Cal-Nevada center
The California-Nevada Conference center in West Sacramento, Calif. (Conference photo)
A Prickly Unity
There’s this perception that the entire Western Jurisdiction is this idyllic place of progressivism and rampant inclusion. While the latter is accurate to a degree, the former is not because there’s actually a lot of variety in the West. As we discuss the future of The United Methodist Church in the West, we see greater variety in the conferences.
A very public example of the difference came this month during annual conferences in the West. While the Greater Northwest conferences were passing disaffiliation study committees and openly debating withholding apportionment dollars, the California Nevada annual conference was adamant that such things were anathema. From the pulpit in the episcopal address to the ridicule of the will of the body in a press release, the California Nevada appointed leadership (ie. staff appointed by the cabinet and the Bishop, not elected as part of the annual conference representative leadership) re-stated their opposition to disaffiliating, and to even studying it. This week, they continued this opposition with the release of a six-point statement against disaffiliation and withholding apportionment dollars.
I’ll only include the bolded sections of each point with choice quotes, but you can read the whole statement here. The dot points in response are my own commentary or others’ quoted responses.
UMC frayed
Against Disaffiliation
#1: Does disaffiliation from The United Methodist Church fulfill the promise of the Wesleyan Spirit and Methodist Ethos? Cal-Nevada claims that:
Our belief is that it does not and if we are to embrace our General Rules and plant a stake in our connectional system, we must remain on the side of unity…Disaffiliation is contrary to every fiber of Wesleyan theology. As Wesleyans, ours has always been a dynamic faith not one of dogma and ideology.
- From the start, the document places connectionalism above justice, unity above integrity, and ironically places unity AS dogma: higher than anything else. If the UMC rescinded clergywomen’s rights or restructured the conferences based on ethnicity, would those be deal-breakers to unity? If those ARE reasons to study disaffiliation, then that would certainly call into question the value of LGBTQ+ persons to California-Nevada in comparison to those of different races and genders.
- Additionally, any Wesleyan Originalist scholar (who I argue with all the time) would tell you that separation is Wesleyan–schism is not. While we can debate whether we match Wesley’s concept of schism today, to call the AME, AMEZ, Nazarenes, Free Methodists, and other Wesleyans as “contrary to every fiber of Wesleyan theology”—that would be news to them! Heck, the Methodists started disaffiliation from Anglicanism before Wesley had died–that’s why WE are Methodists even though Wesley remained.
- We are a dynamic church that constantly binds and loosens the inherited faith. That’s why we reclaimed women’s ordination from the first century. That’s why we recast ethnic equality as central to the Gospel. And that’s why we are enmeshed in this conversation over LGBTQ inclusion: we are a dynamic faith, not one of dogma and ideology.
#2: How does disaffiliation fulfill our calling to leadership as a jurisdiction within the denomination? Cal-Nevada writes:
Some members of the Wesley Covenant Association, Institute for Religion and Democracy, and others have been planning this deconstruction of the connection for almost 40 years….facilitating THEIR exit should be the primary goal rather than having us waste valuable time and energy planning what is ultimately the will of the WCA and IRD. Remember, it was the Methodist Episcopal Church South that left the Methodist Episcopal Church.
Rev. Adam Briddell, pastor of First UMC in Eugene, Oregon, writes:
Yes WCA and IRD-minded communities have been pushing for disaffiliation. There will always be forces pushing for “schismatic endgames.” But when I look for an example to follow, I would rather look to the Confessing Church, that emerged in resistance to a “connectional” system that had been coopted by sin and death. Sure, the MECS left the MEC. But 80 years later, we are still inspired by the Confessing Church.
#3: How can the Western Jurisdiction best claim integrity as leaders in the denomination? Cal-Nevada responds:
Disaffiliation erodes the integrity of the West as a leader. Rather than functioning as a leader for the church, the West becomes a “leave-er.”…The question must be asked if the perception and the reality of the US church punishing the African church is what faithfulness looks like for the Western Jurisdiction.
- If the West chose disaffiliation as a trajectory, they cease to be concerned with leadership within the denomination and center themselves on their unique mission. That’s what it means! And if the West chooses to disaffiliate, then they ARE leading by choosing a path that more heterogenous conferences cannot bring themselves to do.
- Finally, was Richard Allen a “leave-er” in 1787 to begin the African Methodist Episcopal church? Asking for a friend.
#4: Is disaffiliation by the Western Jurisdiction a lifeboat to save the church? Cal-Nevada replies (in full):
Here the answer is a resounding No. As the weakest of all the jurisdictions, the West has been dependent on the connectional church for its survival. Loss of the connectional relationship will accelerate its decline. The primary issues facing the West in its disciple-making capacities and congregational vitality will remain whether we disaffiliate or not. We believe that full inclusion is a necessary, but not the sole component of healthy evangelism and growth.
