Posted on 08/29/2018 8:15:56 AM PDT by Morgana
Due to action of The United Methodist Churchs 2012 General Conference and to negotiation of church leaders, the General Board of Church and Society held listening sessions on the Social Principles throughout the church. From them, Church and Society learned that the Social Principles need to become more theologically grounded, more globally relevant, and more succinct (according to a 04/12/18 press release).
Then the 2016 General Conference voted to continue Church and Societys work in revising the Social Principles. On April 11, 2018, The United Methodist Social Principles/Working Draft 1 was released. Church and Society aims to propose a complete revision of the Social Principles to the 2020 General Conference.
The Social Principle on Abortion: A Brief History
Since the birth of The United Methodist Church in 1968, the Social Principles paragraph on abortion has been contested. The 1972 paragraph stated: We support the removal of abortion from the criminal code, placing it instead under laws relating to other procedures of standard medical practice. A decision concerning abortion should be made only after thorough and thoughtful consideration by the parties involved, with medical and pastoral counsel.
Following the United States Supreme Courts 1973 Roe v. Wade decision, which knocked down state laws against abortion, United Methodism reflected Roe; its 1976 abortion paragraph included this sentence: We support the legal option of abortion under proper medical procedures.
Since 1976, many General Conferences have considered and debated petitions that would alter the churchs teaching on abortion. Some passed. Gradually, the paragraph became more skeptical, critical, and prohibitive of abortion. That is, the Social Principle became more protective of the unborn child and mother.
In 2018, while The United Methodist Churchs Social Principle on abortion (Paragraph 161K in the 2016 Book of Discipline) support[s] the legal option of abortion, it also contains many phrases and statements that are protective of the unborn and mother. That Social Principle has now been rewrittenthoroughly.
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The Revised Title
The revision of this Social Principle is boldly announced in its title change: from Abortion to Reproductive Health. Why? Abortion, as a title, might be considered too controversial, harsh, specific. In contrast, Reproductive Health might be understood as more medical-clinical, gentle, and general.
Against this retitling, four objections can be raised.
First, the new title assumes that abortion is, as a matter of fact, just another medical procedure required for the reproductive health of women. However, many inside and outside the medical profession, especially those of various religious persuasions, would disagree.
Second, should not a Social Principle dedicated to abortion, by commonsense, be titled Abortion? One would think so: a thing should be called what it is.
Third, the Church through the ages has routinely used the word abortion; so United Methodism should regularly use the same word.
And fourth, abortion names a morally significant (and objectionable) incident: that is the taking of the life of an unborn child. To put such a serious incident under the heading of reproductive health disguises and diminishes what happens to the child in the womb.
For these reasons, the title Abortion should remain.
The Revised Text
According to the three needed improvements reported by the listening sessions, how does the revision measure up?
Is the revision more theologically grounded? For starters, the revision mentions God once. But not Jesus Christ. And not the Holy Spirit. The Bible is cited twice, but not quoted. Church tradition is not referenced. The revision seems trapped in the modern worldview of individualism, public health, and social science. It seems anthropocentric (centered on humanity), and neglectful of God and Gods creation, commands, and redemption.
Unlike the standing paragraph, the revision opens up very little to the presence and power of God. So the revision is not more theologically grounded than what was revised. Its theological grounding is reduced.
Is the revision more globally relevant? To be globally relevant, the revision would need to use terms that are universally understandable and applicable. The Church speaks the most universal language of all. Its wordsfor example, God and humanity, birth and death, good and evil, joy and suffering, love and loyalty, and so onappeal to most people worldwide.
While occasionally using such words, the revision reverts to a Westernized, individualized, medicalized mindset. This mindset results in the revisions inability to affirm the humanity of the unborn. Such thinking is better suited for an international political agency than for a global Christian church. While the standing Social Principle on abortion is imperfect on the matter of global relevance, it lacks the revisions predetermined Westernized agenda. So, on its global reach, the revision fails.
Is the revision more succinct? Yes. The revision is roughly one-third as long as the current Social Principle (approximately 220 words to 660 words).
Editing Out the Gospel of Life
When the standing Social Principle on abortion was revised, what phrases and sentences were deleted? Sanctity of unborn human life. Sacredness of the life and well-being of the mother and the unborn child. We support parental, guardian, or other responsible adult notification and consent before abortions can be performed . We cannot affirm abortion as an acceptable means of birth control, and we unconditionally reject it as a means of gender selection or eugenics . We oppose the use of late-term abortion known as dilation and extraction (partial-birth abortion) and call for the end of this practice . We entrust God to provide guidance, wisdom, and discernment . We mourn and are committed to promoting the diminishment of high abortion rates. They [the Church and its congregations] should also support those crisis pregnancy centers and pregnancy resource centers . We particularly encourage the Church, the government, and social service agencies to support and facilitate the option of adoption .
These phrases and sentences emerged from historic, ecumenical Christianitys witness for life and opposition to abortionand were approved by General Conferences.
If the theologically superficial, globally distant, brief revision is adopted, as is, by the 2020 General Conference, that would basically nullify, in one vote, all General Conference decisions that have been protective of the unborn child and mother. That nullification, in one vote, would: silence the voices of many United Methodists around the world; increase distrust in The United Methodist Church today; set The United Methodist Church more strongly against the consensual teaching of historic, ecumenical Christianity on life and abortion; and lead possibly to the destruction of more unborn children and bring harm to their mothers.
That nullification, in one vote, would not be good. That nullification is unacceptable.
