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Daily Wrap-up: Delegates hear restructuring report, Laity
Address
April 28, 2004 GC04-014
By Linda Bloom*
PITTSBURGH (UMNS) – How United Methodists
relate to one another, both structurally and spiritually, was a
topic of discussion during the April 28 session of the
denomination’s top legislative body.
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Rev. Bob
Hoshibata presents part of the General Council on Ministries'
report to General Conference.
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Delegates to General Conference received a
report from the churchwide Council on Ministries called “Living into
the Future,” which proposes merging the work of program and finance
agencies into a “Connectional Table.” In that structure, leaders
from around the church would coordinate the work of most of the
denomination’s agencies and would oversee ministries budgeted at
more than $500 million per quadrennium.
United Methodists in all regions of the world, including Africa,
Asia, Europe and North America, would be represented at the table,
along with the Council of Bishops and agency officials.
Under the proposed plan, the General Council on Ministries and
General Council on Finance and Administration would fold into the
Connectional Table by Jan. 1, 2007. Ten other agencies would retain
their own board of directors but be accountable and represented at
the table.
“The plan is about bringing mission and money to the same table,”
said Darlene Amon, a delegate from the Virginia Annual Conference
and one of the voices in the video describing the benefits of
“Living into the Future.”
Bishop Joseph Yeakel described the proposal in terms of “connecting
the connection.” A rejection of the plan by General Conference would
amount to the church choosing to “retain a disconnected structure,”
he said.
Delegates will vote on the document during the week of May 3.
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| Gloria Holt, lay
leader of the North Alabama Annual Conference, gives the Laity
Address |
In the General Conference Laity Address,
Gloria Holt told delegates that until each individual church member
is willing to let go of “me, myself and I” and make a concerted
effort to become “we, ourselves and us,” the denomination will
continue to be involved in “power struggles, selfish decision-making
and un-Christian action toward each other.”
Most troubling is the “apparent unwillingness” of laity and clergy
to be equal partners in ministry, according to Holt, president of
the United Methodist Association of Annual Conference Lay Leaders.
“If clergy are singing their own song while the laity are dancing to
their own beat, how in the world are we going to get in sync with
one another?” she asked. “Unless we do, the church will not be
creating the music for which God gave us the notes.”
She also urged the international assembly to move away from doing
things in the same old way and to realize that the absence of youth
and young adults in local congregations could be due to an
unwillingness to change in ways that would welcome that age group.
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| United Methodist
Bishop Bruce P. Blake, Oklahoma, preaches during morning worship
on April 27 at the denomination's 2004 General Conference in
Pittsburgh. |
In the morning worship service, Bishop
Bruce Blake of Oklahoma noted the legislative concerns over budget
issues.
“Our attitude is one of giving until it hurts, rather than heals.
Everything is focused on our limited resources when, in fact, if
United Methodists would give until it heals we would have so much
money to facilitate God’s mission in the world that conferencing
would be a celebration of sharing rather than our experience of
divvying up a shrinking pie.”
He suggested that United Methodists have lost the connection between
grace and giving, and he challenged the delegates to live a gospel
of giving until it heals.
*Bloom is a United Methodist News Service news writer.
News media contact: (412) 325-6080 during General Conference, April
27-May 7.
After May 10: (615) 742-5470.
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