Fascinated to see what happens with my church (we no longer attend since we moved away) - the main church is traditional / conservative but one of it's sister churches is very progressive.
100% agree. The split needs to happen at this point. No sense in staying together and tolerating a segment that employs suburbianity principles and continues to contort the word around how they want it to be.88Warrior said:
The sad thing is it should have never come down to this...This is what years of appeasement does. The denomination should have stood firm years ago when the "progressives" started pushing..Just one Methodist's opinion...
BCG Disciple said:100% agree. The split needs to happen at this point. No sense in staying together and tolerating a segment that employs suburbianity principles and continues to contort the word around how they want it to be.88Warrior said:
The sad thing is it should have never come down to this...This is what years of appeasement does. The denomination should have stood firm years ago when the "progressives" started pushing..Just one Methodist's opinion...
BCG Disciple said:100% agree. The split needs to happen at this point. No sense in staying together and tolerating a segment that employs suburbianity principles and continues to contort the word around how they want it to be.88Warrior said:
The sad thing is it should have never come down to this...This is what years of appeasement does. The denomination should have stood firm years ago when the "progressives" started pushing..Just one Methodist's opinion...
TresPuertas said:
Are these the results of the official vote or is this just the word on the street is?
UTExan said:
The Traditional Plan, which upholds the current language about homosexual practices, has received the most votes over the one church plan favored by the bishops and which would have allowed clergy to officiate at same sex weddings. There is much work to be done, but the church has held true to traditional biblical sexual standards for now. I would not be surprised to see liberal clergy leaving the denomination, as they probably should. Source is the United Methodist News Service...cannot link due to posting from my phone.
https://www.umnews.org/en/news/effort-to-delay-traditional-plan-debate-defeatedQuote:
After approving the Traditional Plan in the morning, General Conference delegates spent the afternoon debating and ultimately voting against the One Church Plan.
Delegates opposed the bishops' recommended One Church Plan by a vote of 436 to 386. The vote was 53 to almost 47 percent.
The votes mean the Traditional Plan moves forward to plenary Feb. 26.
The One Church Plan could still come back, but as a minority report. An amended version of the Traditional Plan, which delegates did not fully take up, also could come before the body Feb. 26.
Also heading to the plenary are two separate petitions that, with certain limitations, would allow churches to depart with their property. Currently, delegates also plan to discuss the LGBTQ-submitted Simple Plan, which eliminates restrictions related to homosexuality.
AgLiving06 said:
Am I reading it right that it appears a split is almost certain to occur based on todays votes?
OnlyForNow said:
There will also be a 200k grant available to conferences that leave under the modified trad. Plan.
UTExan said:
Good quote by Liberian delegate Rudolph Merab on his support for the Traditional Plan:
"It is better to be divided by truth than united by error."
Agree!UTExan said:
Good quote by Liberian delegate Rudolph Merab on his support for the Traditional Plan:
"It is better to be divided by truth than united by error."
Quote:
After passionate speeches, prayers and tears, the "one, last shot" for the One Church Plan was defeated by a vote of 449-374 at The United Methodist Church's 2019 General Conference.
-----
Nancy Denardo, Western Pennsylvania, cited Scriptures in her argument against the One Church Plan.
"Friends, please stop sowing seeds of deceit," she said. "I'm truly sorry if the truth of the Gospel hurts anyone; I love you and I love you enough to tell the truth."
------
Aislinn Deviney, Rio Texas, who described herself as a young evangelical delegate, said many young people "fiercely believe marriage is between one man and one woman."
"We are here at the table because of our dedication, not because we demand a place because of our age," she said. "We speak for ourselves. We all have family and friends who are LGBTQ that we love and value."
The Rev. Cara Niklas, Oklahoma, in speaking against the One Church Plan, said people supporting the Traditional Plan have been called mean-spirited.
"That is a false narrative," she said. She talked about the love she has for a niece who is a lesbian. "When gay persons become convinced I don't love them because of their behavior, it causes damage with our relationships."
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https://www.umnews.org/en/news/gc2019-daily-feb-26
UTExan said:
And the One Church folks really tried to paint the Traditional supporters as haters:Quote:
After passionate speeches, prayers and tears, the "one, last shot" for the One Church Plan was defeated by a vote of 449-374 at The United Methodist Church's 2019 General Conference.
-----
Nancy Denardo, Western Pennsylvania, cited Scriptures in her argument against the One Church Plan.
