| Delegates hear
restructuring proposal, reports on ministries
Apr. 28, 2004 News media
contact: General Conference Newsroom * (415) 3256080* {GC04008}
By Linda Green*
PITTSBURGH (UMNS) - Delegates
attending the United Methodist Church's top legislative body are
deciding if they are ready to "connect the connection" to enable the
denomination to better perform mission and ministry.
In video after video, the 998
delegates attending the United Methodist General Conference saw the
worldwide church at work and became better acquainted with a "Living
into the Future" report from the churchwide General
Council on Ministries.
Since forming in 1968, the United
Methodist Church has conducted several studies on its structure and
ways to improve its operation. During the last 36 years, the
denomination has shaped and reshaped its general agencies for
program and missional effectiveness.
The 2000 General Conference voted
down a proposal that would have changed dramatically the church's
structure. Instead, that assembly mandated that the General Council
on Ministries "determine the most effective design for the work of
the general agencies and ... provide enabling legislation to the
2004 General Conference." The result of the council's work is the
Living into the Future report.
The "Living Into the Future" plan
before the delegates proposes merging the work of the denomination's
program-coordinating and finance agencies into a "Connectional
Table." There, leaders from around the church would coordinate the
work of most of the denomination's general agencies and would
oversee ministries budgeted at more than $500 million per
quadrennium.
If approved, the proposal would
bring the widespread denomination together. United Methodists have
congregations and other ministries on four continents - Africa,
Asia, Europe and North America (primarily the United States). All
regions would be represented at the table, along with the Council of
Bishops and officials from the churchwide agencies.
The document aims to fold the
General Council on Finance and Administration, with a 41-member
governing board, and the General Council on Ministries, governed by
78 members, into a Connectional Table as of Jan. 1, 2007. Ten other
agencies, accountable to the General Council on Ministries, would
retain their free-standing boards, with about 500 directors, but be
accountable to and represented at the Connectional Table. The
"table" would be amenable and accountable to the General Conference.
"This 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 the "Living into the Future"
proposal.
In the video, Amon and Jay
Williams of the Western New York Annual Conference discuss the
proposal with Bishop Joseph Yeakel at Barratt's Chapel in Frederica,
Del. The chapel was the site of a historic meeting in 1784 between
Thomas Coke and Francis Asbury, key figures in early American
Methodism.
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.
The delegates will vote on the
document during a plenary session May 3-7.
The General Council on Ministries'
three-part report also provided delegates with information about
special programs and recommendations coming before the assembly,
including holistic strategies for ministry in Africa and Latin
America and the Caribbean over the next four years. The council is
asking General Conference to approve $1.32 million in funding to
enable the Board of Global Ministries to coordinate the plans.
The strategy, to be guided by the
churchwide Board of Global Ministries, is "the opportunity to
participate with God in doing a new thing," said Jane Middleton, a
delegate from the New York Annual Conference. "The holistic strategy
provides a unified response to the crises in these areas of the
world."
Middleton said the United
Methodist Church is called to respond to and with its brothers and
sisters around the world because "to do less would be to shirk our
responsibilities to make disciples of Jesus Christ."
The council's report also made the
delegates aware of the relationships and partnerships among United
Methodist churches, annual conference and general agencies around
the world, and how they are at work in Africa, Latin America and the
Caribbean.
The third portion of the report
examined the church's program ministries and ethnic initiatives. In
a video called "God's Colors-Transforming the World," the work of
general agencies and commissions were highlighted in five themes -
centering on Christian formation, calling forth covenant leadership,
empowering the connection for ministry, encouraging theological and
doctrinal discourse, and strengthening ecumenical and global
relationships.
"United Methodists are required to
move toward ministry that is shared by clergy and laity, to better
hear the call of Christ, and to support one another in sharing the
message of love and reconciliation," said the video's narrator.
*Green 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.
********************
United Methodist News Service
Photos and stories also available at:
http://umns.umc.org
BACK TO APRIL 28
BACK TO GENERAL CONFERENCE PAGE
NCCUMC HOME |