Global united methodist church lgbtq
The Global Methodist Church in the Public Square: Restraint and Modesty
By Walter B. Fenton
One of the running jokes among students at the divinity school I attended went like this: “We are all at the divinity college because we did not acquire accepted at the law school.” Like all such witticisms, it was funny because most of us knew it was at least half true. We knew attending the law school could lead to a career in politics, and a good number of us yearned for that calling.
Truth be told, inside many a clergyperson beats the heart of a budding politician. So, it is not surprising many are happy to openly divide their political opinions on a host of matters, and some even do so from their pulpits on Sunday mornings. When done sparingly, and with dignity and respect, we do appreciate pastors who speak in the midst of a crisis or address issues of great import. We are particularly grateful for those who ground such messages in Scripture and in the confessions of faith shared by Christians down through the ages.
All Christ followers, whether clergy or laity, are obliged to addr
Stances of Faiths on LGBTQ+ Issues: The United Methodist Church
In May , the General Conference voted to remove longstanding bans on the ordination of LGBTQ+ clergy and the celebration of same-sex marriages by clergy and in churches. These changes became fully effective on January 1,
BACKGROUND
The UMC traces its origins to the Methodist movement initiated in the midth century by Anglican priest John Wesley and his brother Charles. The current structure of the UMC was established in through the union of the Methodist Church and the Evangelical United Brethren Church. The church is founded on three basic principles:
- Do no harm.
- Do good.
- Practice the ordinances of God, including prayer, Bible reading, worship, and the Lord's Supper.
The global church structure mirrors the United States government with legislative, executive, and judicial branches. The legislative branch, the General Conference, meets every four years to set church policy. Approximately 1, delegates (half lay leaders, half clergy) gather to consider revisions to the Book of Resolutions and the Book of D
Global Methodist Church reacts to UMC votes to allow LGBT clergy, same-sex weddings
The Global Methodist Church has issued an official response to the United Methodist Church's General Conference votes to drop the denomination's decades-old ban on ordaining noncelibate homosexuals and allow the blessing of same-sex weddings.
UMC General Conference delegates voted this week via consent calendar to eliminate assorted rules from the denomination's Book of Discipline, shifting its stance on multiple LGBT issues.
Launched in as a conservative alternative to the UMC at a time when many churches were planning to leave the mainline Protestant denomination, the GMC issued a statement Wednesday stating that it "do[es] not have any affiliation with their decisions, nor do we wish to comment or provide commentary on the actions of other religious organizations."
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Nevertheless, the nascent Methodist denom
The Global Methodist Church Will Face in Costa Rica. Sexuality Is Not on the Agenda.
(RNS) — Sexuality won’t be on the agenda when members of the nascent Global Methodist Church convene for the first time Sept. in San Jose, Costa Rica.
The breakaway denomination established by departing United Methodist churches two years ago will instead adopt a constitution and iron out its governance structure. The wrangling over sexuality has, for now, been settled.
Cityscape of San Jose, Costa Rica. (Photo by César Badilla Miranda/Unsplash/Creative Commons)
The new denomination’s govern book spells out that “human sexuality is a gift of God that is to be affirmed as it is exercised within the legal and spiritual covenant of a loving and monogamous marriage between one noun and one woman.”
It was mostly the issue of sexuality that led some 7, U.S.-based United Methodist churches (about 25% of all U.S. congregations in the denomination) to break away, fearing the United Methodist Church was about to lift its LGBTQ+ bans on ordination and marriage. It did so at its General Conference in Apr