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A youth choir from the Samoan Fellowship sings during worship at
Turnagain United Methodist Church in Anchorage, Alaska, in this 2000
file photograph. A UMNS file photo by Mike DuBose.
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A UMNS Report
By Heather Hahn*
1:00 P.M. ET February 16, 2012
Leaders of five groups that represent the denomination’s ethnic
constituencies have some suggestions for increasing the number of vital
United Methodist congregations.
They urge The United Methodist Church to:
- cultivate new leaders who can reach a racially diverse mission field and
- continue support for the denomination’s national plans for racial/ethnic ministries
The Inter-Ethnic Strategy Development Group made these recommendations in its second statement regarding the Call to Action initiative and the proposed consolidation of nine of the denomination’s 13 general agencies under a 15-member board. General Conference, the
denomination’s top-lawmaking body, will take up proposals to reorganize
the denomination’s general agencies when it meets April 24-May 4 in
Tampa, Fla.
The group’s statement released in September 2011
raised concerns that the proposed restructuring would minimize the
participation of people of color and work against the denomination’s
principle of inclusiveness.
Its February statement
maintains that earlier position but also endorses the Call to Action
charge “to mobilize the whole church for vital and effective mission”
and suggests thoughts on how to reach that goal.
“We affirm the Call to Action’s vigorous Call for Leadership
but would urge a heightened emphasis on differing dynamics of leadership
that will reach a more racially diverse world parish,” the statement
said.
Worshipers sing during a Wednesday evening gathering at Kindgom Builders
Center, Windsor Village United Methodist Church in Houston in this 2011
file photo. A UMNS photo by Mike DuBose.
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If The United Methodist Church wants to reverse decades of declining and
aging U.S. membership, the denomination will need to do more to reach
people of color, group leaders say. That means nurturing more leaders
who are ethnic or racial minorities. It also means doing more evangelism
among immigrant populations and making church more inviting for more
people.
“We seek a structure where racial ethnic persons are not invisible,” the statement says.
The inter-ethnic group includes leaders of the denomination’s five official ethnic caucuses: Black Methodists for Church Renewal, Metodistas Asociados Representando la Causa de los Hispano-Americanos, National Federation of Asian American United Methodists, Native American International Caucus and Pacific Islander National Caucus of United Methodists.
“We say we want to be diverse, but what are we showing the world? Look
at our leadership,” said Anne Marshall, chair of the Inter-Ethnic
Strategy Development Group. She is also chair of the Native American
International Caucus.
“You talk to younger generations and they’ll say it doesn’t matter what
someone’s color or race is, but then they’ll turn around and say, 'I
don’t know if I will belong because there’s no one who looks like me,'”
she added.
The five Unified National Plans for Strengthening Ethnic/Racial
Ministries offer tools to address this problem, the inter-ethnic group
said. The group urges that any restructuring plan General Conference
approves continue the work of the national plan.
Need for national plans
According to the 2010 U.S. Census, racial and ethnic minorities accounted for 91.7 percent of the nation’s population growth
during the previous decade. People of color are now the majority in
Washington, D.C., and four states — Hawaii, New Mexico, California and
Texas. Yet, the denomination’s General Council on Finance and
Administration reports that the church’s U.S. membership has come nowhere close to matching this diversity.
As of 2009, the U.S. lay membership was 91.2 percent white, 5.9 percent
black, 1.1 percent Asian, 0.9 percent Hispanic, 0.4 percent multiracial,
0.3 percent Native American and 0.2 percent Pacific Islander. The
denomination has about 7.7 million members in the United States.
The five national plans for ethnic ministries established by General
Conference have begun the slow work of drawing more people of color into
the pews, the inter-ethnic group leaders say.
These initiatives are the National Plan for Hispanic/Latino Ministry, the UM Council on Korean-American Ministries and the Asian American Language Ministry, all housed at the United Methodist Board of Global Ministries. In addition, the initiatives include the Native American Comprehensive Plan and Strengthening the Black Church for the 21st Century, both part of the United Methodist Board of Discipleship.
A petition before the 2012 General Conference would establish a sixth
such initiative — the Pacific Islander National Plan. The UM Council on
Korean-American Ministries is seeking to change its name to the Korean
Ministry Plan to reflect its global scope.
Among their efforts, these ethnic initiatives work with annual
(regional) conferences and local churches to help plant new
congregations and identify, recruit and train new leaders.
