That's exactly what it is about. Power.
AGC said:
Will anyone object to me tagging on?
I saw an article and it's consistent across all splintering denominations: the conservative and liberal segments do not consider each other to be carrying out the same mission. Even as the liberal churches wither and die, they refuse to sell property to conservative churches. Their preference is a church desert in redeveloping areas where it is prohibitively expensive for anyone to move in. Few can compete with developers for real estate in downtown Austin, certainly not many churches. The preference is condos and hotels to spiritual life of any sort.
https://baptistnews.com/article/historic-first-baptist-austin-commits-to-stay-downtown-with-the-help-of-partners/
Edit: perhaps this is the true fruit of the progressive doctrine. Spiritual death not only of self and congregation but community and city is the only end.
The Shank Ag said:
Not too long before general conference. Wondering how off the rails it gets.
They've been dragging their feet on releasing information, i.e. hotel information. African churches are unable to get visas without hotel reservations. Looks like a deliberate attempt to keep conservative African churches from participating.The Shank Ag said:
Not too long before general conference. Wondering how off the rails it gets.
Martin Cash said:They've been dragging their feet on releasing information, i.e. hotel information. African churches are unable to get visas without hotel reservations. Looks like a deliberate attempt to keep conservative African churches from participating.The Shank Ag said:
Not too long before general conference. Wondering how off the rails it gets.
88Warrior said:Martin Cash said:They've been dragging their feet on releasing information, i.e. hotel information. African churches are unable to get visas without hotel reservations. Looks like a deliberate attempt to keep conservative African churches from participating.The Shank Ag said:
Not too long before general conference. Wondering how off the rails it gets.
Not surprised by this if true. It was the African churches that helped stave off the liberal proposals last conference…I have not seen anything on it but any idea how many African churches left the UMC since last conference??
goatchze said:88Warrior said:Martin Cash said:They've been dragging their feet on releasing information, i.e. hotel information. African churches are unable to get visas without hotel reservations. Looks like a deliberate attempt to keep conservative African churches from participating.The Shank Ag said:
Not too long before general conference. Wondering how off the rails it gets.
Not surprised by this if true. It was the African churches that helped stave off the liberal proposals last conference…I have not seen anything on it but any idea how many African churches left the UMC since last conference??
Almost none.
African churches have the people.
UMC has the money.
UMC needs the people.
African churches need the money.
The latest UMC "plan" is to have a carve out, a separate set of rules for the African churches. A different book of discipline, definition of marriage, etc.
If implemented, it will make for an interesting, more dependency based relationship.
So the Word of God is different depending on what continent you're on?goatchze said:
The latest UMC "plan" is to have a carve out, a separate set of rules for the African churches. A different book of discipline, definition of marriage, etc.
If implemented, it will make for an interesting, more dependency based relationship.
Already here88Warrior said:goatchze said:88Warrior said:Martin Cash said:They've been dragging their feet on releasing information, i.e. hotel information. African churches are unable to get visas without hotel reservations. Looks like a deliberate attempt to keep conservative African churches from participating.The Shank Ag said:
Not too long before general conference. Wondering how off the rails it gets.
Not surprised by this if true. It was the African churches that helped stave off the liberal proposals last conference…I have not seen anything on it but any idea how many African churches left the UMC since last conference??
Almost none.
African churches have the people.
UMC has the money.
UMC needs the people.
African churches need the money.
The latest UMC "plan" is to have a carve out, a separate set of rules for the African churches. A different book of discipline, definition of marriage, etc.
If implemented, it will make for an interesting, more dependency based relationship.
With the loss of some of the bigger, more traditional churches via disaffiliation, I feel the UMC cash flow will be in a bind here pretty soon…
https://www.umnews.org/en/news/amid-church-losses-proposed-budget-slashedQuote:
For now, the GCFA board is proposing a 2025-2028 denominational budget of about $346.7 million to the denomination's top policymaking assembly, scheduled to meet April 23-May 3 in Charlotte, North Carolina.
That's about $23.8 million less than the budget proposal the finance agency board approved in May last year.
The new bottom line also marks a nearly 43% overall reduction from the $604 million denomination-wide budget that General Conference approved at its last regular meeting in 2016 and represents the biggest budget drop in the denomination's history.
Pro Sandy said:Already here88Warrior said:goatchze said:88Warrior said:Martin Cash said:They've been dragging their feet on releasing information, i.e. hotel information. African churches are unable to get visas without hotel reservations. Looks like a deliberate attempt to keep conservative African churches from participating.The Shank Ag said:
Not too long before general conference. Wondering how off the rails it gets.
Not surprised by this if true. It was the African churches that helped stave off the liberal proposals last conference…I have not seen anything on it but any idea how many African churches left the UMC since last conference??
