From Deseret News archives:

Methodist delegates vote for unity in face of conservative proposal to split

Published: Friday, May 7, 2004 1:14 p.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
PITTSBURGH — United Methodists hugged and wept as they overwhelmingly endorsed church unity Friday, a day after a rift over homosexuality broke wide open with an evangelical proposal to split the denomination.

Choking back emotions, delegates spoke in support of the unity resolution at the end of their national policy meeting, which is held once every four years. The measure passed 869-41, with eight abstentions.

"Our denomination was very clear today. We are going to continue as the United Methodist Church as we know it," said the Rev. John Schol of West Chester, Pa., who organized a group to draft the resolution. "I think we'll come back in four years a stronger denomination."

On Thursday, the Rev. William Hinson, a prominent Methodist pastor and president of the conservative Confessing Movement, startled many General Conference participants by announcing he could no longer endure the dispute over homosexuality that has dragged on since 1972.

He said he had concluded that opposing sides in the debate could never reconcile their views on what the Bible says about gays, so they should divide up the church. The 8.3 million-member denomination is the third-largest in the country.

Story continues below
Hinson said he did not interpret Friday's vote as a repudiation. Conservative leaders plan to spend the next four years building support among local congregations for a schism.

"I know unity is important, but someone said if you sacrifice truth on the altar of unity you lose both," Hinson said.

Several hundred evangelical delegates, who had gathered for their daily breakfast strategy session, gave Hinson a standing ovation Friday when he rose to address them. Scott Field, legislative coordinator for a coalition of evangelicals, said they had been flooded with "thumbs-up e-mails and phone calls" in response to the pastor's speech.

But even conservatives were divided over Hinson's proposal.

The Rev. Maxie Dunnam, a leading evangelical and president of Asbury Theological Seminary in Wilmore, Ky., believed there was still a chance to resolve the dispute over gay issues and more dialogue was needed.

"We shouldn't put emphasis on separation but on talking together on what it is that's keeping the United Methodist Church from being what we say we are," Dunnam said.

The denomination's Social Principles say that gay sex is "incompatible with Christian teaching" and bans ordaining homosexuals. Delegates this week voted to affirm that stand and made conducting same-sex marriage ceremonies a chargeable offense for clergy under church law.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Related content
previousnext

Latest comments

Jazz need to win during homestand

blowing away mediocre teams at home I am not taking anything for granted....

I'd believe Daniel Hill over our government. This man knows what he's talking...

BYU wins 3-2 in a boring snowy game?

Dan you need to be more specific in your reporting. "Scramble" "Gleefully...

because i'm rooting for them. they had those cute ladybug uniforms

It's funny that N.O.W. decides to comment on 'sexist' comments about a dirty...

BCS at-large bids up for grabs

Are you serious? MAYBE that might be remotely possible if BYU had beat FSU...

If the Cougs win by l-------That will be the greatest satifaction to me. I...

Cougars turn focus to dreaded rivals

I think Max Hall will scramble 75.5 yards for the winning touchdown as time...

BCS at-large bids up for grabs

No wonder Bronco thinks his own fans are ignorant. There is absolutely no...

Advertisements