Current:Home > ContactAs a landmark United Methodist gathering approaches, African churches weigh their future. -FundSphere
As a landmark United Methodist gathering approaches, African churches weigh their future.
View
Date:2025-04-14 09:23:04
The United Methodist Church lost one-fourth of its U.S. churches in a recent schism, with conservatives departing over disputes on sexuality and theology.
Now, with the approach of its first major legislative gathering in several years, the question is whether the church can avert a similar outcome elsewhere in the world, where about half its members live.
The question is particularly acute in Africa, home to the vast majority of United Methodists outside the U.S. Most of its bishops favor staying, but other voices are calling for regional conferences to disaffiliate.
At the upcoming General Conference in Charlotte, North Carolina, delegates will tackle a wide range of proposals – from repealing the church’s ban on same-sex marriage and ordaining LGBTQ people, to creating more autonomy for regional conferences to set such rules, to making it easier for international churches to leave the denomination.
Delegate Jerry Kulah of Liberia said he believes it’s time for African churches to leave.
He said that when he first attended a General Conference in 2008, he was shocked by proposals to liberalize church rules. Since then, he helped mobilize African delegates to vote with American conservatives to create ever-stricter denominational rules against same-sex marriage and ordaining LGBTQ people.
But progressive American churches have increasingly been defying such rules and now appear to have the votes to overturn them.
“We know that we are not going to the General Conference to necessarily win votes,” said Kulah, general coordinator of the advocacy group UMC Africa Initiative. “So our goal is to go and articulate our position and let the world know why it has become very necessary to disaffiliate from the United Methodist Church, because we cannot afford to preach different gospels.”
But Jefferson Knight, also a delegate from Liberia, opposes disaffiliation. He said a schism would amount to forsaking the rich spiritual legacy of the UMC in Africa and would severe its valuable international bonds.
“Liberia was the birthplace of the United Methodist Church on the continent of Africa in the 1800s,” said Knight, of the advocacy group United Methodist Africa Forum. The church has developed leaders in education, health care and evangelism across the continent, said Knight, who also works as a human rights monitor for the church.
Knight said schism isn’t necessary.
He shares the widespread opposition in Africa to liberalizing policies on marriage or ordination, but he favors a proposal that would allow each region of the church – from America to Africa to Europe to the Philippines – to fit rules to its local context.
“The best way out is to regionalize and see how we can do ministry peacefully and do ministry within our context, our culture,” Knight said.
The United Methodist Church traces its roots to 18th century revivalist John Wesley and has long emphasized Christian piety, evangelism and social service. It has historically been present in almost every U.S. county.
But it’s also the most international of the major U.S. Protestant denominations.
Generations of missionary efforts brought Methodism across the world. Local churches took root and grew dramatically, particularly in Africa.
Today, members from four continents vote at legislative gatherings, serve on boards together, go on mission trips to each others’ countries and are largely governed by the same rules. U.S. churches help fund international ministries, such as Africa University in Zimbabwe.
More than 7,600 U.S. congregations departed during a temporary window between 2019 and 2023 that enabled congregations to keep their properties – held in trust for the denomination – under relatively favorable legal terms, according to a UM News count.
That provision applied only to American churches. Some say the General Conference – running April 23 through May 3 – should approve one for other countries.
“Our main goal is to ensure that African and other United Methodist outside the U.S. have the same opportunity that United Methodists in the U.S. have had,” said the Rev. Thomas Lambrecht, vice president of the conservative advocacy group Good News.
Opponents say overseas churches already can disaffiliate under church rules – and some conferences in Eastern Europe have taken such steps. But proponents say the process is too cumbersome.
Further complicating the matter is that churches operate in a range of legal settings. Some African countries criminalize same-sex activity, while in the U.S., same-sex marriage is legal.
Most departing American congregations were conservative churches upset with the denomination’s failure to enforce its bans on same-sex unions and the ordination of LGBTQ people. Some joined denominations such as the new Global Methodist Church, while others went independent.
The departures accelerated membership losses in what until recently had been the third-largest American denomination. The United Methodist Church recorded 5.4 million U.S. members in 2022, a figure sure to plummet once disaffiliations from 2023 are factored in.
A detailed study by the UMC’s General Council on Finance and Administration indicated there are 4.6 million members in other countries – fewer than earlier estimates, but still approaching U.S. numbers.
