The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

United Methodist conservati­ves detail plans for a breakaway

- By David Crary AP National Writer

Conservati­ve leaders within the United Methodist Church unveiled plans Monday to form a new denominati­on, the Global Methodist Church, with a doctrine that does not recognize same-sex marriage.

The move could hasten the long-expected breakup of the UMC, America’s largest mainline Protestant denominati­on, over differing approaches to LGBTQ inclusion.

Due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, the UMC’s General Conference — at which the schism would be debated — has been postponed for two consecutiv­e years, and is now scheduled to take place in Minneapoli­s starting in late August of 2022.

The Rev. Keith Boyette, a Methodist elder from Virginia who chairs the Global Methodist initiative, said he and his allies do not want to wait that long to formally leave the UMC. They have asked that the topic of schism be added to the tightly limited agenda of a special one-day General Conference to be conducted online May 8.

“The church is basically stalemated right now,” Boyette said. “We don’t believe an additional year is going to be helpful for anybody.”

However, Louisianab­ased Bishop Cynthia Fierro Harvey, who heads the UMC’s Council of Bishops, said debate over a schism would involve “delicate deliberati­ons” and attempting to conduct them online in May “does not seem wise or ethical.”

If the issue is not addressed on May 8, Boyette said he and his allies would be willing to delay until the 2022 General Conference, but only if UMC centrists and progressiv­es remain committed to previous agreements about a breakup. Any lessening of those commitment­s might prompt the conservati­ves to bring the new church into existence, Boyette said.

Difference­s over samesex marriage and the ordination of LGBTQ clergy have simmered for years in the UMC, and came to a head in 2019 at a conference in St. Louis where delegates voted 438-384 to strengthen bans on LGBTQinclu­sive practices. Most U.S.-based delegates opposed that plan and favored LGBTQ-friendly options; they were outvoted by U.S. conservati­ves teamed with most of the delegates from Methodist stronghold­s in Africa and the Philippine­s.

In the aftermath of that meeting, many moderate and liberal clergy made clear they would not abide by the bans, and various groups worked on proposals to let the UMC split along theologica­l lines.

The most prominent plan, the Protocol of Reconcilia­tion & Grace Through Separation, has some highlevel support, including from the Council of Bishops and from the Global Methodist group. Under the protocol, conservati­ve congregati­ons and regional bodies would be allowed to separate from the UMC and form a new denominati­on. They would receive $25 million in UMC funds and be able to keep their properties.

On a new website launched Monday, the Global Methodist organizers said the new denominati­on would allow women to serve at all levels and seek a membership that is “ethnically and racially diverse.”

Regarding LGBTQ issues, organizers said the denominati­on would adhere to “the traditiona­l understand­ing of Christian marriage as a covenant between a man and a woman and as God’s intended setting for human sexual expression.”

Bishop Karen Oliveto of the UMC’s Mountain Sky region — who in 2016 became the UMC’s first openly lesbian bishop — said in an email that “it is heartbreak­ing when the Body of Christ fragments itself.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/CHARLIE RIEDEL, FILE ?? A gay pride rainbow flag flies along with the U.S. flag April 19, 2019, in front of the Asbury United Methodist Church in Prairie Village, Kan.
AP PHOTO/CHARLIE RIEDEL, FILE A gay pride rainbow flag flies along with the U.S. flag April 19, 2019, in front of the Asbury United Methodist Church in Prairie Village, Kan.

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