Almost none.
African churches have the people.
UMC has the money.
UMC needs the people.
African churches need the money.
The latest UMC "plan" is to have a carve out, a separate set of rules for the African churches. A different book of discipline, definition of marriage, etc.
If implemented, it will make for an interesting, more dependency based relationship.
With the loss of some of the bigger, more traditional churches via disaffiliation, I feel the UMC cash flow will be in a bind here pretty soon…https://www.umnews.org/en/news/amid-church-losses-proposed-budget-slashedQuote:
For now, the GCFA board is proposing a 2025-2028 denominational budget of about $346.7 million to the denomination's top policymaking assembly, scheduled to meet April 23-May 3 in Charlotte, North Carolina.
That's about $23.8 million less than the budget proposal the finance agency board approved in May last year.
The new bottom line also marks a nearly 43% overall reduction from the $604 million denomination-wide budget that General Conference approved at its last regular meeting in 2016 and represents the biggest budget drop in the denomination's history.
Martin Cash said:So the Word of God is different depending on what continent you're on?goatchze said:
The latest UMC "plan" is to have a carve out, a separate set of rules for the African churches. A different book of discipline, definition of marriage, etc.
If implemented, it will make for an interesting, more dependency based relationship.
Martin Cash said:So the Word of God is different depending on what continent you're on?goatchze said:
The latest UMC "plan" is to have a carve out, a separate set of rules for the African churches. A different book of discipline, definition of marriage, etc.
If implemented, it will make for an interesting, more dependency based relationship.
Interpretation is.Martin Cash said:So the Word of God is different depending on what continent you're on?goatchze said:
The latest UMC "plan" is to have a carve out, a separate set of rules for the African churches. A different book of discipline, definition of marriage, etc.
If implemented, it will make for an interesting, more dependency based relationship.
I am already a member of the GMC. But I still have friends in the UMC, so I try to keep up with what is going on there.The Chicken Ranch said:
You are about 15 years behind the PCUSA.
They will then change the pronouns in the Bible, then they will change your hymns and liturgy to be justice centered. In your confessions you will ask God to forgive you for being white and destroying the earth, while you will pray for justice for Palestinian terrorists. You will be asked to adamantly support gun control and abortion up to the second that the baby is born. You will be inclusive of any gender they can think of and have "Jesus was queer" classes shoved down your throat.
Go find you a Global Methodist Church, an ECO/EPC/PCA Presbyterian Church, or a LCMS/WELS Lutheran Church and be done with it.
My Faith walk with God has blossomed since we left the PCUSA. Pray about it, and listen to God.
goatchze said:
https://religionnews.com/2024/04/04/ahead-of-general-conference-queer-united-methodist-delegates-organize-a-caucus/
The last time the United Methodist Church met for its General Conference, in 2019, there were only seven self-identifying LGBTQ delegates. When the denomination convenes later this month, there will be 26 enough to form a caucus, which is exactly what they've done.
The first-ever United Methodist Queer Delegate Caucus will be among the more visible changes when the denomination's top legislative body convenes April 23-May 3 in Charlotte, North Carolina.
Though the caucus can only be unofficial in a denomination that still views homosexuality as "incompatible with Christian teaching," it is organized and ready for the spotlight. It has a website, it plans on convening news conferences and it has already ordered T-shirts and pins.
...
"Queer folks have been bearing the weight of the division and the discrimination in this denomination for close to 50 years," said the Rev. Becca Girrell, pastor of a church in Morrisville, Vermont, and a member of the queer delegate caucus. "And that's just not a tenable weight to carry any longer for most folks."
But for this conference, the goals of the caucus are more modest. They include the removal of contested passages from the denomination's rulebook, the Book of Discipline, that restrict LGBTQ members from ordination and marriage. The caucus is not calling for new definitions or expressions.
"We're not seeking at this point to add any affirming language," said Helen Ryde, a regional organizer with the Reconciling Ministries Network who serves on the caucus's 10-person steering committee. "This is getting us to neutral. It's getting us to a level playing field where there's nothing bad in there. This is not the year to be trying to do any more than that."
(i.e. not yet)
...
That doesn't mean there won't be opposition to removing restrictive LGBTQ passages from the rulebook. The United Methodist Church is a global denomination and many delegates from Africa and Asia will likely resist any changes to the human sexuality clauses.
For that reason, the caucus supports another proposal before the General Conference to restructure the United Methodist Church worldwide to give each region of the church parity and the ability to tailor their own customs and traditions to meet local needs. That plan is called regionalization.
If it passes a yearslong process that will require ratification in each region Methodists in Africa, Europe, the Philippines and the United States would each be able to customize the Book of Discipline on questions of human sexuality and other nondoctrinal issues.
