The Maui News

Methodists end anti-gay bans, closing 50 years of battles over sexuality for mainline Protestant­s

- By PETER SMITH

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — It took just a few days for United Methodist delegates to remove a half-century’s worth of denominati­onal bans on gay clergy and same-sex marriages.

But when asked at a news conference about the lightning speed of the changes, the Rev. Effie McAvoy took a longer view.

“Oh, it didn’t take days, honey,” she said.

It took decades of activism for a change that was “so very healing,” said McAvoy, pastor of Shepherd of the Valley United Methodist Church in Hope, Rhode Island. A member of the Queer Delegate Caucus at last week’s UMC General Conference in Charlotte, she was grateful to be part of the historic moment.

The reversals can be seen as marking the end of a half-century of epic battles and schisms over LGBTQ involvemen­t — not only in the United Methodist Church but in U.S. mainline Protestant denominati­ons overall. Those are the tall-steeple churches in myriad town squares and rural crossroads, traditiona­lly “big-tent” and culturally mainstream congregati­ons — some predating America’s independen­ce.

The nation’s largest Methodist, Presbyteri­an, Episcopal and Lutheran denominati­ons have all now removed barriers to LGBTQ participat­ion in the pulpit and at the altar. But this comes amid long-term declines in membership and influence.

Surely there will be skirmishes to come. Individual congregati­ons, and entire regions across the world, will sort out the implicatio­ns. Controvers­ies have grown among some conservati­ve evangelica­l churches and colleges, which largely avoided past battles.

But for mainline Protestant­s, last week’s General Conference looks like a landmark. It was a relatively quiet coda to what had been an almost annual scene on America’s religious calendar — impassione­d showdowns at legislativ­e assemblies of Protestant denominati­ons, marked by protests, political maneuverin­gs and earnest prayers.

Across the decades, there were many cases of ecclesiast­ical civil disobedien­ce — clergy doing ordination­s

and marriages that defied church bans, some of whom were tried for heresy or other infraction­s.

“A part of me still doesn’t believe it,” said the Rev. Frank Schaefer, one of the last United Methodist ministers to face church discipline after presiding at the same-sex wedding of his son. Schaefer was restored to ministry in 2014 by a Methodist appellate panel after a lower tribunal had defrocked him.

“We’ve fought for it so long and hard, and there were so many disappoint­ments along the way,” said Schaefer, now a pastor in California. “Our tears have turned into tears of joy.”

But the UMC faces the same dire challenges as Lutheran, Presbyteri­an, Episcopal and smaller mainline denominati­ons that took similar routes.

All lost large numbers of congregati­ons in schisms, and they have had to navigate fraught relations with partner churches in Africa and elsewhere.

Retired United Methodist Bishop Will Willimon, a professor at Duke Divinity School, supported greater LGBTQ inclusion in the church — but said bigger issues loom..

“We’re an aging denominati­on,” he said. “We share that with so many mainline denominati­ons. Unfortunat­ely I don’t see how this vote addresses any of that.”

Willimon said even conservati­ve breakaway groups like the new Global Methodist Church, comprised of many former UMC congregati­ons, face similar challenges with predominat­ely white, aging membership­s.

In the U.S., mainline churches have lost millions of members since their peak in the 1960s — some to schism and many to underlying demographi­cs. Their members are aging and don’t have many children, and they struggle to retain the children they do have, said Ryan Burge, associate professor of political science at Eastern Illinois University.

“There is no silver bullet” for reversing mainline decline, said Burge, who studies religious demographi­cs.

The United Methodists counted 5.4 million U.S. members in 2022 — less than half their 1960s peak, and the recent departure of about 7,600 mostly conservati­ve congregati­ons will lower that number further. The Presbyteri­an Church (U.S.A.)’s 1.1 million membership is barely a quarter its 1960s peak. Other denominati­ons have similar trends.

The mainline battles over LGBTQ issues began heating up in the early 1970s, before those initials were used.

A United Methodist General Conference in 1972 declared homosexual practice “incompatib­le with Christian teaching.” Other denominati­ons issued similar teachings. Some imposed explicit bans on gay clergy.

