Delegates fund action plan for town, country ministries May 1, 2004 By Linda Green PITTSBURGH
(UMNS) - In an effort to stem the decline of United Methodist rural
churches, delegates to the denomination’s top legislative body voted May
1 to financially undergird town and country ministries. Delegates to the 2004 General Conference adopted a $425,000 budget to strengthen rural congregations. The
2000 General Conference adopted a foundation for Town & Country
Ministries, called "Born Again in Every Place," and requested that an
action plan be developed over the next four years. The delegates to the
2004 assembly gave the support to implement the plan because rural
United Methodist churches are more than one-third of the denomination’s
membership, and those congregations account for half of the overall
membership loss in recent decades. By
approving the budget, the delegates gave permission to the
denomination’s National Comprehensive Plan for Town & Country
Ministries to develop, support and affirm effective ministries in rural
cultures and contexts for the next four years. The plan will also assist
in developing, strengthening and sustaining effective leadership for
town and country ministries. Town & Country Ministries is a program
of the United Methodist Board of Global Ministries. Rural
congregations and country ministries are at the center of mission in
the church, said the Rev. Edward Kail, speaking for the funding. "I
believe in the renewal of the church in every place," the Gilmore City,
Iowa, pastor said. "I believe in the renewal that this (plan) would
have throughout Methodism." The
plan supports developing educational opportunities for clergy and lay
leadership because licensed local pastors and lay speakers are
increasingly leading town, country and rural congregations. Green is a United Methodist News Service news writer.
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