Church Restructuring
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. (UMNS Photo by Mike DuBose.)
A friend of mine was a delegate to our Jurisdictional Conference this year. I was asking him about his experience and he vented about some of his frustrations. He said, “There was a point when people started to simply vote for minorities and not the candidate who had the gifts and talents needed by the church.” He went on to tell me that he had a conversation with another delegate from his conference about this issue. She called him out on his comment about gender and race. She was an older black women and he is a white young clergy.
His defense is, “For my generation we don’t see race and gender as the older generations do. We don’t get caught up in that anymore and we need to vote for who has the best talents and gifts.” I understand where he is coming from and agree with him. I think the younger generations, GenXers and the Millennials, see race and gender differently than those who grew up in the 50s and 60s. We have grown up being segregated and do not know a world without leadership of mixed races and with women in key leadership roles.
Have we moved beyond race and gender? As I appoint local church leadership in my Nominations committee I do have an eye out making sure there is equal representation of gender and generations, but that is not my main focal point. My main objective is to get people with talents, willingness and passion into the leadership roles that will move the local church forward and not prop up past agendas or “back to Egypt” mentalities. But then again I am a white male who turned 35 this year.
I am a firm believer in equal representation but let’s face it in the next decade or two we will become an even more white denomination (at least in my conference). Out of the 68 young clergy we have only one who is non-white and that person is Asian. We have no representation in our young clergy demographic of African American, Native American, Hispanic, or any other race that plays a major part in our local communities. In twenty years when one of these 68 young clergy is put up for nomination to Bishop they will have between 20-30 years of ministerial experience. They will have helped congregations through tough transitions and want the United Methodist Church to do what it can to be relevant and vital in this world. BUT they will be 99% white.
Have we moved beyond gender and race and/or should we? I would love to hear your thoughts especially if you are a minority in the UMC. Do you feel the same way or does that mentality seem like a thought from the majority to make ourselves feel better about ourselves?
The Rev. Jim Parsons is pastor of Trinity United Methodist Church in Thomasville, NC, in the Western North Carolina Conference of The United Methodist Church.