Photo by Laura Rossbert, Reconciling Ministries Network
Openshaw-Prince Wedding
United Methodist Bishop Melvin Talbert, center, marries Joe Openshaw, left, and Bobby Prince at Covenant Community United Church of Christ in Center Point, Ala.
Formal complaints have been filed against retired Bishop Melvin G. Talbert alleging “he has violated the sacred trust of his office,” said a March 13 statement from the Western Jurisdiction College of Bishops.
The United Methodist Council of Bishops on Nov. 15, 2013, requested the complaints be filed against Talbert, after he officiated at the union of two men — Joe Openshaw and Bobby Prince — on Oct. 25, 2013, in Birmingham, Ala., despite prohibitions in church law.
Before the ceremony, both Birmingham Area Bishop Debra Wallace-Padgett and the Executive Committee of the Council of Bishops asked Talbert not to officiate.
The Book of Discipline, the church’s law book, since 1972 has stated that all people are of sacred worth, but “the practice of homosexuality is incompatible with Christian teaching.” Church law bans United Methodist clergy from performing and churches from hosting “ceremonies that celebrate homosexual unions.”
The Council of Bishops requested that Germany Area Bishop Rosemarie Wenner, the council’s president, and Wallace-Padgett, who leads the North Alabama Annual (regional) Conference, submit the complaint.
The council also directed that the complaint against the bishop be “under the provisions of Paragraph 413 (of the Book of Discipline) for undermining the ministry of a colleague (Paragraph 2702.1f) and conducting a ceremony to celebrate the marriage of a same gender couple (Paragraph 2702.1b) within the bounds of the North Alabama Conference.”
But the March 13 statement from the council did not specify who filed the complaints or their contents. Neither Wallace-Padgett nor Wenner immediately returned requests for comment.
The news of the complaint against Talbert came the same week that the New York Annual (regional) Conference announced that it had resolved without a trial a similar complaint against the Rev. Thomas Ogletree, a former seminary dean who officiated at his son's wedding to another man.
Talbert on March 13 cheered that resolution as "an excellent outcome." However, he demurred when asked if he hoped for a similar resolution of the complaints against him. "You cannot impose what happened in one case on another," he said. "Each case stands on its own."
The complaint process is now before the denomination’s Western Jurisdiction, from which Talbert retired after serving as an active bishop from 1980 to 2000 in the Seattle and later the San Francisco areas. Church law requires that complaints against bishops be heard in the jurisdiction where the bishop is a member.
The March 13 statement said that in accordance with church law, a supervisory response has been initiated by Mountain Sky Area Bishop Elaine Stanovsky.
Stanovsky is the president of the Western Jurisdiction College of Bishops. She also leads United Methodists in the Rocky Mountain and Yellowstone conferences.
“Whenever a bishop receives a complaint, we keep faith with the guidance that we get from the Book of Discipline,” Stanovsky told UMNS in November after the Council of Bishops requested the complaints.
Paragraph 413.3b in the Book of Discipline, the denomination's law book, says a supervisory response is a review of the bishop’s ministry that “shall be directed toward a just resolution” of the complaint. "It is not part of any judicial process" that precedes a trial, the law book says.
If the supervisory response does not reach a resolution, the matter could potentially become a judicial complaint. The Discipline also calls church trials “an expedient of last resort.”
The supervisory team consists of two bishops working in consultation with one clergy and one lay member of the jurisdictional committee on episcopacy.
The supervisory team carefully maintains the confidentiality of the supervisory response, as guided by the Book of Discipline.
“We find that confidentiality protects the integrity of the process and provides the best hope of the parties reaching a just resolution and offering healing to the Church,” Stanovsky said in the March 13 statement. “We need the whole Church to respect the supervisory process and uphold it in prayer. Everyone involved takes their role very seriously and is working for a just, healing and faithful outcome.”
Heather Hahn is a multimedia reporter for United Methodist News Service.