United Methodist General Conference Redux: 2020 vs. 2024

United Methodist General Conference Redux: 2020 vs. 2024 April 24, 2024

UMC logo courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

I read with interest fellow Anxious Bencher Jacob Randolph’s excellent recent post on the issues facing the United Methodist General Conference 2024. My interest arose from the fact that just over four years ago I wrote an analysis of the issues facing the United Methodist General Conference 2020. As Jake noted, that conference never happened. COVID postponed it all the way until this year.

What struck me is how similar the issues still are–even after the possible split I wrote of in 2020 has in many ways come to pass.

As Jake wrote, “The last year, the UMC has also faced a spate of disaffiliations, local churches who voted to leave the denomination and were given leeway to do so under a 2019 special addendum to the Book of Discipline. The rule created space for churches to formally exit the UMC with due process so long as said churches left by December 31, 2023.”

GMC logo courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

Many of these churches left to preserve a commitment to heterosexual marriage and ordination, doctrines they believed to be under threat in the United Methodist Church (UMC). Many of these disaffiliated churches in turn joined the new Global Methodist Church, an iteration of Methodism that pledged to maintain those doctrines in accordance with their belief in the right interpretation of the Scriptures. All told, 1 in 4 congregations disaffiliated with the UMC.

At the same time, as Jake points out, the churches that chose to remain do not have uniform views on sexuality or other hot button issues. He notes major issues facing this year’s General Conference include theology surrounding LGBTQ persons and practices as well as the related issue of how governance should work when United Methodists in different areas of the world hold disparate views on this and other issues–the very same topics I wrote about in 2020.

Because of its surprising timeliness, I therefore repost below historical context on the tensions in the United Methodist Church and the questions they raise for other American Christians as well:

***

Originally posted here at the Anxious Bench February 5, 2020

I am not a Methodist—well, not anymore. I grew up in the United Methodist Church (UMC), but have been a member of various other denominations since my college years. So the current debates within the United Methodist Church are not my fight. But they do interest me, both because of my religious history and because I am a religious historian.

Most mainline American Protestant denominations have liberalized their stance on same-sex relationships in recent years. The Presbyterian Church, USA (PCUSA), the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA), the American Baptist Churches, USA (ABCUSA), and the Episcopal Church, USA (ECUSA), among others, now preside over same-sex marriages and ordain ministers in same-sex relationships. The United Methodist Church, by contrast, retained its traditional stance barring both of those practices longer than other mainline denominations.

Many expected that stance to change at the special session of the General Conference a year ago, which held a vote on the issue. The General Conference consists of lay and clergy representatives of the churches that make up the UMC, and functions as the final governing body for the denomination. To the surprise of many, the General Conference voted to uphold the denomination’s traditional position.

Part of what made the difference is the structure of the UMC versus that of other American denominations: the UMC is robustly international. Note the “A” in the PCUSA, ELCA, ABCUSA, and ECUSA—but not in the UMC. These other denominations are “American” in the sense that they consist dominantly of churches located in the United States. The UMC, meanwhile, consists of churches from around the world, with 41% of delegates hailing from outside the United States. The largest non-American contingent came from Africa. African churches are more sexually traditional, and their votes combined with the conservative contingent from within the United States to defeat the proposed measure to liberalize the denomination’s practice with respect to same-sex marriage.

American conservatives often perceive this fact as evidence that their interpretation of God’s design for healthy sexual ethics is in line with the broader Christian church—not only throughout time but also throughout space. Meanwhile, American liberals wrestle with how to advance their interpretation of how the Christian message is liberating in the same way with respect to both race and sexual orientation. How should they respond when a postcolonial portion of the world exercises its voice to say that those two issues are distinct?

But the question of the moment for the UMC is not so much what to believe about same-sex marriage, as what to do when your neighbor churches radically disagree with you on the question. The vote was close: 53% to 47%. What does it mean in this case to love your neighbor as yourself? Should you fight it out together? Or should you split as amicably as possible?

Conservatives believe same-sex relationships constitute direct disobedience to God’s revealed will for human flourishing—quite literally unrepentant sin at a high level. Liberals believe forbidding same-sex relationships violates the second greatest commandment to love your neighbor as yourself, to do unto others as you would have them do unto you—quite literally unrepentant sin at a high level. Yet both believe that Jesus prayed that his followers, “may be brought to complete unity” and also that on a practical level disseminating the Christian message and serving the world can often be done more effectively as a coordinated effort. What to do?

