From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


United Methodists sustain connection in the NCC


From NewsDesk <NewsDesk@UMCOM.UMC.ORG>
Date 11 May 2000 19:24:49

CLEVELAND (UMNS) - Delegates attending the United Methodist General
Conference voted to retain the denomination's membership in the ecumenical
National Council on Churches (NCC) on May 11.

The action was in response to a petition that called on the United Methodist
Church to "withdraw from any and all connection" with the ecumenical body by
Dec. 31. The petition said that although the NCC receives funds to assist
churches in cooperating with each other and in promoting Christianity, it
has strayed from that goal for the past 50 years.

The 992 delegates rejected the notion that the NCC has focused its energies
on things of "a secular political nature" and that it "retained a peripheral
relationship" in spreading the Gospel.

The Rev. Robert Edgar, a United Methodist pastor and former Congressman,
became the ecumenical agency's chief staff executive on Jan. 1. The United
Methodist Church is a major supporter of the NCC.

The delegates also voted to continue the church's membership in the
Consultation on Church Union (COCU), a body working toward unity of the
universal church. COCU is an ecumenical organization of Protestant churches;
representatives from each denomination meet regularly to work toward shared
understandings of polity, ritual and ordination.

Voting to sustain a connection with COCU, the assembly directed the Council
of Bishops and the United Methodist Commission on Christian Unity and
Interreligious Concerns to continue in dialogue with "covenanting partners,"
clarifying questions and developing covenant processes. The General
Conference also told the bishops and the commission to promote the "Call to
Christian Commitment and Action to Combat Racism" throughout the
denomination and to advocate its study and implementation.

General Conference delegates, who gather every four years to set policy for
the United Methodist Church, are meeting May 2-12.

Delegates acted on a variety of matters May 11, including adding a third
special Sunday without an offering to the denomination's programming. They
created "Organ and Tissue Donor Sunday," to be observed annually on the
second Sunday in November. The current non-funded special Sundays are
Heritage Sunday, April 23, when the church is called to remember the past by
committing itself to God's continuing call; and Laity Sunday, the third
Sunday in October, when the church celebrates the ministry of lay people. 

The new Sunday will be celebrated at the designated time in November because
the date is closest to Thanksgiving and "is viewed as a time to come
together around the issue of life and Thanksgiving." 

General Conference delegates also celebrated the work of the lay members.
They were reminded at the beginning of the legislative meeting of the
importance of clergy and laity partnership. They called upon the churchwide
Board of Higher Education and Ministry and the Board of Discipleship to seek
ways of expanding existing and new forms of "professional" lay ministry and
to acknowledge professional lay ministry as a call to ministry through "acts
of recognition and celebration." 

The delegates instructed both boards to bring recommendations for
professional lay ministry to the 2004 General Conference in Pittsburgh.

In the United Methodist Church, all clergy members are appointed annually to
a church, charge or circuit. The delegates voted to lengthen the term of
pastoral appointments. They encouraged bishops and cabinets to work toward
longer tenures in local church appointments, to provide a more effective
ministry. Currently, bishops appoint clergy to coincide with the pastoral
needs of charges, communities and pastors.

Delegates also expressed grief for violence by passing a measure encouraging
congregations, youth and campus ministries, and church agencies to promote
opportunities "where we might be a witness to a grieving nation." They
requested that United Methodists across the globe "seek to reconcile the
violence found within our own hearts" and to "seek forgiveness for the
injustices we have committed against each other, our friends and family, and
the larger community." 
# # #
---Linda Green

*************************************
United Methodist News Service
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