88Warrior said:goatchze said:
https://religionnews.com/2024/04/04/ahead-of-general-conference-queer-united-methodist-delegates-organize-a-caucus/
The last time the United Methodist Church met for its General Conference, in 2019, there were only seven self-identifying LGBTQ delegates. When the denomination convenes later this month, there will be 26 enough to form a caucus, which is exactly what they've done.
The first-ever United Methodist Queer Delegate Caucus will be among the more visible changes when the denomination's top legislative body convenes April 23-May 3 in Charlotte, North Carolina.
Though the caucus can only be unofficial in a denomination that still views homosexuality as "incompatible with Christian teaching," it is organized and ready for the spotlight. It has a website, it plans on convening news conferences and it has already ordered T-shirts and pins.
...
"Queer folks have been bearing the weight of the division and the discrimination in this denomination for close to 50 years," said the Rev. Becca Girrell, pastor of a church in Morrisville, Vermont, and a member of the queer delegate caucus. "And that's just not a tenable weight to carry any longer for most folks."
But for this conference, the goals of the caucus are more modest. They include the removal of contested passages from the denomination's rulebook, the Book of Discipline, that restrict LGBTQ members from ordination and marriage. The caucus is not calling for new definitions or expressions.
"We're not seeking at this point to add any affirming language," said Helen Ryde, a regional organizer with the Reconciling Ministries Network who serves on the caucus's 10-person steering committee. "This is getting us to neutral. It's getting us to a level playing field where there's nothing bad in there. This is not the year to be trying to do any more than that."
(i.e. not yet)
...
That doesn't mean there won't be opposition to removing restrictive LGBTQ passages from the rulebook. The United Methodist Church is a global denomination and many delegates from Africa and Asia will likely resist any changes to the human sexuality clauses.
For that reason, the caucus supports another proposal before the General Conference to restructure the United Methodist Church worldwide to give each region of the church parity and the ability to tailor their own customs and traditions to meet local needs. That plan is called regionalization.
If it passes a yearslong process that will require ratification in each region Methodists in Africa, Europe, the Philippines and the United States would each be able to customize the Book of Discipline on questions of human sexuality and other nondoctrinal issues.
The old "divide THEN conquer" technique….The UMC will be gone in 10 years….The big conservative donors that have funded the UMC are leaving.
Quote:
Characteristics of full Communion
- common confessing of the Christian faith
- mutual recognition of Baptism and a sharing of the Lord's Supper, allowing for joint worship and an exchangeability of members
- mutual recognition and availability of ordained ministers to the service of all, subject to the disciplinary regulations of other denominations
- common commitment to evangelism, witness and service
- means of common decision-making on critical common issues of faith and life
- mutual lifting of any condemnations that exist between denominations.
AgLiving06 said:
You're right, and it actually goes farther. I did a quick google search to see who the ELCA was in full communion with and the results are:
ELCA Full Communion PartnersQuote:
Characteristics of full Communion
- common confessing of the Christian faith
- mutual recognition of Baptism and a sharing of the Lord's Supper, allowing for joint worship and an exchangeability of members
- mutual recognition and availability of ordained ministers to the service of all, subject to the disciplinary regulations of other denominations
- common commitment to evangelism, witness and service
- means of common decision-making on critical common issues of faith and life
- mutual lifting of any condemnations that exist between denominations.
Partners:
PCUSA
Reformed Church in America
United Church of Christ
The Episcopal Church
The Moravian Church (not sure who this is)
United Methodist Church
So to your point...today, an ELCA pastor could show up on your pulpit, and your family would have to accept them and their teachings.
It is inevitable that these groups will merge into a single liberal group (I won't even pretend they are Christians).
AgLiving06 said:
You're right, and it actually goes farther. I did a quick google search to see who the ELCA was in full communion with and the results are:
ELCA Full Communion PartnersQuote:
Characteristics of full Communion
- common confessing of the Christian faith
- mutual recognition of Baptism and a sharing of the Lord's Supper, allowing for joint worship and an exchangeability of members
- mutual recognition and availability of ordained ministers to the service of all, subject to the disciplinary regulations of other denominations
- common commitment to evangelism, witness and service
- means of common decision-making on critical common issues of faith and life
- mutual lifting of any condemnations that exist between denominations.
Partners:
PCUSA
Reformed Church in America
United Church of Christ
The Episcopal Church
The Moravian Church (not sure who this is)
United Methodist Church
So to your point...today, an ELCA pastor could show up on your pulpit, and your family would have to accept them and their teachings.
It is inevitable that these groups will merge into a single liberal group (I won't even pretend they are Christians).
Quote:
Unfortunately UMC is taking a lot of assets with them.