodpaster’s reminder of Asbury’s legacy.
The lessons from the past, she said, “give us the gifts that will lead us into the future.”
“We know in our bones who we need to be and what we need to do,” she
said. “We just need to listen and be as faithful to following
God as we can be.”
Voice of hope
Mozambique Area Bishop Joaquina Felipe Nhanala called Goodpaster’s address a “message of hope.”
Goodpaster concluded his address, perhaps fittingly for the Easter
season, by talking of Christ’s Resurrection. Goodpaster reminded the
bishops that in Mark’s Gospel, the disciples learned the newly risen
Christ was “going ahead” of them to Galilee. Jesus continues to go
ahead, the bishop said.
“I also have a hunch that we will never catch up with him,” Goodpaster
said. “That does not mean we do not try to close the gap between where
Jesus is calling us and where we might prefer to stay.”
*Hahn is a multimedia news reporter for United Methodist News Service.
News media contact: Heather Hahn, Nashville, Tenn., 615-742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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