From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


Clergywoman accepts 'cost of being truthful' about sexuality


From "NewsDesk" <NewsDesk@UMCOM.ORG>
Date Mon, 27 Oct 2003 15:17:52 -0600

Oct. 27, 2003	    News media contact: Joretta Purdue7(202)
546-87227Washington   ALL-BLGT{512}

NOTE: This report is a sidebar to UMNS story #511.

By Joretta Purdue*

SAN DIEGO (UMNS) - Two and a half years after revealing her sexual
orientation in a letter to her bishop, the Rev. Karen Dammann came more than
a thousand miles to a crowded hotel room to face her denomination's highest
court. 

At stake was her profession as a United Methodist minister and her job as
pastor to one of the congregations of the church's Pacific Northwest Annual
(regional) Conference.

In addressing the United Methodist Judicial Council during oral hearings Oct.
23, Dammann said she and her partner, Meredith Savage, did not envision that
the process initiated by her letter of Feb. 14, 2001, in which she asked to
come off family leave, would still be ongoing.

"We knew that the cost of being truthful with my bishop and my annual
conference would be high," she recalled. "We were ready to accept that cost
because we already knew the cost of living in closets, with the accompanying
lies and deceptions, was one we were determined not to pass on to our son."

In the letter, Dammann told Bishop Elias Galvan that she was in a committed
relationship with a woman. The bishop subsequently said he believed such an
appointment was forbidden in light of her statement and did not appoint her
to a church. The church's Book of Discipline, a book of laws and rules,
forbids ordination and appointment of "self-avowed practicing homosexuals."

The issue of her non-appointment ended up before the Judicial Council, which
ruled in October 2001 that only the clergy session of the conference could
change the status of a clergy member. Because of a misquote of the Book of
Discipline, the court reconsidered the case the following spring to correct
the error.

The bishop brought a complaint against Dammann afterward, based on the 2001
letter. The Pacific Northwest Annual Conference Committee on Investigation
held a hearing July 24, 2002, and the following day issued a statement saying
that it dismissed the complaint because the matter did not receive the five
votes necessary to send it forward to trial. 

The committee's decision was appealed to the Western Jurisdiction Committee
on Appeals, which met Jan. 29-30. The appellate committee affirmed the
conference committee on investigation by a 4-3 vote. The counsel for the
church appealed the decision to the Judicial Council.

The Rev. James Finkbeiner, a retired clergyman of Townsend, Wash., presented
the church's arguments in the oral hearings.

"We believe, as the counsel for the church, that essentially the Pacific
Northwest Conference of the church is presently in violation with the
Discipline (Paragraph) 304.3, which gives the qualifications and
disqualifications for ordination in the United Methodist Church, and for
appointment as well as for ordination," he stated. The law is uniform, he
said, so that every candidate in every jurisdiction of the church can look at
it and know whether they are qualified. 

The bishop's office, believing it was violating the law but also heeding the
decision of the committee on investigation, appointed Dammann to First United
Methodist Church in Ellensburg, Wash., Finkbeiner said. He added: "It is a
very trying and frustrating and difficult time for all of us who care about
each other and love each other in our agreements and in our disagreements." 

Dammann, in her presentation, said she was thankful for the members of the
Ellensburg congregation and of the two committees that heard her case. She
referred to the committee members as "'reformers,' for through them and
through their decisions on this matter, surely the Holy Spirit is speaking
clearly and strongly for the church to hear."

Dodie Haight, a laywoman representing the Ellensburg congregation, affirmed
the pastor. "Karen is a good fit for our congregation and is effective
because of her honesty and openness about who she is." Haight said Dammann
had won the hearts of the congregation in a short time.

The Rev. Robert C. Ward of Tacoma, Dammann's clergy counsel, said he believed
that the committee on investigation "was looking at the whole Discipline, and
beyond that was trying to be aware of who we are as the people of God ... and
... as United Methodists."

The Judicial Council's decision, released Oct. 27, said the Book of
Discipline is binding on individuals, congregations and other groups within
the church. The council remanded the case back to the jurisdictional appeals
committee and set aside the conference committee's decision.

"Our church has in place a judicial system that protects the rights of
pastors and the well-being of the church," said Bishop Elias Galvan after
learning of the council's decision. "We will continue to follow the
disciplinary process as directed by the Judicial Council." He requested
prayers for Dammann, her family and all those involved "in this difficult
process."

"I guess my immediate concern is for the congregation," Dammann told United
Methodist News Service. She said she warned them from the beginning that she
might be an interim rather than a long-term pastor.
 
She said she had not given much thought to her future. She noted that she has
been employed by the church since age 19, except working nights at a nursing
home when she was without an appointment.

"My calling is very strong still, and I'm not interested - at least I don't
think I am - in a denominational switch. So, I would anticipate that my
profession as a minister is over or would be fairly soon unless there are big
changes next year at General Conference. Even then, I don't know."

For the time being, she said, she will try to accomplish what she can with
her congregation and watch the process unfold.

# # #

*Purdue is a United Methodist News Service news writer based in Washington.

 
 

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