Last month, a group of leading liberals, moderates, and conservatives within the United Methodist Church met with a prominent mediator to hammer out a plan for an amicable split. Despite losing the vote, the liberal faction would retain the name United Methodist Church, while the conservative faction would form a new Traditional Methodist Church. Churches would remain in the United Methodist Church by default unless they voted to join the new denomination. If they did so, however, they would keep all of their property. The United Methodist Church would pay the new denomination a large sum of money to get it started. The United Methodist Church would also pay a large sum of money to “communities historically marginalized by the sin of racism,” prominently including the African churches with a more conservative sexual ethic. The Traditional Methodist Church would contribute as well.

None of this is binding until the delegates to this year’s UMC General Conference vote in May. And some conservatives and some moderates have expressed reservations.

The question before the delegates will be:

At what cost division? At what cost unity?

I wrote these two questions at the top of notes I have been taking recently on the history of American Methodists for a project I’m researching. The project is on the fundamentalist-modernist controversy of the early twentieth century: the conflict between theological (and sometimes social) conservatives and liberals that roiled many American denominations, including Methodists. Interestingly, however, it did not divide Methodists as much as Baptists and Presbyterians.

It’s not that American Methodists were not fractious. It’s that their fractiousness had come earlier. By the early 1900s, Methodists (those Protestant denominations that grew from the teaching of John Wesley) fell into at least this many denominations: Methodist Episcopal Church; Methodist Episcopal Church, South; Colored Methodist Episcopal Church; African Methodist Episcopal Church; African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church; Methodist Protestant Church; United Brethren Church; Evangelical Association; the Church of the Nazarene; the Wesleyan Church; and the Free Methodist Church.

They had split over: whether to have bishops, how much say lay members of the church should have, views on slavery, and interpretations of distinctly Wesleyan doctrines like entire sanctification in this life. They subsequently further disagreed on things that had not caused the initial split, such as whether to ordain women or whether to have racially integrated churches.

To be fair, Presbyterians, Baptists, and others worshiped in multiple denominations as well. On the whole, though, the bulk of (white) parishioners in the early twentieth century fell into one of two large denominations within a tradition—one based in the north (such as the Northern (later, American) Baptists) and one based in the south (such as the Southern Baptists). These splits were a legacy of the fight about slavery that ultimately broke out into the Civil War. But more American Protestants were Methodist than belonged to any other tradition, and Methodists had more substantial denominations to choose from.

Methodists of the early twentieth century longed to corral their disparate manifestations into a more centralized denomination. They hoped doing so would make for more coordinated—and hence more effective—evangelism, discipleship, and service. In 1939, the Methodist Protestant Church, the Methodist Episcopal Church, and the Methodist Episcopal Church, South united into “The Methodist Church.” In 1946, the Evangelical Association and the United Brethren Church united into the Evangelical United Brethren Church. Finally, in 1968, these two groups joined to form the present United Methodist Church.

In order to achieve unity, the various denominations made compromises throughout this process on issues important to them, from racial integration to women’s ordination to lay governance. They did so because they believed that the costs of division were greater than the costs of unity. But the existence of all those smaller denominations means that at other times in history, Methodists had thought the reverse: that the costs of unity were greater than the costs of division.

The history of American Methodism therefore points to this truth for Christian churches: there is always a cost to unity, and there is always a cost to division. In this life, Christians will not always agree. I joke that as a Protestant intellectual there is no other human on the planet with the exact same set of beliefs as me. Belonging to a church forces me to interact with others who agree with me on the most important things, but differ on other things that are still important. Worshiping with people whose political, social, and even to some extent theological ideas differ is an important way that the church .

The tricky part is determining where to draw that line: both for matters necessary to salvation, and, separately, for matters necessary to productive work together as a congregation or denomination. Different Christians, different churches, and different denominations will answer these questions differently. And maybe there is some value in that. Perhaps having some narrower and some broader denominations is the only way for the church as a whole to live out different goods. It is up to the United Methodist delegates to discern their particular calling.

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