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Homosexuality issues underlie consultation on biblical authority


From NewsDesk <NewsDesk@UMCOM.UMC.ORG>
Date 10 Dec 1999 09:32:33

Dec. 10, 1999 News media contact: Thomas S. McAnally*Nashville Tenn.*(615)
742-5470 10-21-28-71B {664}

NOTE: For related coverage of the consultation, see UMNS story #665.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UMNS) - The "authority of Scripture and the nature of
God's revelation" was officially the topic for a consultation in Nashville,
Dec. 7-9, but as one participant observed, "the monster under the table" was
homosexuality.

That observation came as no surprise for the 33 participants, who understood
that the underlying reason for the consultation grew out of dialogues on
theological diversity held in 1998 and 1999, in which homosexuality was
identified as the most divisive issue in the United Methodist Church. The
participants of those earlier dialogues concluded, in a paper titled "In
Search of Unity," that much of the debate on the volatile issue hinges on
how one reads the Bible and understands God's continuing revelation.

As a result, the United Methodist Commission on Christian Unity and
Interreligious Concerns and the Board of Discipleship jointly sponsored the
consultation on Scriptural authority. Most of the participants were members
of the two agencies' governing boards.

While he did not characterize the problems related to homosexuality as a
"monster," the Rev. Bruce Robbins, staff executive for the Commission on
Christian Unity, did speak of what he termed a crisis in the church.

In a summary near the close of the three-day event, Robbins said many United
Methodists feel "deep levels of distrust and a sense of betrayal." People on
both sides of the issue are distressed at the "huge expenditure of energy on
the issue at the expense of mission and ministry," he said.

When the denomination's top legislative body meets May 2-12 in Cleveland, he
said it will be "yet another General Conference where homosexuality will be
front and center in our discussions."

On one side of the division are people who believe proscriptions against
homosexuality force them to participate in "exclusion and bigotry," Robbins
said. On the other side are members who believe they are forced to support a
church whose leaders and actions are an "offense to the gospel" because of
their support for homosexual causes, he said. People in this group often
point to a statement issued at the 1996 General Conference by 15 bishops who
said they disagree with the church's official stance on homosexuality. The
church's official policy in its Book of Discipline includes a statement that
"the practice of homosexuality is incompatible with Christian teaching."

Robbins expressed concern that people in the middle are feeling increasing
pressure to move to one position or another, possibly leading to a split in
the church.  

He wondered aloud how the Roman Catholic Church has avoided schism
throughout its long history, and remarked that "splitting is a very
Protestant solution." Some participants suggested that focusing on
ecclesiology, "who we are as a church together," would provide an answer to
that question. Instead of the authority of Scripture and God's revelation,
they suggested that the event should have dealt with ecclesiology.

Robbins said some in the church keep hoping that new evidence on
homosexuality will emerge so that debate will no longer be an issue. Others
hope that the issue will diminish as it becomes less important to one side
or the other, he said. "There is the thought that the liberals will give up
or that the conservatives will be worn down," he said. Still others in the
church hope the Holy Spirit will "move or convert" people in one direction
or the other on the issue, he said.

Consultation participants did not develop a statement of consensus or a
document of any kind, but they appeared to accept Robbins' general
observations about the meeting and the issues related to homosexuality.   

He offered several options for trying to resolve the impasse in the church,
including a process for continued dialogue across the church and models for
creating "safe space" for ministry and mission. Despite the large amount of
time spent on issues related to homosexuality in the church, he said, "I
think the need for dialogue is urgent."  

He noted that the Council of Bishops is planning such a dialogue and that
many annual conferences have conducted "Christian conferencing."

The Rev. Rebekah Miles, a faculty member at Perkins School of Theology at
Southern Methodist University in Dallas, encouraged participants to identify
areas of consensus regarding the authority of Scripture and to "avoid
unnecessary polarization." On many theological issues, she said there is
"quite a lot of commonality." The authority of Scripture, she suggested, may
not be the dividing point for homosexuality.

The Rev. Stuart Greene of Duluth, Ga., noted that issues such as the Virgin
birth and the resurrection of Christ are not dividing the church. However,
he expressed concern that any attempt to redefine the authority of Scripture
on the issue of homosexuality will cause people to fear changes in the
church's position on foundational beliefs.  "If our desire is unity, I'm not
sure that is the best way to pursue it," he said. 

The Rev. David Lull, a United Methodist staff member of the National Council
of Churches, said the divisive issues before the church are not limited to
homosexuality.  He pointed to two controversial events: a "Re-Imagining
Conference" held several years ago in Minneapolis, and the "Jesus Seminar,"
a group of theologians who meet periodically to explore who Jesus was. He
expressed concern that "some said you couldn't be a United Methodist
clergyman and participate in those two events."  

Much the same concern was expressed by Bishop Roy Sano, Los Angeles Area,
president of the governing board for the Commission on Christian Unity.
"Those of us who feel the Discipline should be changed (regarding
homosexuality) ... are often panned as being unbiblical," he said. "The
Bible has been central to my life. When I'm dismissed as unbiblical, it's a
very serious offense."

The Rev. Joy Moore, a faculty member at Asbury Theological Seminary in
Wilmore, Ky., observed there is considerable agreement within the
denomination concerning the authority of Scripture. "We are a people of the
book," she said.  

However she and others expressed concern that the consultation did not focus
adequately on the nature of revelation. "What are the new revelations? We
can't pinpoint them." She said many in the church are concerned that people
might assume that God's new revelations say there is another Christ or that
the atonement didn't really happen, or that "fundamentals are no longer
fundamentals."

Five presentations were given during the consultation: 
·	"John Wesley's Understanding of Biblical Authority and the Nature of
God's Revelation," by the Rev. Scott Jones, Perkins School of Theology,
Southern Methodist University, Dallas;
·	"Biblical Authority from a Translation Perspective," the Rev. David
Lull, Office of Bible Translation and Utilization for the National Council
of Churches;
·	"Revelation and Biblical Authority," the Rev. Delwin Brown, Iliff
School of Theology, Denver;
·	"Biblical Authority as it Shapes Culture," the Rev. Rebekah Miles,
Perkins School of Theology;
·	"Biblical Authority as Understood in Non-Western Culture," the Rev.
Wesley Ariarajah, Drew University Theological Seminary, Madison, N.J.
#  #  #

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