From DallasVoice.com
LGBT Methodists reeling after General Conference votes
By John Wright
May 8, 2008 - 10:07:54 PM
Gays
and their allies struggle with decision on whether to stay and fight or
leave UMC after church reaffirms anti-gay policies, ruling
 |
| Eric Folkerth |
Sandy Long is about as Methodist as they come.
Long’s father is a retired Methodist minister, and when she was just 6, her family served a two-year mission for the church.
Both sets of Long’s grandparents were Methodist. And her
great-grandfather was a Methodist evangelist who led revivals on
Sundays.
Long, a 44-year-old out lesbian, is a member of Northaven United
Methodist Church in Dallas, a “reconciling” congregation that’s 30-40
percent gay and lesbian.
But Long said she’s decided to leave the denomination in the wake of last week’s General Conference in Fort Worth.
During General Conference, the UMC lawmaking session held once every
four years, delegates voted to strengthen anti-gay language in the
UMC’s governing document, the Book of Discipline. They also voted not
to overturn a decision by the church’s Judicial Council granting
pastors the authority to deny people membership based on their sexual
orientation.
Both votes went against majority reports from legislative committees at
the conference, and it marked a major setback for LGBT Methodists and
their supporters.
After years of fighting, Long said she’s finally given up hope that the only church she’s ever known can change.
“Leaving the Methodist church is a hard thing for me; it’s like leaving
the family, leaving a family that doesn’t really want you,” Long said.
“I need to do this for my own spiritual health. Even though I go to a
reconciling church with the most wonderful people, it is a part of the
bigger church — the one that doesn’t want me.”
Northhaven UMC is a member of the Reconciling Ministries Network, a
national Methodist group that seeks full inclusion for LGBT people.
And a reconciling committee from the 600-member North Dallas
congregation spent a whole year lobbying delegates to the General
Conference from North Texas.
“We’re very disappointed,” said Kaye Gooch, a Northaven member who
chaired the committee. “There was no expectation of giant advances, but
there weren’t even incremental advances.”
Gooch said she’s among those who haven’t made up their minds whether to stay in the Methodist church.
Although the General Conference votes won’t change anything at
Northaven, an oasis for gay and lesbian Methodists, a portion of
members’ financial contributions go to the denomination.
“I think lots of people are really having to regroup and rethink,” Gooch said.
Eric Folkerth, the straight pastor at Northaven, said the congregation
held a healing service Sunday, May 4, two days after the General
Conference ended.
Folkerth said it was the first of what likely will be many events
designed to process the results of the conference and figure out what
to do next.
“I think people need time to sort through where they are,” Folkerth
said. “It’s going to be a tough time. It’s absolutely going to be a
tough time, and I think we’ll have people individually making all kinds
of decisions.”
Folkerth said the General Conference was not without positives: a less
conservative Judicial Council was elected; actions against a
transgender clergyperson were dropped; and family is now defined as
“two parents” and not just a “mother and father.”
Delegates also approved a strongly worded statement condemning
homophobia and a constitutional amendment that, if ratified by regional
conferences over the next year, would essentially overturn decision
1032, which gave pastors the authority to deny membership to openly gay
people.
Above all, though, Folkerth said it became clear during this year’s
General Conference that a solid majority of U.S. delegates in the
church support removing a 36-year-old clause in the Book of Law stating
that homosexuality is “incompatible with Christian teaching.”
The clause has been used as the theological justification for the
church’s anti-gay policies, including bans on gay clergy and same-sex
marriage.
“It’s hard to claim a victory when the scoreboard says otherwise, but
we are hearing from person after person in the American church that
they were with us on this and they were ready for change,” Folkerth
said.
The problem, Folkerth said, is the growing influence of international
delegates, especially those from Africa, who are extremely
conservative. During the General Conference, a committee was appointed
to study the idea of restructuring the denomination to give the U.S.
church more autonomy.
The committee will report back to the 2012 General Conference.
“It’s similar to what the Episcopal Church is struggling with,”
Folkerth said. “They have the same exact issues in terms of the
struggle between a worldwide church and a culturally appropriate church
in every cultural situation. … If we cannot restructure, it’s all over.
We’re at a turning point, and I hope it’s not too late.”
In the meantime, Folkerth said it’s likely that Northaven will
participate in acts of nonviolent protest and resistance against the
church’s anti-gay policies, although it’s unclear what form they will
take.
Representatives from the Reconciling Ministries Network and Soulforce,
a national LGBT civil rights group, staged demonstrations on each of
the last two days of the General Conference, including a same-sex
commitment ceremony.
Steven Webster, a longtime Methodist from Wisconsin who helped lead
Soulforce’s efforts at the conference, said he believes some
congregations will follow the lead of Foundry UMC in Washington, D.C.,
which has been skirting the Book of Discipline by recognizing same-sex
unions.
Webster, who helped start UMC’s first gay group, Affirmation, in 1975,
said he doesn’t plan to leave the church, although he called that a
“valid” option.
“What’s not valid from the Soulforce point of view is to remain in the church and be silent,” Webster said.
This article appeared in the Dallas Voice print edition May 9, 2008.
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