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Delegate Diary: Process
difficult, but worthwhile
May. 4, 2004 News media
contact: General Conference Newsroom * (412) 3256080* {GC04057}
NOTE: News media contact: after
May 10: (615) 742-5470.
Dawn Hand, the communications
director of the Western North Carolina Conference of the United
Methodist Church and a lay delegate to 2004 General Conference, will
offer her thoughts during the two weeks of General Conference in
Pittsburgh.
By Dawn Hand
PITTSBURGH (UMNS) - This schedule
is grueling! To be in your seat by 8 a.m. for worship, and then to
close committee meetings after 10 p.m. makes for a long day. And I'm
not a night person, so I shut down.
I'm staying 10 blocks away from
the convention center, and walking here helps me prepare myself for
what's ahead. The evening walk back gives me a chance to debrief.
I went for a jog on the morning of
my birthday (April 30), thinking it would be a good day to get out
and run. The night before, I had made a motion in the finance
committee to table the budget vote. I was calling for an evening of
prayer, to come back in the morning and make our decision. So the
next morning I was out tackling these bridges over the Allegheny
River and working things out in my mind. I came off the bridge near
the convention center and the next thing I knew, I was crashing down
into the rocks. The first thing I did was look around to make sure
no one had seen me, and then I picked myself up and realized I'd
scraped my knees pretty badly. But I decided to keep going because I
hadn't finished my discernment time yet.
The hospitality here has been
wonderful, and it's good to have some snacks to recharge our
batteries. I'm trying to take advantage of the free lunches! Last
night, we walked over to a nearby restaurant that had a big sign out
front that said, "Welcome United Methodists!" Their special is
called the "Big Ass Burger," and it was very funny hearing all these
United Methodists ordering them.
The setting for this General
Conference is better than in Cleveland in 2000, where the long and
narrow hall made us feel detached from the stage. Here we're all
much closer, and the closer you are to stage the more engaged you
feel.
It's interesting to talk to other
delegates and get their takes on things. Two people can read the
same document and have an entirely different thought process. That
happened in our legislative committee.
I like the process we have, where
things happen in committees before going before the whole
conference. That way, people feel they can speak before the
committee, even if they would be hesitant to stand and speak before
the whole plenary group. There are points along the way where
people's voices can be heard. And yet the decision is not over until
the whole body votes.
In my legislative committee, we
grappled over the budgetary decisions which we make on behalf of the
whole church. We decided to adopt a budget of $612 million, and it
was a tough decision. The overwhelming refrain is that the church
simply cannot afford to do this. But we heard presentations that it
is possible, and passionate speeches about not putting constraints
on ourselves. I got up and said at one point that we need to turn
fear into faith.
Most all of the delegates have
experienced similar tough decisions in their committees, and I think
the general church appreciates that we have a tough time. It is not
an easy thing to do, but it is an honorable thing to do.
My fellow delegates have done a
lot of hard work to get us to this point. All of us need to be led
by God in all that we do. General Conference is the most political
process in the life of our church. The U.S. government has nothing
on us in terms of lobbying. I know people come here because they
intensely feel they are charged to do something for the church. I
applaud people's passions and their strong convictions. But there is
not one single mission or ministry that solely defines the church.
There are many issues that make up the United Methodist Church.
********************
United Methodist News
Service
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http://umns.umc.org
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