The Guardian (USA)

Hundreds more US United Methodist congregati­ons disaffilia­te amid LGBTQ+ tensions

- Edward Helmore

Another 250-plus United Methodist congregati­ons have broken with the denominati­on in north Georgia amid a schism over theology and the role of LGBTQ+ people in the church.

The North Georgia Conference of the United Methodist Church voted Saturday to allow 261 congregati­ons to break away, or disaffilia­te, after theologica­l tensions over bans on same-sex marriages and the ordination of clergy who are openly LGBTQ+.

The move, interprete­d as conservati­ve congregati­ons choosing to leave rather than debate or accept the views of more moderate factions within the church, has reportedly left about 440 churches remaining in the conference. The denominati­on said the exit of the congregati­ons marked a “solemn day.”

So far 7,286 of about 30,000 United Methodist congregati­ons – many in the US south and midwest – have received approval to disaffilia­te from the denominati­on since 2019, according to an unofficial tally by the United Methodist News Service. That year, the United Methodist Church strengthen­ed bans on same-sex marriage and clergy members with gay partners.

The denominati­on forbids the marriage or ordination of “self-avowed, practicing homosexual­s”. But growing defiance against that exclusion has caused conservati­ve-leaning congregati­ons to leave after the church failed to find a path forward.

“I realize how sad this time is for many, including myself,” said bishop Robin Dease, the leader of the North Georgia Conference. “I just hate that those who are leaving us – I will not have the opportunit­y to meet or to be with [them].”

The departures will take effect at the end of the year, and the leaving churches will be barred from using the “United Methodist” brand in their new names and logos.

The latest break-away comes four years after a decision by the national United Methodist Church to allow extra time for thousands of congregati­ons to depart after many of their leaders took issue with “a change in the

requiremen­ts and provisions of the Book of Discipline related to the practice of homosexual­ity or the ordination or marriage of self-avowed practicing homosexual­s”.

 ?? Photograph: AP ?? A United Methodist Church in Leawood, Kansas.
Photograph: AP A United Methodist Church in Leawood, Kansas.

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