Daily Kos

Open Hearts, Open Minds, Open Doors - Not!

Sat May 03, 2008 at 08:49:52 AM PDT

I haven’t told my son yet that the denomination in which his father has been a minister for his entire career has decided once again not to remove the stain from its official policy that homosexuality is "incompatible with Christian teaching." I doubt that he cares now. He has already felt the sting of rejection, which is now mutual.

On April 30, the General Conference of the United Methodist Church at its quadrennial meeting, this year in Fort Worth, once again refused to change its pronouncement of judgment on gays and lesbians by a vote of 504-417.

In an act of witness in front of delegates to the 2008 United Methodist General Conference, more than 200 people declared that the denomination's policies and practices against homosexuality are "sinful" and that "sexuality is a gift from God."
Primarily dressed in black, demonstrators walked onto the legislative floor at the Fort Worth Convention Center, formed a two-lined cross around the communion table located in the center aisle and draped it in a black shroud to witness against the church's stance on homosexual practice. They entered silently, but once all demonstrators were in place, they sang, "Were You There When They Crucified My Lord?"

The vote did not go unchallenged.  

In an act of witness in front of delegates to the 2008 United Methodist General Conference, more than 200 people declared that the denomination's policies and practices against homosexuality are "sinful" and that "sexuality is a gift from God."
Primarily dressed in black, demonstrators walked onto the legislative floor at the Fort Worth Convention Center, formed a two-lined cross around the communion table located in the center aisle and draped it in a black shroud to witness against the church's stance on homosexual practice. They entered silently, but once all demonstrators were in place, they sang, "Were You There When They Crucified My Lord?"

During the demonstration,

Retired Bishop Melvin Talbert, a former ecumenical officer of the Council of Bishops, reminded the conference of the church's 1939 action, when the denomination segregated black Methodists into the Central Jurisdiction.
"That action was wrong. That action was a sin against God," and in making the decision on April 30, the General Conference "has taken an action that is wrong," he said. The segregated jurisdiction was dissolved in 1968.
Prior to asking the General Conference to reconsider its April 30 vote, Talbert said that those in the former Central Jurisdiction lived within a structure and were able to repair broken relationships with the church. That has not been the case with those with differing sexual identities, he said.
"We have chosen to leave them out rather than invite them in to work out our relationships. ... I can do no other than to say what is on my heart. General Conference, General Conference, this is wrong. I invite you to reconsider."

North Georgia Bishop Lindsey Davis disagreed with Bishop Talbert.

"I definitely disagree with Bishop Talbert on that matter. ... I do not think it has anything to do with civil rights," Davis said. He added that the church takes great strides to protect the civil rights of all people.

"I will go to the mat to protect the civil rights of all of these persons who protested today, but I don’t think you can equate the two," he said. "If you do, it is doing a disservice to the civil rights movement of the 1960s and on."

He probably really believes that too. The General Conference did not reconsider. The conference passed a resolution

against homophobia and heterosexism, saying the church opposes "all forms of violence or discrimination based on gender, gender identity, sexual practice or sexual orientation."

Forgive me if I don’t take any comfort from such a statement. In view of the official policy of exclusion this resolution seems to me nothing more than rank hypocrisy. It reminds me of church actions in the mid-twentieth century saying that all persons were of sacred worth and that blacks shouldn’t be lynched but were unwilling to support racial integration.

Audrey Krumbach, formerly a member of the North Georgia Conference and a student at Garrett Evangelical Theological Seminary, Evanston, Ill, had this to say about the denomination’s action.

"We are part of God's living body in today's world, but our United Methodist Church refuses to accept what God has already done; refuses to keep covenant with its own words in the baptismal promise ... refuses to open its hearts, minds and doors."

She said those outside the church have noticed "the church truly scapegoating" people "on the altar of so-called unity" and "the closeting (of) the LGBTQ people who faithfully serve the church."

These are sad days for United Methodists. In 1844 the Methodist Episcopal Church came to the place where "unity" could no longer trump the church’s silence on slavery. No amount of "holy conferencing" will keep that day from coming for United Methodists. Until that day comes, the sign we should hang over our denomination is "Open Hearts, Open Minds, Open Doors—Not!"

Tags: homosexuality, lesbians, United Methodist Church, General Conference, Central Jurisdiction, racism, slavery (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

Permalink | 10 comments

  •  The denomination to which (0+ / 0-)

    "Our separation from each other is an optical illusion of consciousness." Albert Einstein.

    by kararay on Sat May 03, 2008 at 08:56:33 AM PDT

  •  Ms. Hillary should 'denounce and reject' (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Milos Janus Outlook, browneyes

    As this is ms. hillary's denomination, she should be called upon to denounce and reject the church and leave immediately.

    How could she have sat under such discriminating teachings for sixty plus years and not know of its policies? We want to know what she know about this denomination, when did she know it, and will she now walk away from such divisive teachings.

    "Our separation from each other is an optical illusion of consciousness." Albert Einstein.

    by kararay on Sat May 03, 2008 at 08:59:55 AM PDT

  •  A journey of a thousand miles ... (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Lefty Mama, Milos Janus Outlook

    As a life-long member of the UMC, this saddens me. I am encouraged that 45% did vote for change; there is some reason to hope that enlightment will come. I live in South Carolina, the heart of the "Baptist Bible Belt." Southern Baptists make the UMC look like flamming liberals. Women are supposed to be submissive to their husbands. You could not get 45% of Southern Baptists to vote for females to be allowed to be ministers. I will remain within the UMC and seek to change it as much as I can. Thank you for this post.

    Establishing lasting peace is the work of education; all politics can do is keep us out of war. Maria Montessori

    by benil81241 on Sat May 03, 2008 at 09:34:57 AM PDT

    •  Thank you for your response. (0+ / 0-)

      Today I am just weary of waiting and pushing. We will continue until that day comes round.

      •  I understand and share your frustration. (1+ / 0-)

        Recommended by:
        Milos Janus Outlook

        Injustice should be ended now, but that is not our, nor the world's, history. I graduated from college in 1963 in South Carolina and had never attended a class in my entire life at an educational institution that had black students. We have a long way to go for full racial justice in this country but look how far we have come; we may indeed have a person of color as the next POTUS. Gender equality has improved, but misogyny is still rampant. Prejudice based on sexual orientation is immensely more widespread, but things are slowly changing. I can only offer the tired cliche, Keep the Faith!

        Establishing lasting peace is the work of education; all politics can do is keep us out of war. Maria Montessori

        by benil81241 on Sat May 03, 2008 at 11:16:43 AM PDT

        [ Parent ]

  •  rays of hope (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Milos Janus Outlook

    My friend said that the worst amendments died in committee, and there seem to be some small progress forward. Check out this article, about a protest-wedding ceremony. It mentions two specific decisions that were voted on:

    Methodists this week rejected replacing a sentence in its Book of Discipline — which says the church "does not condone the practice of homosexuality" — with other phrases, including one saying Christians differ on the issue. The measure to change the language also was rejected at the last conference in 2004.

    Methodists this week also voted against a proposal to change a policy allowing pastors to keep gays and lesbians from joining the denomination's churches.

    Unfortunately, the language is so complicated it's hard to understand what happened, exactly.

    In a democracy, everyone is a politician. ~ Ehren Watada

    by Lefty Mama on Sat May 03, 2008 at 04:38:24 PM PDT

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