The United Methodist Church has been debating homosexuality since the early 1970s, steadily tightening its LGBTQ bans through its last legislative gathering in 2019.
That year, “the traditionalists won the vote but they lost the church” said the Rev. Mark Holland, executive director of Mainstream UMC, which advocates for lifting the church-wide bans and for a “regionalization” proposal allowing each region to decide on such rules.
He noted that numerous regional church conferences in the United States reacted to the 2019 vote by electing more progressive delegates to the upcoming General Conference.
Progressives believe they have adequate votes to repeal language in the governing Book of Discipline barring ordination of “self-avowed practicing homosexuals” and penalizing pastors who perform same-sex marriages.
Less certain is the fate of regionalization, which would increase regional autonomy. Regionalization involves constitutional amendments requiring a two-thirds General Conference majority and approval by two-thirds of local conferences worldwide.
Proponents say regionalization would also bring parity to different regions, saying the current system is a U.S.-centric relic of an earlier missionary era. The regionalization scenario could also allow churches in some regions to maintain LGBTQ bans while others remove them.
Church regions outside the United States already have some leeway in adapting rules to their settings, but regionalization would define that flexibility more precisely and extend it to U.S. churches.
The UMC-affiliated church in the Philippines – the only one in Asia, with about 280,000 members – would maintain its opposition to same-sex marriage, which is not legally recognized there, a church official said. It will also not allow openly LGBTQ people to be ordained.
Most African bishops oppose disaffiliation, even as they oppose LGBTQ ordination and marriage.
“Notwithstanding the differences in our UMC regarding the issue of human sexuality especially with our stance of traditional and biblical view of marriage, we categorically state that we do not plan to leave The United Methodist Church and will continue to be shepherds of God’s flock in this worldwide denomination,” said a statement signed by 11 African bishops at a meeting in September.
Among those withholding signatures was Nigeria Area Bishop John Wesley Yohanna.
Nigerian Methodists in December celebrated 100 years of the denomination in their country, but its future remains uncertain. Deeply conservative views on sexuality are widespread in Nigeria. A spokesman said the bishop’s position on disaffiliation would be determined by what happens at the General Conference.
Same-sex marriage “is unbiblical and also is incompatible with Christian teaching according to our Book of Discipline,” Yohanna said at a January news conference, in which he also said “no to regionalization.“
___
AP reporters Chinedu Asadu in Lagos, Nigeria, and Jim Gomez in Manila contributed.
___
Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP’s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.
veryGood! (7)
Related
- 'Meet me at the gate': Watch as widow scatters husband's ashes, BASE jumps into canyon
- Ashes of Canadian ‘Star Trek’ fan to be sent into space along with those of TV series’ stars
- Horoscopes Today, December 31, 2023
- Elvis is in the building, along with fishmongers as part of a nautical scene for the Winter Classic
- Small twin
- Michael Penix Jr. leads No. 2 Washington to 37-31 victory over Texas and spot in national title game
- A prisoner set a fire inside an Atlanta jail but no one was injured, officials say
- After 180 years, a small daily newspaper in the US Virgin Islands says it is closing
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- Israel moving thousands of troops out of Gaza, but expects prolonged fighting with Hamas
Ranking
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- Green Day changes lyrics to shade Donald Trump during TV performance: Watch
- A crash on a New York City parkway leaves 5 dead
- Colorado Springs mother accused of killing 2 of her children arrested in United Kingdom
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- Mysterious blast shakes Beirut’s southern suburbs as tensions rise along the border with Israel
- Michigan didn't flinch in emotional defeat of Alabama and is now one win from national title
- Housing market predictions: Six experts weigh in on the real estate outlook in 2024
Recommendation
Euphoria's Hunter Schafer Says Ex Dominic Fike Cheated on Her Before Breakup
What's open New Year's Eve 2023? What to know about Walmart, Starbucks, stores, restaurants
Nadal returns with a win in Brisbane in first competitive singles match in a year
A driver fleeing New York City police speeds onto a sidewalk and injures 7 pedestrians
Everything Simone Biles did at the Paris Olympics was amplified. She thrived in the spotlight
Report: Members of refereeing crew for Lions-Cowboys game unlikely to work postseason
What to put in oatmeal to build the healthiest bowl: Here's a step-by-step guide
Why Sister Wives' Christine Brown Almost Went on Another Date the Day She Met David Woolley