Jamaica Gleaner

United Methodists edge towards break-up over LGBT policies

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TNEW YORK (AP):

HERE IS at least one area of agreement among conservati­ve, centrist and liberal leaders in the United Methodist Church (UMC): America’s largest mainline Protestant denominati­on is on a path towards likely break-up over difference­s on same-sex marriage and ordination of LGBT pastors.

The difference­s have simmered for years, and came to a head in February at a conference in St Louis where delegates voted 438-384 for a proposal called the Traditiona­l Plan, which strengthen­s bans on LGBT-inclusive practices. A majority of United States-based delegates opposed that plan and favoured LGBT-friendly options, but they were outvoted by US conservati­ves teamed with most of the delegates from Methodist stronghold­s in Africa and the Philippine­s.

Many believe the vote will prompt an exodus from the church by liberal congregati­ons that are already expressing their dissatisfa­ction over the move.

Some churches have raised rainbow flags in

a show of LGBT solidarity. Some pastors have vowed to defy the strict rules and continue to allow gay weddings in Methodist churches. Churches are withholdin­g dues payments to the main office in protest, and the UMC’s receipts were down 20 per cent in March, according to financial reports posted online.

“It’s time for some kind of separation, some kind of amicable divorce,” said James Howell, pastor of Myers Park United Methodist Church in Charlotte, North Carolina, who posted a video assailing the proposal for its “real meanness”.

The UMC’s nine-member Judicial Council convenes a four-day meeting in Evanston, Illinois, on Tuesday to consider legal challenges to the Traditiona­l Plan. If the plan is upheld, it would take effect for US churches on January 1. If parts of it are struck down, that would likely trigger new debate at the UMC’s next general conference in May 2020.

The UMC’s largest church — the 22,000-member Church of the Resurrecti­on with four locations in the Kansas City area — is among those applying financial pressure. Its lead pastor, Adam Hamilton, says his church is temporaril­y withholdin­g half of the US$2.5 million that it normally would have paid to the UMC’s head office at this stage of the year.

“We’ll ultimately pay it,” Hamilton said. “But we want to show that this is the impact if our churches leave.”

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