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May 9, 2012

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Church Restructuring

UMNS Photo by Mike DuBose.

Delegate Joan Carter-Rimbach urges delegates to reconsider the elimination of the United Methodist Commissions on Religion and Race and the Status and Role of Women during floor debate at the 2012 United Methodist General Conference in Tampa, Fla. "Who will speak for me as a woman of color?," she asked.

I’ve read all I can find about the final, inconclusive, disturbing and yet almost liberating end to General Conference.  I wish I could have been there, but this way from the distance I was free to spend many hours in prayer for the situation.

The badly need restructuring just didn’t happen.  Huge, scary trust issues, or lack of trust issues, surfaced. Nearly half the delegates walked away saddened and defeated by the church’s continued focus on sexuality as the root of evil and sin rather than far more significant issues that permeate and hurt the witness of The United Methodiist Church.  Bishops gained power, rank and file clergy are learning that whille we still must honor our vows to go where ever we are sent, and while we must continue to offer prophetic voice and courageous leadership, there is no longer a reciprocal vow on the other end that our Bishops will ensure that we have places to serve.

Yet, there is liberation here.  This is the liberation of speaking truth and finding freedom in that truth.  After this GC, everyone knows that something must change.  The main, foundational item that must be addressed:  the issue of trust.  If we, as a group of people committed to the work of God cannot learn to trust one another with our huge differences, then we have lost our way and our voice.

I end these musings with a parable I wrote several months ago when I saw then the tendency to hide behind our procedures rather than to step boldly into Holy Truth.

May God have mercy upon us all.


                                                A Modern Day Parable

Jesus had just experienced a really busy day.  He’d healed some guy who had been unable to speak, freeing that dear person from being chained to silence by evil.  When the newly freed one began to speak, the crowds turned on Jesus, accusing him of being the Evil One himself!

Jesus explained to them that the very kingdom of God had come into their presence and invited people to be with him, to gather others as well.  He reminded them that God brings signs of grace through the strangest people, like the cowardly Jonah and even a very rich queen.

He insisted people examine themselves so they would really know if they were walking in the light or not. Sometimes what people think is light is really darkness.

While he was wrapping up his speech, a really, really important person in the religious community asked Jesus to dinner.  Jesus happily came, but then was immediately criticized for not following the exact letter of the law in The Book of Religious Institution Rules before sitting down to eat.

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May 9, 2012

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Restructuring

I was at Gen Conf 2012 as an observer to the General Administration Committee and I read all of their assigned legislation and watched them through long, long days of hard work.

The first restructuring attempt, the Call to Action (CtA) proposal was immensely restrictive, having a church of 12 million very diverse people run by a Board of 15 individuals, almost all from the U.S. It attempted to reduce the boards and agencies to committees of that board, and it had almost no representation from the Central Conferences, which is where the church is growing. Out of this, mostly by CtA people who were unhappy came something called Plan B, somewhat more flexible and inclusive but not much. The Methodist Federation for Social Action also created a plan, much more inclusive, with a larger governing board and significant participation from the Central Conferences.

The Committee labored hard, but could not find any combination that had enough support to pass. This was largely because the committee was packed by a very large number of delegates from the Connectional Table, who had produced the CtA plan and were, finally, unwilling to be flexible enough to work with others.

So, the committee could find no full scale or even skeletal restructuring proposal to bring to the plenary floor.

Meanwhile, many of the Boards and Agencies, seeing the handwriting on the wall had spent a couple of years considering their own structures, reducing Boards for more efficiency, and generally doing what boards ought to do every decade; that legislation was seen but not acted on, except for a very impressive set of new governance resolutions from United Methodist Women which passed without amendment or negative vote, which meant they went onto the consent calendar and were passed by the Whole GC2012 without further debate.

When the CtA and PlanB people saw the situation, they worked up overnight something they called PlanUMC, and somehow, despite it not being even seen by any committee or sub committee, got all 76 pages of it into the
Daily Christian Advocate for the Plenary session. That hasty plan, an attempt to save the restrictive structures of CtA and Plan B, is what the Judicial Council declared hopelessly unconstitutional.

However, don’t forget all those Agency revisions. They were presented and passed as a group, allowing the various church parts to work on and revise their agencies in ways they know best and return a much revivified church to General Council 2016 with a much larger participation by the Central Conferences.

This is not to say that some terrible things did not happen at GC2012, particularly in matters of the open and inclusive church and in the unbelievable vote taken on whether God’s Grace is available to all at all times, which apparently only 56% of the GC2012 believes to be true.

However, the restructure issue was not an unmitigated disaster, and in fact came out a lot better than perhaps we deserved. I have never been so close

Anne Ewing more than 1 years ago

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