| Former Clinton aide
compares church, political gatherings
Apr. 28, 2004 News media
contact: General Conference Newsroom * (415) 3256080* {GC04012}
By Melissa Lauber*
PITTSBURGH (UMNS) - As a former
White House press secretary, Mike McCurry is a political expert,
well-versed in conventions and creating policy and priorities.
However, as a first-time General Conference delegate, he is "walking
humbly," listening and learning how the United Methodist Church goes
about developing its polity and charting its course.
McCurry sees similarities between
the General Conference, meeting April 27-May 7 at the David L.
Lawrence Convention Center, and the national Democratic and
Republican conventions.
Each of the conventions, held
every four years, provides an opportunity for longtime colleagues to
greet one another, and each group recognizes that whatever divisive
issues may arise, members share a common identity - although there
are more funny hats at the Democratic convention, McCurry quipped.
A member of the
Baltimore-Washington Annual (regional) Conference delegation,
McCurry said he hopes United Methodists do not follow the example of
the U.S. political system, which has become so polarized that it is
gridlocked.
The tension between "blue states"
(those that vote for Democrats) and "red states" (which vote for
Republicans) doesn't allow for significant work to be done, McCurry
said. He urges United Methodists to compromise on specific issues to
allow God's work to be accomplished.
"We must always stand on
principle," he said. "But not every issue is equal." McCurry hopes
delegates will figure out "how we come together in the name of Jesus
Christ to go out and do the job of making new disciples."
For McCurry, the most important
issues facing General Conference are evangelism and renewing the
church. "The conference needs to be really focused on how the church
continues to fulfill its primary mandate to make more disciples for
Jesus Christ," he said. "We've lost some of the evangelical fervor
of Wesley. And we're not igniting enough passion with our faith to
spread the Good News effectively."
McCurry is excited about the
denomination's television advertising campaign and the
reinvigoration of the church's Sunday school program.
At St. Paul's United Methodist
Church in Kensington, Md., McCurry is the Sunday school
superintendent and teaches seventh- and eighth-graders. Last year,
his sixth-grade son was in his Sunday school class.
From 1995 through 1998, McCurry
served as President Bill Clinton's press secretary, fielding
controversial questions that swirled around the Monica Lewinsky
scandal and impeachment proceedings.
While such an experience tested
his political savvy, he admits that serving as Sunday school
superintendent is the "single most political job I've ever had in my
career."
But church, he said, was also a
haven. "It was a place for me in which I was known as someone other
than the president's spokesman because I was a dad, a Sunday school
teacher and an active member of the congregation. I was accepted
there for who I was," he said.
"To have a quiet place for
reflection and for being in contact with God and to think about what
God was asking of me in that very trying moment - that was a very,
very critical thing," he added.
Teaching children and serving as a
delegate is a "give-back," McCurry said. "God provides all the
resources we need for God's work."
And so he will be walking humbly,
learning from the delegates around him and building on his political
skills.
While partisan politics may not be
the best arena for the church, he said, "the business of impacting a
community and dealing with those who are dispossessed and doing a
lot of things that are inherently political - that's right there at
the core of what we're called to do in the Gospel."
*Lauber is a United Methodist News
Service correspondent.
********************
United Methodist News Service
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