We United Methodists have challenging work to do as we distinguish between essentials and non-essentials and define what is important in our witness, what is indispensable in our mission, and how we’ll organize and govern our common life.
Following the debacle of the 2019 Special Session of the General Conference, a diverse coalition of United Methodists, shaped and animated by Methodism’s emphasis on God’s extravagant grace and committed to making the world more loving and just, declared an emphatic “no!” to the hurtful and punitive policies of the Traditional Plan.
Many who yearn for practices that assure the full participation of LGBTQ people in every aspect of leadership and ministry, as well as the removal of targeted prohibitions and penalties related to marriage and ordination, have formed alliances to elect sympathetic delegates and adopt clarifying resolutions at recent meetings of the U.S. annual conferences.
A number of annual conferences adopted resolutions calling for changes or the repeal of the Traditional Plan and pledging bold acts of resistance as they look ahead to the 2020 General Conference.
Our best estimate is that over 73% of U.S. delegates to the upcoming General Conference now embrace approaches contrary to the Traditional Plan. Accurate information about the likely voting preferences of delegates from the central conferences in Africa, Asia, and Europe will accumulate over the next months.
We don’t know if there will be sufficient changes in voting by these delegates to gain over 50% support and rescind actions taken in St. Louis. If not, the apparent chasm between the prevailing views in the U.S. annual conferences and some in other regions cries out for solutions that are more redeeming and faithful than narrow win/lose votes at the next General Conference.
As many have observed for decades, outcomes that hinge on such close votes hardly achieve our Wesleyan aspirations as the beloved community, and instead generate unhealthy wedges that alienate us from one another.
From our inception in 2017, the Uniting Methodists movement has been steadfast in understanding our calling and reaffirming our commitments to seek and build a robust unity. What we mean by unity is not an uneasy organizational calm, but a dynamic life and witness that assures mercy and justice for all while making room for diversity of experience, conviction, and conscience.
We share with many the deep desire to turn much of our attention to missional witness for spiritual and social transformation enriched by Methodism’s graceful evangelistic witness to the good news of Jesus Christ, and persistent investment in “doing justice” in places far and wide around the world.
How do we move forward?
Uniting Methodists urge all United Methodists to:
Let’s all commit to reshaping and rebuilding our historic and vital United Methodist witness.
Let’s engage each other with prayerful humility and with commitment to “first do no harm” as we grow in love of God and neighbor and affirm with the psalmist: “I run the same path as your commandments because you give my heart insight” (Psalm 119:32 CEB).