Chattanooga Times Free Press

United Methodist conference seizes church assets in leadership dispute

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MARIETTA, Ga. — A regional governing body for a Protestant denominati­on has seized the assets of a large congregati­on in Georgia in a dispute over who should be the senior pastor.

Mt. Bethel United Methodist Church, in the Atlanta suburb of Marietta, has about 8,000 members and is one of the largest congregati­ons in the North Georgia Conference of the United Methodist Church. The conference said in a statement Monday that it was “acting out of love for the church and its mission,” The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on reported.

The Mt. Bethel church also has the Mt. Bethel Christian Academy. According to the statement from the conference, the title to the congregati­on’s real, personal, tangible and intangible property was immediatel­y transferre­d to the conference’s Board of Trustees, “who may hold or dispose of such property in its sole discretion.”

The statement also said the employment, instructio­n, activities and worship at the church and the school will continue “but under the direction and control of the Conference Board of Trustees.”

The North Georgia Conference and the leadership at the conservati­ve Mt. Bethel church have been in a dispute for months.

In April, the Rev. Jody Ray, who has served as the congregati­on’s senior pastor for about five years, surrendere­d his credential­s and said the congregati­on was taking steps to leave the denominati­on. At issue was the planned reassignme­nt of Ray, who was to be appointed to the conference staff related to racial reconcilia­tion. Ray contends he was never consulted about the move.

In a previous interview, Ray said the reassignme­nt could be due to the church not paying its full share to the annual conference for several years. He also thinks the congregati­on’s support of the Book of Discipline’s conservati­ve stance on the issue of homosexual­ity may have been a factor.

The Rev. Steven Usry was appointed “pastor-incharge,” beginning July 1.

Bishop Sue HaupertJoh­nson and the eight district superinten­dents “have unanimousl­y determined that ‘exigent circumstan­ces’ have threatened the continued vitality and mission of Mt. Bethel United Methodist Church,” according to the conference statement. “Given this determinat­ion, all assets of the local church have transferre­d immediatel­y to the conference’s Board of Trustees of the North Georgia

Conference.”

The conference said a decision could be made next summer about whether to close the local church.

In an April 26 pastoral letter, Haupert-Johnson wrote that the “reassignme­nt of a pastor is not done out of spite. The placement of a pastor is not done as a form of punishment. The reassignme­nt of a pastor is not designed to persecute.”

After the seizure of assets was announced, Mt. Bethel issued a statement saying Haupert-Johnson had failed to engage in the denominati­on’s consultati­ve process.

“While she claims she is acting out of ‘love for the church and its mission,’ enlisting attorneys and the courts to seize assets is a strange way for a bishop to show her love for one of the healthiest churches in her conference,” according to the congregati­on statement.

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