LifeNews Note: Rev. Stallsworth is the pastor of Whiteville (NC) United Methodist Church, the president of the Taskforce of United Methodists on Abortion and Sexuality, and the editor of its quarterly newsletter Lifewatch. This appeared in the June issue of Lifewatch.
PLEASE RESPOND BEFORE AUGUST 31st
https://www.umcjustice.org/who-we-are/social-principles-and-resolutions/social-principles-revision/social-principles-2020/sp2020-english
PLEASE RESPOND TO UMC SURVEY BEFORE AUGUST 31st
https://www.umcjustice.org/who-we-are/social-principles-and-resolutions/social-principles-revision/social-principles-2020/sp2020-english
Since they’re inventing moral doctrine, maybe they’ll invent an Abortion Sacrament too. Combination of Baptism and Last Rites.
We went through this onslaught of heresy early on in the dense Boston-to-DC conferences. My southern Methodist relatives' conferences took longer, but now are all secular politicized, as well.
The church is not a building or a denomination or even a congregation. It is the unbroken thread of belief in the gospel of Jesus Christ. Once that goes and there's little hope of a congregation making a recovery, it's time to shake the dust off your feet and go. The prophet is honored everywhere except his own home town and among his own people. The Son of Man has no place to lay His head.
It was wrenching, but finally I did leave the church of many generations of Methodists in my family and sought another, which took much research and some years, including divesting myself of prejudices, suspicions and snobbery towards other denominatons.
God took me on a winding journey through several denominations and half-a-dozen dedicated prayer groups that met regularly, as well as participation in the wonderful Community Bible Study program. At last I found a Bible-believing church that is right for me.
Bible-affirming is the must-have component; after that, the way the church is organized, the mission statement of the denomination (or independent organization), and whether the local church has ministries and groups in which you can grow.
The rationales for abortion put forth by the second-wave feminists in the 60s have largely disappeared. Prior to the legalization of access to birth control for the unmarried in the early 60s, families still were humiliated and shamed by extramarital pregnancy of a daughter and were sometimes rejecting and punitive. Social remedies then were "sending her away" and having the child adopted to an unknown couple, forcing an early marriage on teenagers, or the parents of the pregnant girl raising the child as their own. For older women who became pregnant, they would usually have to leave work as soon as they began showing, whether married or not; so for an unmarried woman, there would be no way to support herself and the child. Single women raising children were shunned and shamed, and the children labeled "bastard" and "illegitimate." And illegal abortions were often quite dangerous and unsanitary. For these reasons, the feminists wanted access to "safe, legal and rare" abortion.
Seventy years into the so-called "sexual revolution", society has moved past most of these conditions, so young women do not feel the same urgency to take drastic steps. Many young people don't bother to be married or even to know the other person well before having unprotected sex. Employers are enjoined from firing women outright for pregnancy and must give pregnancy leave. And from what we read, abortion faciities are not always sanitary or safe, either; but the pc brainwashing has convinced many irresponsible women otherwise.
Who wouldn't want to see a world in which all children are wanted, lovingly anticipated by both parents and prepared for? Unfortunately, unwanted pregnancies will always be with us. Adoption is sometimes the kindest and most humane option, but even there, the agencies are under great lib/prog pressure to favor adoption by LGBT's and singlesand in UK, Christians are disfavored because of their "religious extremism." In this country, activists have passed laws in various localities insisting that prospective parents allow their adopted child to choose his/her own gender, religion, etc. The far neediest group of children are black, but race separatists object to white families adopting African-American kids. Young women who have tried to have their child placed with married heterosexuals of the same religion are often subjected to punitive and spiteful placement of their child with just the opposite kind of adoptive person(s). The same holds true in divorce when one partner has "discovered" their "gay identity"the heterosexual partner has no right to prevent their biological child from being thrust into joint custody with daddy's boyfriend or mommy's girlfriend.
We must pray for our whole society to be freed from this pc tyranny against Christianity.
I think I’d be ok with a Wesleyan or Lutheran MS congregation.
The problem is that none in my area has the ministries/groups Im looking for.
I credit the UMCs youth programs with keeping me from going any further from God than I did. I want that foundation for my kids.
Fond memories! We had MYF meetings every Sunday night, with games and musis, and also sleep-away church camp in the summer. (But several of our youth pastors were gay, even back in the 50s. That's the Northeast Conferences for you.)
I hear you on the importance of good activities for kids. Try the Baptists -- most of them are still sticking to the Bible. And if anyone in your family, such as a grandparent or a stay-at-home parent, can take the kids to Community Bible Study, their teaching and activities are really great even here in a blue state.
For me, one of the most valuable parts of the Methodism I grew up with, which was then the Methodist Episcopal Church (not the UMC, the merger which ruined it), was singing, both in the choir and in the congregation. Later in life when trouble struck, the words of the hymns would come back to me. Only as an adult did I realize that most of the hymns are based rather literally on the psalms and scripture (not the praise song crap on the big screen monitors, but the real four-part harmony hymns in the Methodist Hymnall).
musis = music
Agreed!
I have been in a UMC choir since 2nd grade (some 45 years ago)
The music is the foundation of my faith awakening, and I’d miss that terribly.
I don’t know what I’m going to do.... A larger Baptist Church might be my only real option.
They are not a church. At least a Christian one. Maybe they should change their name to Sunday morning social club
A womans right to choose (to kill an unborn child).
A blessing on your search and journey. Pray for an answer. It may not come immediately, but God hears your prayers and answers in His time.
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