The plans have a track record of fostering “growth in membership and
worship attendance from our racial ethnic constituency and ensuring the
presence of a younger generation,” the inter-ethnic group’s statement
said.
Work of national plans
For example, the National Plan for Hispanic/Latino Ministries since 2009
has worked in partnership with 23 annual conferences to establish 57
new Hispanic/Latino congregations. The plan also has deployed 22
missionaries to assist 14 annual conferences in ministering to growing
Hispanic populations, said the Rev. Francisco Cañas, the plan’s
executive director.
Strengthening the Black Church for the 21st Century has concentrated on
leadership development and church revitalization. It has established 17
Congregational Resource Centers to sponsor training events and partner
with congregations in every U.S. jurisdiction. It also has launched a
coaching network to work with predominantly African-American
congregations.
The Korean plan since 2009 has started 23 new congregations and trained
1,000 people in small-group ministry, says the Rev. Paul Hak-Soon Chang,
the plan’s executive director. According to the Call to Action research, small groups are among the drivers of vital congregations.
The Rev. Jonathan S. Lee, senior pastor of Holliston United Methodist
Church in Pasadena, Calif., credits the Korean initiative with helping
his 600-member multiracial congregation to plant a new Korean-American
United Methodist congregation across the country in Hicksville, N.Y. The
national plan provided financial support. The 5-year-old New York Dream
Church now has an average weekly attendance of 50 people.
“I hope and I pray the national plan will continue so they can impact
not only the Korean-American church but also help develop the
second-generation leaders,” Lee said.
The Asian American Ministry Plan in 2009-11 started 12 new congregations
and led 13 annual training events in Asian languages for Cambodian,
Vietnamese, Hmong, Chinese, Filipino, South Asian and Lao laity and
pastors.
Many Asian-American immigrants to the United States “first came to know Christ in refugee camps through Methodist
missionaries,” said the Rev. Nam-Jin “N.J.” Jun, the plan’s executive director.
However, in earlier decades, few United Methodists reached out to these
recent arrivals. “That’s why we as a general church need to show to
Asian Americans, who are still coming in as immigrants, that we welcome
them,” he said.
Such a welcome requires establishing places where immigrants can worship
with people who share their language and a connection to home, he said.
The Korean and Asian-American initiatives also help develop global
partnerships between U.S. congregations and United Methodist missions
around the globe.
“All these hyphenised-Americans living in this country have very close
and strong ties with friends and relatives back home because most are
immigrants or refugees,” Jun said. “So they evangelize them … and they
start mission partnerships.”
Concerns about restructuring
The ethnic caucus leaders consulted with the leaders of the national
plans in drafting their statement. Leaders of the plans said they are
concerned because they received little or no consultation about the new
structure proposed by the Interim Operations Team, which developed the
restructure proposal endorsed by the Connectional Table and Council of
Bishops. The Connectional Table drafted the legislation.
“We don’t know where we fit,” said the Rev. Fred A. Allen, national
director of Strengthening the Black Church for the 21st Century. “We
have not been convinced that the proposed restructure will either help
or hurt where we are as the national plans.”
Retired Bishop Roy I. Sano, a signer of the inter-ethnic group statement
and member of the National Federation of Asian American United
Methodists, was even more pointed.
“The color blindness in the (Interim Operations Team) and (Call to
Action) diverts us from the most pervasive missional challenges and
opportunities in the massive global migration of people different from
ourselves inundating our neighborhoods in the U.S. and in regions
abroad,” he said.
Neil M. Alexander, president of the United Methodist Publishing House,
and Illinois Area Bishop Gregory V. Palmer have been leaders throughout
the Call to Action process. They said in a joint statement that they
have proposed “no retreat whatsoever” from the denomination’s commitment
to diversity.
“We expect diversity in the governing bodies and staff would be
continued and expanded going forward,” their joint statement said, “that
the effective ministries of the national plans would be ongoing and, in
fact, enhanced by consolidating the program services and resourcing of
the general church.”
The Rev. Jorge Mayorga Solis, a district superintendent in the Wisconsin
Annual (regional) Conference, said the National Plan for
Hispanic/Latino Ministries’ partnership with his conference has led in
the past 20 years to 13 new predominantly Hispanic congregations and at
least 600 new United Methodists.
“Any restructuring at General Conference should not take away the
national plans,” he said. “They are providing a methodology and tools
for ministry.”
*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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