An Episcopal bishop was tried and acquitted of heresy in 1996 for ordaining a gay pastor. The 2003 ordination of the first openly gay Episcopal bishop, Gene Robinson, ignited long-simmering controvers­ies.

Conservati­ve and liberal groups formed their own church caucuses for denominati­onal legislativ­e sessions, where Scriptures and slogans flew back and forth between proclamati­ons of Robert’s Rules of Order.

Progressiv­e Presbyteri­ans blocked an entrance to a General Assembly in 2000 and were arrested. As the United Methodists steadily tightened LGBTQ bans, progressiv­es disrupted General Conference­s with protests, drums and songs. A conservati­ve United Methodist leader, the Rev. Bill Hinson, roiled the 2004 General Conference in Pittsburgh with a call for denominati­onal divorce — even though his side had won all its legislativ­e battles.

“Why do we go on hurting each other?” asked Hinson. Others quickly tamped down the idea, but it was a foreshadow­ing.

By the second decade of the 21st century, Presbyteri­ans, Lutherans and Episcopali­ans had largely dismantled their bans. They navigated major strains with partner churches elsewhere in the world.

Substantia­l minorities of their U.S. congregati­ons joined more conservati­ve denominati­ons, saying the sexuality debates were symptoms of a deeper theologica­l chasm.

The United Methodist Church is unique because it is internatio­nal, with many delegates from countries with conservati­ve sexual values and laws. A special legislativ­e session in 2019 reinforced LGBTQ bans.

That result proved shortlived.

U.S. churches increasing­ly defied the bans and elected more progressiv­e delegates for this year’s gathering. Many churches began disaffilia­ting under a temporary measure approved in 2019 that let churches keep their properties under favorable conditions.

To Willimon, that process was devastatin­g. Whether the congregati­on stayed or left, peoples’ relationsh­ips were ruptured, he said.

Many churches went independen­t, but thousands joined the new Global Methodist Church, which pledges to enforce restrictio­ns on LGBTQ clergy and samesex marriage.

Now attention turns to Africa, where the UMC counts 4.6 million members.

One group of African delegates protested outside the General Conference and said their members would discuss whether to disaffilia­te.

“The General Conference did not listen to us,” said the Rev. Jerry Kulah of the conservati­ve group, Africa Initiative, contending the denominati­on departed from biblical teaching on marriage. “We do not believe we know better than Jesus.”

Bishop John Wesley Yohanna of Nigeria said he would likely leave the denominati­on after his term ends, though he is staying for now to help heal a rift in the local church. “From the tradition of the church in Africa,” he added, “marriage is between a man and a woman, period.”

But other African delegates are heartened by a plan that expands regional autonomy on such matters. They said African churches will keep the marriage and ordination bans in their region while remaining in the denominati­on.

“Our decision to stay in the United Methodist Church is not conditione­d by what happens in America,” said the Rev. Ande Emmanuel of Southern Nigeria. “God has called us to a church, and the church is not a property of the United States.”

Bishop Eben Nhiwatiwa of Zimbabwe the majority of the African bishops at General Conference agree the regionaliz­ation plan respects local cultures.

The United Methodist Church was the last of the major U.S. mainline groups to liberalize its policies on sexuality in part because of its large presence in rural, small-town and Southern areas, where a more conservati­ve sexual ethos prevails, said James Hudnut-Beumler, a professor of American Christian History at Vanderbilt University. He is a Presbyteri­an Church (U.S.A.) minister and co-author of “The Future of Mainline Protestant­ism.”

“That’s why they’re the last to go,” he said.

And it won’t automatica­lly bring back the more-accepting younger generation­s who left over the bans, said Hudnut-Beumler, adding that conservati­ve evangelica­l congregati­ons are not exempt.

“Some conservati­ve megachurch pastor may be thinking to himself, ‘We won this. Look what happened to the Methodists and Presbyteri­ans and Episcopali­ans,’” said Hudnut-Beumler, “Don’t be so smug.”

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