JOIN US MAY 20-21 FOR RESTORE CONFERENCE

Mary
DeMuth

Scot
McKnight

Screenshot 2023-01-13 at 1.50.18 PM

Naghmeh
Panahi

Reporting the Truth.
Restoring the Church.

United Methodist Bishops Look to Pivot After 2,400+ Churches Disaffiliate

By Emily Miller
thomas bickerton UMC disaffiliation
Bishop Thomas Bickerton addresses a meeting of United Methodist bishops, May 1, 2023, in Chicago, Illinois. (Video screen grab)

About 100 active and retired United Methodist bishops from across the globe are meeting this week in Chicago, Illinois, for the first time in person since the COVID-19 pandemic and since the launch one year ago of the Global Methodist Church, a conservative denomination formed for United Methodist churches looking to disaffiliate over LGBTQ ordination and marriage.

Bishop Thomas Bickerton told the United Methodist Church’s Council of Bishops it was time to pivot, as the denomination has been losing churches since a 2019 special session of its General Conference approved a disaffiliation plan for congregations wishing to leave for “reasons of conscience” related to their beliefs about sexuality. The United Methodist Church has been stuck in disagreement over the ordination and marriage of its LGBTQ members for decades.

“There is a way through the morass. But it depends completely on where we cast our eyes — not on the dilemmas in this world, but on the goodness of God’s mercy and grace,” Bickerton said during his president’s livestreamed address Monday.

The bishop’s remarks came one year to the day after the Global Methodist Church launched.

The Global Methodist Church got its official start on May 1, 2022, after the United Methodist Church’s General Conference meeting was delayed for the third time for pandemic-related reasons. Delegates to that meeting had been expected to vote on a proposal to effectively split the mainline denomination, dedicating money to the creation of the new theologically conservative Methodist denomination.

Your tax-deductible gift helps our journalists report the truth and hold Christian leaders and organizations accountable. Give a gift of $30 or more to The Roys Report this month, and you will receive a copy of “Hurt and Healed by the Church” by Ryan George. To donate, click here.

UMC
A variety of active and retired United Methodist Church bishops meet May 1, 2023, in Chicago. (Video screen grab)

Since 2019, more than 2,400 churches have disaffiliated from the United Methodist Church, according to the latest tally by the United Methodist News Service.

The majority — about 2,000 churches and 2,450 clergy, including three former United Methodist bishops — have joined the Global Methodist Church, according to the Rev. Keith Boyette, who leads the new denomination as its transitional connectional officer. And more congregations and conferences around the world have declared their intention to join the Global Methodist Church, according to a post on the new denomination’s website.

Meantime, those leading the denomination Global Methodists have left behind are “tired, worn and vulnerable,” according to Bickerton, president of the United Methodist Church’s Council of Bishops.

“There’s no doubt in this room that the second wave of disaffiliations has taken a toll. In conversations with many of you, it’s not hard to sense the fatigue, the disappointment, the anger, the sadness, the confusion within us all,” he said.

More disaffiliations are expected as regional annual conferences gather this year for regular meetings and special sessions.

Dec. 31 can’t come soon enough, Bickerton said.

That’s the last day churches can leave the United Methodist Church under the disaffiliation plan approved at the 2019 special session of its General Conference.

“I admit to you I’m eager to get past all this. I want us to stop talking about disaffiliations. I’m worried genuinely that we’ve spent more time on those that are leaving than focusing our energy on those who are staying,” he said to applause.

The United Methodist Church will look different moving forward, Bickerton said. Too much has changed, he said, and he anticipates a “drop in the denomination numerically.”

He encouraged bishops to grieve all that had been lost, making time during his address for them to pause and pray together.

But he also encouraged them to look for new opportunities.

“We should anticipate less bishops, reconfigured boundaries, reformed agencies and a revised work plan to achieve our mission. We cannot work with what is not there. But we can see it as a longtime overdue opportunity to reposition this denomination for its next expression,” he said.

“That is the pivot.”

During Monday’s opening worship, the Council of Bishops planned to anoint the new bishops who were elected in November. It also is scheduled to hear from general secretaries of United Methodist agencies and boards and discuss how to endow theological education in conferences outside of the United States and promote racial equality in the workplace, according to a press release.

Emily McFarlan Miller is a national reporter for Religion News Service. 

SHARE THIS:

GET EMAIL UPDATES!

Keep in touch with Julie and get updates in your inbox!

Don’t worry we won’t spam you.

More to explore
discussion

5 Responses

  1. United Methodist Churches are very important community organizations in the United States. As a Girl Scout and Cub Scout leader, I’ve been involved with several Methodist congregations, and they were always warm and helpful and just great people. I wish them all the best.

  2. My obligatory comment that you are consistently framing this schism incorrectly. It isn’t about LGBTQ issues, but about Jesus and the Bible. There’d be no LGBTQ issue if the Bible and Jesus didn’t have something to say on the issue.

    As Bishop Bickerton said, ““There is a way through the morass. But it depends completely on where we cast our eyes — not on the dilemmas in this world, but on the goodness of God’s mercy and grace,” Bickerton said during his president’s livestreamed address Monday.”

    That is correct. The correct place to cast our gaze is on Jesus (The eyes are the lamp of the Body). The UMC, of which I am a minister currently, has, as an organization, chosen to reject that truth and embrace secular liberalism, and unitarianism, as its worldview. It rejects the scriptural holiness that John Wesley so famously dedicated his life to.

    1. Amen to following scripture and not social present day demands! It is all about that. The UMC just doesn’t get it. People are hungry for the Truth!

  3. We err because we don’t know the Holy Scriptures…My Dad was a Methodist Pastor, and he would have voted to desaffiliate, as the UMC is deviating from the Holy Scriptures.

  4. I believe that scripture is pretty clear in that marriage is between a man and woman. I can’t find any reference that indicates approval of LGBT lifestyle

Leave a Reply

The Roys Report seeks to foster thoughtful and respectful dialogue. Toward that end, the site requires that people register before they begin commenting. This means no anonymous comments will be allowed. Also, any comments with profanity, name-calling, and/or a nasty tone will be deleted.
 
MOST RECENT Articles
MOST popular articles
en_USEnglish

Donate

Hi. We see this is the third article this month you’ve found worth reading. Great! Would you consider making a tax-deductible donation to help our journalists continue to report the truth and restore the church?

Your tax-deductible gift helps our journalists report the truth and hold Christian leaders and organizations accountable. Give a gift of $30 or more to The Roys Report this month, and you will receive a copy of “Hurt and Healed by the Church” by Ryan George.