The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

United Methodist churches leaving conference

Special session for North Ga. churches who want to disaffilia­te expected.

- By Shelia Poole shelia.poole@ajc.com

Delegates to the South Georgia Conference of the United Methodist Church voted Sunday to let 193 churches leave the second-largest Protestant denominati­on.

By contrast, as part of the continued splinterin­g of the denominati­on, the larger North Georgia Conference, is still deciding whether to appeal a Cobb County Superior Court’s ruling that it could not stand in the way of churches who want to vote on disaffilia­tion. Roughly 185 churches sued the North Georgia conference, trustees and the former and current bishops, among others, to continue the disaffilia­tion process.

An announceme­nt of a special called session is expected this week for North Georgia churches who want to disaffilia­te.

Sunday’s South Georgia Conference vote was held by via Zoom.

“Personally, today is heartbreak­ing,” said Bishop David Graves. “For every pastor that is serving in a church today, I, or another bishop, appointed you there over the years ... Friends, this is heavy stuff. This is overwhelmi­ng, and at times, it’s paralyzing.”

One of the reasons most cite for disaffilia­tion is over ordination of non-celibate gay clergy and performanc­e of same-sex marriage.

Churches that are disaffilia­ting have to meet certain financial obligation­s as part of the agreement.

The disaffilia­ting churches have until June 30 to complete the process.

Graves said the last few years have been polarizing in the nation and that has filtered down to the

local church across the country.

It has allowed the nation’s culture “to drive many decisions that happen in the Christian Church. We, the church should be the light to our culture, and it’s not only United Methodist, but it’s the church of every denominati­on and independen­t congregati­on.”

Several of the churches had honored his request to stay with the conference through the 2024 General Conference, but not all.

“Some of you are more concerned about getting this process over with, recruiting people to join your movement while causing great division in many churches,” he said.

Even with the loss, Graves said

he had hope for the future of the conference.

He said it’s time to reach new people.

Vineville United Methodist Church in Macon is among the 274 churches in the conference

that plan to stay.

“Part of our decision to stay is that this is who we are,” said the Rev. Jimmy Asbell Jr., pastor of the 1,200-member church. “We’ve been Methodist at this location and the majority of these members have been Methodist all their lives. We’ve seen changes and we have seen challenges but we don’t feel like the answer is to leave.”

He describes the congregati­on as “traditiona­l, but compatible.” He said the breakdown is about 60% “traditiona­l in our understand­ing of marriage, but we still believe there is room for everybody in the Gospel. We intend to stay the course and remain.”

The United Methodist Church prohibitio­n of ordaining non-celibate LGBTQ clergy and performing same-sex marriage was strengthen­ed during the last General Conference in 2019.

The denominati­on has been divided for decades over several issues, largely over the ordination of openly gay clergy and same sex marriage. But those are not the only issues, church members say. Some said they feared the denominati­on was moving away from biblical principles and fear it could become too progressiv­e.

Some moderate and progressiv­e churches have left over the years, but the vast majority have been more traditiona­l churches.

The North Georgia, conference, which covers the area north of Macon, with about 700 churches, last year temporaril­y suspend the disaffilia­tion process, citing circulatio­n of inaccurate and misleading informatio­n.

It’s unlikely North Georgia churches would be able to hold a vote before the annual meeting June 1-3 in Athens, according to sources on both sides of the issue. The most likely scenario is for the conference to hold a special called conference before the end of the year, according to Atty. David Gibbs III, who represents the North Georgia churches.

North Georgia is among the largest conference­s in the nation.

Gibbs, said in an email that church votes are being scheduled through the summer.

Gibbs serves as the president of the National Center for Life and Liberty which is described on its website as a nonprofit legal ministry that protects and defends Bible-based values.

The churches that leave the conference will pay any unpaid apportionm­ents for the 12 months immediatel­y prior and an additional 12 months of apportionm­ents, plus unfunded pension obligation­s, direct-bill obligation­s and other liabilitie­s. They depart with assets and property.

 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER/STEVE.SCHAEFER@AJC.COM ?? A Cobb County Superior Court ruled earlier this month that the North Georgia Conference could not stand in the way of churches in its conference that want to vote on disaffilia­tion. The conference is considerin­g whether to appeal that decision.
STEVE SCHAEFER/STEVE.SCHAEFER@AJC.COM A Cobb County Superior Court ruled earlier this month that the North Georgia Conference could not stand in the way of churches in its conference that want to vote on disaffilia­tion. The conference is considerin­g whether to appeal that decision.
 ?? ?? The Book of Discipline for the United Methodist Church.
The Book of Discipline for the United Methodist Church.

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