My position was made clear in my initial post, but regardless of where you stand on the issue, it's my belief this could well be the death knell for the Methodist Church, as it stands as the largest Protestant church, in this country.
While similar concerns were held when they changed their stance of blacks and women, those were moves towards inclusivity. This is a move, perhaps in perception alone, towards exclusive.
Our current social climate doesn't lend itself towards people flocking to exclusive churches. The rise of the non-denominationals, and the falling, not the rising, numbers of Methodists here in the US are clear indicators of that.
While every Protestant faith may be in line with their stance on this issue, none are having their position broadcast in the Wall Street Journal. That's bad pub.
The fact of the matter is that this decision didn't just alienate the small amount of LGBTQ folks, it alienated their supporters as well as those who carry the idea that loving > judging. Those people could be patently wrong with regard to scripture, but churches also need people and funding to operate.
It'll be very interesting to see what the ultimate fallout will be.
*also, Hans noted that the liberals were convingly defeated and that's not the case and is a misleading statement. The opinions of countries where homosexuals are put to death were crucial in this decision. In the US the decision was around 2/3 to 3/4 in support of it. The OCP was defeated, it not handily and should, like the direction of Texas to a bluer state, be reason for concern rather than spiking god the football.