Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Crisis over LGBT issues grips United Methodist Church

Leaders brace for departures after St. Louis decision

- By David Crary

The United Methodist Church’s top legislativ­e assembly convenes Sunday for a high-stakes, three-day meeting likely to determine whether America’s secondlarg­est Protestant denominati­on will fracture due to divisions over same-sex marriage and the ordination of gay clergy.

While other mainline Protestant denominati­ons — such as the Episcopal and Presbyteri­an (U.S.A.) churches — have embraced gay-friendly practices, the Methodist church still bans them, even though acts of defiance by pro-LGBT clergy have multiplied and talk of a possible breakup of the church has intensifie­d.

At the church’s General Conference in St. Louis, 864 delegates — split between lay people and clergy — are expected to consider several plans for the church’s future. Methodist leaders said they expect a wave of departures from the church regardless of the decision.

“I don’t think there’s any plan where there won’t be some division, and some people will leave,” said David Watson, a dean and professor at United Theologica­l Seminary in Dayton, Ohio, who will be attending the conference.

Formed in a merger in 1968, the United Methodist Church claims about 12.6 million members worldwide, including nearly 7 million in the United States. In size, it trails only the Southern Baptist Convention among U.S. Protestant denominati­ons.

The church technicall­y forbids same-sex marriage and gays serving in the ministry, but enforcemen­t has been inconsiste­nt. Clergy who support LGBT rights have been increasing­ly defiant, conducting same-sex marriages or coming out as gay or lesbian from the pulpit. In some cases, the church has filed charges against clergy who violated the bans, yet the UMC’s Judicial Council has ruled against the imposition of mandatory penalties.

At the heart of the ideologica­l conflict is an official UMC policy, dating from 1972, asserting that “the practice of homosexual­ity is incompatib­le with Christian teaching.”

One of the proposed plans, endorsed by the UMC’s Council of Bishops, would remove that language from the church’s law book and leave decisions about same-sex marriage and ordination of LGBT clergy up to regional bodies. This proposal, called the One Church Plan, would open up many options for those who support the LGBT-inclusive practices, but it would not compel individual churches or clergy to engage in those practices.

The proposed Traditiona­l Plan would affirm the bans on same-sex marriage and the ordination of “selfavowed practicing homosexual­s.” The plan would strengthen enforcemen­t of those bans, and set up procedures for churches and regional bodies to leave the UMC if they could not abide by those rules.

A third option would create three branches of the church reflecting the different approaches to LGBT issues. One branch would maintain the current bans, another would expect all its clergy and regional groups to support full LGBT inclusion, and the third would neither forbid nor require the inclusive practices. This plan would take several years longer to implement than the others.

Those three plans were developed over 17 months of deliberati­ons by a Methodist committee that was formed after conflict over LGBT policies boiled over at a General Conference in 2016. In accordance with Methodists’ long tradition of democratic policy-making, delegates in St. Louis will be free to revise any of those plans, or consider some alternativ­e.

The UMC’s Queer Clergy Caucus will be presenting what it calls “the Simple Plan” — which is even more LGBT-affirming than the One Church Plan.

Kenneth Carter, the Florida-based president of the Council of Bishops, is among a majority of the bishops supporting the One Church Plan, hoping it would limit any exodus by creating space for differing views on the LGBT issues.

“We’re better together than we are separated and fragmented, but I do understand that the forces that would separate us are very powerful,” Carter said.

Among the supporters of the Traditiona­l Plan is Mark Tooley, who heads a conservati­ve Christian think tank, and has long engaged in the debate over Methodist policy.

He believes a traditiona­list alliance of U.S.-based and overseas delegates will be large enough to outvote centrist and liberal delegates.

Unlike other mainline Protestant churches, the UMC is a global denominati­on; its greatest growth recently has been overseas. About 30 percent of the delegates in St. Louis will be from Africa — a bloc with relatively conservati­ve views on sexuality that in the past has supported the LGBT bans.

If the Traditiona­l Plan does prevail, Tooley says some liberal segments of the church — perhaps its Western U.S. district — might withdraw to form a new denominati­on.

In December, the Council of Bishops issued a pastoral letter expressing remorse that the buildup to the St. Louis conference has been hurtful to many LGBT people.

“Demeaning and dehumanizi­ng comments and attacks on LGBTQ persons in conversati­ons related to the upcoming February Conference are a great tragedy and do violence to hearts, minds, and spirits,” the letter said. “We commit ourselves to helping people who disagree with each other to have conversati­ons that include, honor, and respect people with different conviction­s.”

One of Glide’s former senior pastors is Karen Oliveto, who — after eight years at Glide — was elected by the Rocky Mountain regional body in 2016 as the UMC’s first openly lesbian bishop and is now based in Colorado. The UMC’s judicial council upheld the election result, while ruling that Oliveto’s 2014 marriage to a woman violated UMC policies for its clergy.

Oliveto hopes the delegates in St. Louis vote to end the LGBT bans; she’s unsure what would ensue if the Traditiona­l Plan prevails.

“What that means for us, I don’t know,” she said. “I’ll be praying very deeply.”

 ?? ERIC RISBERG/AP ?? The church has 7 million members in the U.S. Above, the Glide Memorial United Methodist Church in San Francisco.
ERIC RISBERG/AP The church has 7 million members in the U.S. Above, the Glide Memorial United Methodist Church in San Francisco.

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