- I’m afraid there’s nothing “resounding” about it as our connectional dependence is varied and amendable. For example, I’ve documented before how few church resources are developed by or with the West in mind (read articles here and here). Flip through any Cokesbury catalogue and you’ll be amazed at how many SEJ writers there are–UMPH is based in Nashville! Huh! So the amount of practical, useful, works-on-the-ground-from-the-west discipleship resources we get are small in comparison to the dominant Bible Belt resources.
- But I must ask: How will the loss of our connectional relationship with a global church (that finds its voice in our General Conference) accelerate our decline? In the WJ, we have churches NOW that are declining, and we have churches that are growing. How are our healthy churches made more healthy, or how are our struggling churches find new life, by being in relationship with a global connection that degrades the worth of LGBTQ+ people?
Finally, Rev. David Wright in Washington state writes:
“We believe that full inclusion is a necessary, but not the sole component of healthy evangelism and growth.” – when you see the “but” after full inclusion, especially when your connection fails to practice anything close to full inclusion, you’ve just expressed one of the major barriers you have to vitality and health.
In summary, disaffiliation must be studied and examined to see if it is a viable path, not dismissed out of hand—and for an annual conference representative body to approve such examinations—and then have them be dismissed by executive action—is a disturbing development.
Coins
Photo Courtesy of Jeremy Smith
Withholding Apportionments
The second section of the letter dealt with the question of withholding apportionments, our assigned church tithes to support the connection. This section is much more nuanced than the first, and bears further discussion.
Is non-payment of General and Jurisdictional Apportionments an effective strategy for change? Cal-Nevada responds:
Whether intended or not, non-payment inflicts financial and other forms of punishment on the Central Conferences, the entire connection, and those beyond ourselves whom we are called to serve. It is a clear violation of our first General Rule of “Do no harm.” This action is a misdirection of our pain that evades any notion of a redemptive outcome…
- This is a good point. But likewise, by giving to a system that is actively doing harm to our LGBTQ+ siblings, we are complicit and participating in that harm. It also violates our first General Rule of “Do no harm.” So both scenarios cause harm: withholding doesn’t focus the protest on those responsible, and paying allows those who are responsible to continue unabated. That doesn’t mean we stop finding ways through it.
- This makes a mountain out of a molehill as the annual conference will to actually do this is low. I attempted three different ways in one Greater Northwest conference to change how the conference handles apportionments. It was voted down or out all three times. So the conversation is important but the will to actually reduce our obligations is just not present enough to validate such opposition. While local churches can make these choices, because annual conferences are unwilling to honor local church choices, apportionments will continue to be paid.
Does the withholding of General and Jurisdictional apportionments create new expressions of justice across the life of the church? Cal-Nevada responds:
To function under the assumption that the Central Conferences are completely beholden to the US church is a de facto admission of a neo-colonial posture. In addition, attempting to control Central Conferences through withholding funds is manipulative and coercive. In fact, this withholding is primarily expressed in Caucasian congregations whose perception is that their entitlement to control others with money is an expression of white privilege…We seek to create genuine relationships with our Central Conference brothers and sisters rather than simply leverage them, for any purpose, using financial means.
- There’s a lot a truth here, as the UMC is so enmeshed in white supremacy that it pits marginalized groups against each other—in this case, minority progressives/LGBTQ persons and African delegates. So long as we buy the narrative we are hopelessly opposed to each other, we will not create the unity we seek to oppose white supremacy effectively.
- That said, having been in them, many of these conversations are not focused on the past. By seeking to withhold our giving to the global church, we are NOT trying to “control Central Conferences” —we are trying to avoid actively contributing to the harm being done to our LGBTQ+ siblings. Intent and effect, of course, are not always synonymous.
- There’s a chance that redirecting money can actively counter the sin (properly named) within the church, but that will take more discernment and prayer and confession than changing a line item on the budget. If our sights are set on the future with equity, then deciding how to use our money is a step towards that equity and a relationship based on mutual care, not manipulation—but it cannot be done outside of the context of confession and mutuality.
In the end, it is circular. If you withhold apportionments, you engage in neocolonialist behavior. If you pay your apportionments, you support our neocolonial structures. I don’t know the way out of this catch-22, but I know shutting down the conversation and shaming others is not the way forward because both produce harm and both produce possibilities, so let’s keep talking about it.
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Rainbow blooms
A thousand blooms!
The next 10 months are critical for United Methodists worldwide, but especially in the simultaneously vulnerable and privileged Western Jurisdiction.
- To oppose a special Jurisdictional Conference because it might be “about disaffiliation” is to deny the West an opportunity to weigh the options, and, at the very least, be ready for General Conference.
- To allege ethnocentrism as motivations for the withholding of apportionments lacks sufficient power analysis in The United Methodist Denomination.
- In short, this action by the California Nevada annual conference leadership does more harm than good to the conversation of the West’s future. I hope they are more attentive to their constituency in the future.
May we all be better about honoring one another’s arguments and perceptions as we in the West will be stuck with each other, no matter which direction General Conference goes. At least, that’s my hope!
Your turn
Thoughts?
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