Posted on 06/26/2019 8:23:24 AM PDT by xzins
With nearly all the annual conferences in the U.S. having voted, it appears that a sufficient number of traditional-minded delegates have been elected to assure a narrow but clear traditionalist majority at the 2020 General Conference in Minneapolis. These delegates will be able to prevent the overturning of parts of the Traditional Plan that were enacted in St. Louis, will seek to enact revised versions of the parts of the Traditional Plan that were not enacted or ruled unconstitutional, and will press forward with other reforms to position The United Methodist Church as a more vital church capable of fruitful and growing ministry in this 21st century.
One of the goals of caucus groups such as Uniting Methodists, Mainstream UMC, UMC Next, and other moderate and progressive groups was to elect enough moderate and progressive delegates to the 2020 General Conference to reverse the decisions made in St. Louis to begin implementing the Traditional Plan. At this point in the annual conference election cycle, our analysis concludes they have failed to achieve that goal.
Enough U.S. traditionalist delegates have been elected that, together with conservative delegates from Africa, the Philippines, and Eastern Europe, the traditional position should have the majority in Minneapolis. Four of the 55 annual conferences have yet to finish their meetings. Two of them (Virginia and Western North Carolina) have the potential to elect additional conservative delegates. At this point, 432 of the 482 U.S. delegates to General Conference have been elected.
Some annual conferences gained traditionalist delegates, while others lost traditionalists. At this point, the traditionalist delegate count is down 15 percent from the St. Louis General Conference. That still leaves enough traditionalist U.S. delegates to assure a majority. This calculation is based on the reporting of reliable analysts in each annual conference. It also takes into account the possibility of up to 10 percent of the central conference delegates being unable to participate due to inability to obtain a visa. Should all the central conference delegates be able to attend General Conference, the traditionalist margin would be even larger.
Both sides of the debate organized to promote like-minded candidates for election as delegates. Lists of candidates were recommended and shared via email, text, message group, and old-fashioned paper. People on both sides solicited support via phone calls, emails, and personal conversations. The unprecedented level of organization fostered a much more overtly political flavor to the elections. What in the past had been mostly hidden in behind-the-scenes maneuvering became publicly transparent, as groups worked to get their candidates elected.
It became clear in the elections that most moderate clergy voted with the progressives and against the Traditional Plan approach to the definition of marriage and sexuality. As noted in a previous Perspective, all of the loss of traditionalist delegates fell on the clergy side.
We have heard anecdotally that a substantial number of the delegates elected were not part of the 2016-2019 delegation. If true, this shift may bring a number of inexperienced delegates into the process. If it results in fresh ideas and new resolve to end the conflict in our church, it could provide momentum toward a resolution. However, it is also possible that inexperience could handicap the delegates ability to accomplish what they want. Future analysis should give us greater insight into this dynamic.
Another lesson from the elections is that our winner-take-all system of democracy does not give adequate representation to minority viewpoints. If the majority vote together as a block, they can elect 100 percent of the delegates, even if as many as 49 percent of the annual conference holds a different view. Fully one-half of the annual conferences that have voted elected a delegation that is either all-traditional or all-progressive/moderate. Since most of these one-sided conferences elected a progressive/moderate slate, it means that many evangelicals will not be represented at General Conference. In the same way, the annual conferences voting an all-traditionalist slate will leave moderates and progressives in those few annual conferences unrepresented. One wonders if a more proportional representation from the annual conferences (similar to the parliamentary system of government) might have led to even greater evangelical representation.
While there are sometimes benefits to a winner-take-all system in terms of helping the body reach a clearer decision, it comes at the expense of leaving groups of people unrepresented. The end result is probably a more polarized delegation and one less inclined to compromise in general. One hopes that the 2020 delegation will be willing to compromise on non-essential issues in order to reach a definitive solution to our conflict.
Now that the election results are becoming clear, it seems apparent that U.S. moderates and progressives will be unable to reverse the decision by the global United Methodist Church in St. Louis to maintain the biblical definition of marriage as one man and one woman, continue to prohibit same-sex weddings, and increase accountability to the covenant freely promised by all of our churchs clergy. That fact should give pause to those unwilling to live by that decision. Rather than continue a fruitless battle, delegates from all perspectives should coalesce around a negotiated plan that will provide space between the groups and multiply the options for Wesleyan Methodist ministry. Such an approach is the healthiest and most Christ-like way forward for our church.
Thomas Lambrecht is a United Methodist clergyperson and the vice president of Good News.
Some annual conferences gained traditionalist delegates, while others lost traditionalists. At this point, the traditionalist delegate count is down 15 percent from the St. Louis General Conference. That still leaves enough traditionalist U.S. delegates to assure a majority. This calculation is based on the reporting of reliable analysts in each annual conference. It also takes into account the possibility of up to 10 percent of the central conference delegates being unable to participate due to inability to obtain a visa. Should all the central conference delegates be able to attend General Conference, the traditionalist margin would be even larger.
In other word split the UMC up. Sooner rather than later.
It does not matter the left will ignore the rules.
Won’t matter, I think. I expect the denomination to split. But, you could be right about a jerk or two that goes with the traditionalists and then starts the entire homosexuality chaos all over again. Although this time there will be rules to remove them from the denomination.
But conservatives fight back.
I expect it will be sooner.
The sticky issues will be pensions, health care, funds in various accounts, and denominational properties: camps, publishing houses/stores, offices, etc.
Celebrating traditional Methodistsim
Back to the basics
It stuns me to think that we are seeing mainstream Christian denominations torn apart over homosexuality.
I never thought homosexuality would be such a big religious issue.
Are homosexuals clamoring to become members of the Methodist Church if only the Methodist church becomes liberal on homosexuality? What’s really going on here?
The Bishops and liberal leaders spent 5 years trying to ensure the One Church Plan passed. They used all their influence leading up to this Special General Conference to resolve the issues once and for all. BUT, like Hillary, they failed to prevail despite all the advantages they built into the process.
Now they want annual do-overs, exactly the situation the Special General Conference was designed to prevent. Liberals, Gee!
UMC has already departed from Scripture by allowing women pastors. It’s just a matter of time before they drift away even further.
I think the arguments are in your favor for the most part.
However, I still don’t think that “should be the husband of one wife” is limiting the ministry to married people. I think it is talking about the number of wives.
Agree...but the leadership is male, and if married, one wife.
I see no evidence of conservatives fighting back. The left will continue until the UMC splits.
This probable split has come about because over many decades God has used the conservative Good News group to fight back.
Ping
congratulations (if I am reading this correctly)
You are.
The left will try again in 2024.
And in 2028...
The strategy they used successfully in the Presbyterian Church USA, The Episcopal Church, and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America has been to wear down and outlast the orthodox.
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