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By Heather Hahn*
7:00 P.M. EST May 3, 2011 | ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. (UMNS)
The Rev. Stephen J. Sidorak Jr. (left) speaks with retired Bishop
William B. Oden. Oden, a member of the bishops' Ecumenical Task Force,
presented to his fellow bishops the recommendation to fold Sidorak's
agency into the Council of Bishops. A UMNS photo by Heather Hahn.
View in Photo Gallery
United Methodist bishops have voted overwhelmingly to support
folding the denomination’s ecumenical agency and its work into the
Council of Bishops.
The May 2 vote came at the urging of the Rev. Stephen J. Sidorak Jr., the top executive of the agency, the United Methodist Commission on Christian Unity and Interreligious Concerns.
Under the proposal, the agency would cease to exist as a separate
entity, and its staff members would work for the council as part of the
newly created Office of Christian Unity and Interreligious
Relationships. The proposal also calls for transforming the commission’s
38-member board of directors into a 15-member oversight group that
includes laity and clergy.
The proposal does not call for a reduction of the agency’s four
executive staff and three full-time administrative staff positions.
“I am elated,” Sidorak said after the bishops’ vote.
Sidorak said the change will deepen the relationship between the
ecumenical and interreligious staff and the denomination’s bishops and
its ecumenical officer, a position now held by retired Bishop Sharon Z.
Rader. He also said it will help the ecumenical staff build strong
connections with annual (regional) conferences and give staff members
direct access to bishops in central conferences outside the United
States.
“We sure think that the Lord is calling us rather clearly to a
deeper interreligious engagement not only in the United States but
around the world,” Sidorak said. “Religiously motivated violence alone
is a serious theological concern that our church has to take much more
seriously than it is.”
General Conference approval
To take effect, the proposal needs approval from the majority of delegates at General Conference,
the denomination’s top lawmaking body, which next meets in 2012. If
the legislation passes, a discernment/transition team will develop a
plan to establish the new office by 2013 or 2014.
If General Conference does not approve the change, the commission
will continue to exist but with a board still reduced to 15 members.
Sidorak said reducing the size of the board will save the denomination
$500,000 in travel, meals and lodging costs every four years.
The bishops’ vote comes on the heels of the Call to Action Steering Team’s report, which the Council of Bishops endorsed in November. The report said the status quo of a shrinking and aging U.S. church is “toxic” and unsustainable.
It also criticized the sense of distance between the people in pews
and church leaders, particularly the denomination’s 13 general
agencies.
“That is a stark realigning of The United Methodist Church. That is the
kind of courage that we are inviting people all across this denomination
to have.” – Bishop John R. Schol
Among other recommendations, the report urged the denomination to
consolidate agencies and align their work and resources with the
priorities of the church and the decade-long commitment to build vital
congregations. In addition, the report said, the agencies should be
reconstituted with smaller, competency-based boards.
Washington Area Bishop John R. Schol commended Sidorak and his
commission’s “courageous step” in responding to those recommendations
by saying “we need to go out of business.”
“That is a stark realigning of The United Methodist Church,” Schol
said. “That is the kind of courage that we are inviting people all
across this denomination to have. That’s the kind of leadership that
we’re looking for in The United Methodist Church.”
‘Change is possible’
Rader, the ecumenical officer, was unable to attend the Council of Bishops meeting, but she had earlier shared her support for the change with United Methodist News Service.
“In light of the Call to Action and in light of 30 or 40 years of
history in the council, we need to organize ourselves for more
effective leadership,” she said.
Arkansas Area Bishop Charles Crutchfield shared his congratulations with Sidorak at the end of the session.
“This gives us a platform to say change is possible. We don’t have
to do things the same way we’ve always done them,” Crutchfield said. “I
hope it’s catching.”
*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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