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United Methodists approve four more years of ‘Open Hearts.
Open Minds. Open Doors.’
May 5, 2004
By Nancye Willis*
PITTSBURGH (UMNS)––The United Methodist Church will share its “Open
Hearts. Open Minds. Open Doors.” messages with a wider audience in
2005-08. But it will have to do so with less money than proposed.
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A UMNS photo by Mike DuBose.
The Rev. Larry Hollon and the Rev. Sung-Ja Lee Moon watch
as General Conference approves Igniting Ministry. |
Delegates to General Conference, the
church’s top legislative body, overwhelmingly approved May 5 a
proposal from United Methodist Communications to expand its
successful media effort. The vote paved the way for the
denomination’s communications agency to add 18 weeks of additional
airings of denominational TV advertising to its established schedule
and to develop a youth component.
However, the amount of funding made available for the core TV
advertising was reduced from a proposed $33.5 million to $22
million. Proponents of the increased airings argued that inflation
had significantly reduced the amount of time that can be bought with
the funds.
The youth strategy survived with its proposed $5.4 million funding
intact. A proposal to reduce the amount to $3 million in view of
tight finances was narrowly defeated by a vote of 488-440.
All requests for funds will be reviewed by the Council on Finance
and Administration. That fiscal agency will present its budget
recommendations for all general church funds to the May 8 closing
plenary session for final action.
Delegates also defeated a proposed amendment that would have allowed
shifting funds among the youth strategy, an expanded core program of
television advertising and a communications initiative in churches
outside the United States.
Sue Mullins, Corwith, Iowa, proposed an amendment specifying that no
approved funds “will be used to promote the slogan ‘Open Hearts.
Open Minds. Open Doors.’”
Arguing against the amendment, Mike McCurry, a first-time delegate
from the Baltimore-Washington Annual (regional) Conference, and
former White House press secretary, said, “No one single issue
defines open-mindedness; no single painful controversy can break an
open heart.”
The slogan, he said, serves to “remind the world who we United
Methodists are and who we can be.”
*Willis is editor of Public Information for United Methodist
Communications.
News media contact: (412) 325-6080 during General Conference, April
27-May 7.
After May 10: (615) 742-5470.
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