Bishops set plan to expand ministries with children, poor
April 27, 2004
By Linda Green*
PITTSBURGH (UMNS)––The United Methodist Church’s bishops want to
expand efforts to help children and the poor.
 |
| Bishop Donald A.
Ott |
During the denomination’s 2004 General
Conference, the bishops said they may merge the critical points of
the Episcopal Address with “Our Shared Dream: The Beloved
Community,” a paper the body adopted last November. The Council of
Bishops anticipates that merging these two documents would create a
new episcopal initiative for 2005-08.
The convergence of the two papers could provide the council with
“marching orders” for the next four years, according to Bishop
Donald A. Ott, coordinator of the Bishops’ Initiative on Children
and Poverty. The bishops anticipate selecting a new initiative
during their November council meeting, with contributions from the
20 new bishops who will be elected this July.
The episcopal initiative seeks to “reshape the United Methodist
Church” with a focus on Jesus and the “least of these,” Ott said.
“God has a bias for the poor,” and through evangelism and
theological reflection, the bishops must enlighten the church about
“this critical and urgent matter for our time,” he said.
Meeting before General Conference, the bishops urged a task force to
present a way in which the council’s paper on the “beloved
community” could become an evolving initiative that could be
affirmed as an initiative for the next four years.
The council does not want to relinquish its work with children and
the poor during the past eight years, explained Ott. The council
wants to continue and enlarge its efforts because of the belief that
“this is where God is calling us.”
The “Beloved Community” document notes that the plight of children
is tied to economics, politics, globalization, war, family
breakdown, the AIDS epidemic and other problems. It also states that
the root causes of poverty and the neglect and abandonment of
children “lie in a society in which people live in fear.”
Ott said the proposed new initiative would reclaim the bishops’
responsibility to be teachers of the church, which is focused on
blending the Wesleyan principles of acts of piety and acts of mercy.
“We should not be a people who cultivate our own spirit, but we must
act on it and care for the poor,” he said. He lamented that the
church and many congregations today are inwardly focused on other
concerns and must be taught about caring for children and the poor.
“We must turn the eyes of the church and its leaders to the world
around it and to where God would give attention.” Except for the
church in Africa and in the Philippines, the United Methodist Church
is not a church of the poor, he said. “We need to turn our eyes
toward Jesus, (and) the way to do that is to turn our eyes to the
poor and see that they are not a burden, but they are God’s gift.”
According to the “Beloved Community,” the church must broaden its
understanding of local mission because too many congregations and
individuals are satisfied with being involved in direct-service
ministries with the poor without the faith-sharing and
congregational inclusion essential to Christian community
A
“beloved community” is one where all people are valued for the gifts
they are and the gifts they bring, Ott said. The important gifts
include mutuality, diversity and inclusiveness.
*Green is a staff writer for United Methodist News Service.
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