"Friends, please stop sowing seeds of deceit," she said. "I'm truly sorry if the truth of the Gospel hurts anyone; I love you and I love you enough to tell the truth."
------
Aislinn Deviney, Rio Texas, who described herself as a young evangelical delegate, said many young people "fiercely believe marriage is between one man and one woman."
"We are here at the table because of our dedication, not because we demand a place because of our age," she said. "We speak for ourselves. We all have family and friends who are LGBTQ that we love and value."
The Rev. Cara Niklas, Oklahoma, in speaking against the One Church Plan, said people supporting the Traditional Plan have been called mean-spirited.
"That is a false narrative," she said. She talked about the love she has for a niece who is a lesbian. "When gay persons become convinced I don't love them because of their behavior, it causes damage with our relationships."
----------
https://www.umnews.org/en/news/gc2019-daily-feb-26
UTExan said:
And the One Church folks really tried to paint the Traditional supporters as haters:Quote:
After passionate speeches, prayers and tears, the "one, last shot" for the One Church Plan was defeated by a vote of 449-374 at The United Methodist Church's 2019 General Conference.
-----
Nancy Denardo, Western Pennsylvania, cited Scriptures in her argument against the One Church Plan.
"Friends, please stop sowing seeds of deceit," she said. "I'm truly sorry if the truth of the Gospel hurts anyone; I love you and I love you enough to tell the truth."
------
Aislinn Deviney, Rio Texas, who described herself as a young evangelical delegate, said many young people "fiercely believe marriage is between one man and one woman."
"We are here at the table because of our dedication, not because we demand a place because of our age," she said. "We speak for ourselves. We all have family and friends who are LGBTQ that we love and value."
The Rev. Cara Niklas, Oklahoma, in speaking against the One Church Plan, said people supporting the Traditional Plan have been called mean-spirited.
"That is a false narrative," she said. She talked about the love she has for a niece who is a lesbian. "When gay persons become convinced I don't love them because of their behavior, it causes damage with our relationships."
----------
https://www.umnews.org/en/news/gc2019-daily-feb-26
Average Guy said:
I wonder if someone who follows this more closely can comment on the idea that US delegates were overwhelmingly (the article said 2/3, I think) in favor of the one church plan. Did I read that right? Does it represent sentiment of US members overall?
This is probably going to be the most interesting thing going forward. For example, I live in Dallas and there are a couple of churches that skew very liberal or very conservative. Oak Lawn UMC is almost certainly going to split, and I know for a fact that HP UMC won't. Those are easy.Quote:
Hmm. If the split among members closely resembles the split among the clergy, a breakaway of liberal churches from the greater UMC church would appear, at least in the US, like breakway of the conservative churches.
TresPuertas said:
I understand that people are hurt by this and that bothers me, But This was never about bigotry, it was about the Gospel,
The people who voted against the OCP aren't bigots. They are faithful Christians.
Quote:
So, when Traditional Plan supporters say "oh well, what can we do? It's just scripture, I'm not making my own judgments" it rings fairly hollow. I'd be far more sympathetic to the Traditional Plan if it also said that divorced people can't be ministers and we can't perform second marriages in the church. Because if it were truly just about the Gospel, it would include those things. I wish supporters were more honest about it. Say "it's not just the Gospel, my reason tells me we should exclude LGBT persons from the clergy."
FtWorthHorn said:TresPuertas said:
I understand that people are hurt by this and that bothers me, But This was never about bigotry, it was about the Gospel,
The people who voted against the OCP aren't bigots. They are faithful Christians.
But Methodism has always been more complex than simply looking at Scripture, right? Wesley instructs us to use scripture, tradition, experience, and reason to shape our faith.
For comparison, the Book of Discipline doesn't allow drinking alcohol. The Gospel, strictly read, would tell us not to ordain women or let them wear jewelry (as pointed out by Adam Hamilton through this process). None of us want that, so it's evident that Methodists generally do as Wesley suggested and add our own reason and experience to scripture.
So, when Traditional Plan supporters say "oh well, what can we do? It's just scripture, I'm not making my own judgments" it rings fairly hollow. I'd be far more sympathetic to the Traditional Plan if it also said that divorced people can't be ministers and we can't perform second marriages in the church. Because if it were truly just about the Gospel, it would include those things. I wish supporters were more honest about it. Say "it's not just the Gospel, my reason tells me we should exclude LGBT persons from the clergy."
The decision to focus on strict application of this one small element of scripture is not an accident.