|
United Methodists celebrate African Americans who stayed
April 30, 2004
By Linda Green*
 |
|
A UMNS photo by Mike DuBose.
Holding hands during a service of appreciation for African
Americans who stayed in the church despite institutional racism |
PITTSBURGH (UMNS) — United Methodists
celebrated the African-American witness and presence within the
United Methodist Church on April 30 and recognized “those who
stayed” in spite of racism.
The nearly 1,000 delegates and visitors to the denomination’s top
legislative assembly in Pittsburgh participated in a Service of
Appreciation, honoring and celebrating those African Americans who
remained as members of the former Methodist Episcopal Church and
other predecessor Methodist bodies in spite of the racial
indignities that occurred in a segregated structure.
The service celebrated God’s presence in the life of the church,
recognized wounds and encouraged healing. A video montage of
African-American United Methodists of yesterday and today centered
the delegates as they began their witness and confessed to the sin
of racism that continues to exist in the denomination.
The delegates gathered to “rise above the transgressions that have
wounded us” and “celebrate a new beginning … and human dignity,”
said Bishop Peter Weaver, Philadephia Area, the opening liturgist
for the service.
 |
|
A UMNS photo by Mike DuBose.
The Rev. Renita Thomas (center) wipes away a tear during a
service of appreciation for African Americans who stayed in the
church despite institutional racism. |
As United Methodist Christians, Weaver
said, the delegates came together as a community of faith under one
baptism and gathered “because sin interrupts community” and shatters
hope and possibilities.
The delegates were reminded that the African-American presence in
the United Methodist Church did not begin with the denomination’s
1968 creation but existed when Methodism began. Today, there are
423,456 African-American U.S. members of the United Methodist
Church, including 14 bishops.
“The roots of Methodism are in the African-American community,” said
the Rev. Vincent Harris, president of Black Methodists for Church
Renewal, a 37-year-old national caucus that promotes advocacy and
leadership development. The roots are evident in the fruits of new
church starts and other acts that not only benefit the church but
also are new creations for the future, he said.
“It is important to be clear that I would not be here if they had
not stayed,” Harris said. As a third-generation Methodist, “I
believe in the church; I believe in what Jesus brought to us in the
Gospel, and I believe that by staying, we not only make the church
better, but we build a foundation for our future.”
 |
|
A UMNS photo by Paul Jeffrey.
Members of the Paine College Gospel Choir sing as part of
an April 30 service. |
The need for such a service arose following
the 2000 General Conference, where delegates participated in an “Act
of Repentance for Reconciliation” service, acknowledging the racism
that caused blacks to leave the denomination in the 18th and 19th
centuries. But no mention was made of the African Americans who
stayed. Black Methodists for Church Renewal expressed its concern
about the omission to the United Methodist Commission on Christian
Unity and Interreligious Concerns, which organized the 2000 service
and related resources for annual (regional) conferences. In the four
years since then, all but six of the 63 U.S. annual conferences have
held acts of repentance services, said Ruth Daugherty, a consultant
to the Christian Unity commission.
The service for those who stayed is a step on a “long journey for us
on this road to inclusiveness,” she said. While noting the 50th
anniversary of the Supreme Court’s Brown v. Board of Education
desegregation decision in May, she said, “we are still a segregated
society (and) we are still a segregated church (and) even when we
sit beside one another, we are segregated.”
 |
|
A UMNS photo by Mike DuBose.
Bishop Violet L. Fisher reads Scripture during a service of
appreciation for African Americans. |
“If we as Christians cannot repent and take
the next steps and learn the contributions that are made and the
richness and necessity that we need to have for ourselves, how can
we expect our society to turn around?” she asked. “I think that this
is a great responsibility that we as Christians in the church have
in our communities and society.”
Confessing to the sin of racism as a member of the majority
population was Bishop Charlene Kammerer, who leads the church’s
Charlotte (N.C.) Area.
During her message highlighting the African-American legacy of
faith, she told the delegates that the United Methodist Church
inherited a big, worldwide house for the whole family. But, she
said, a problem arose because ideas, cultures and interests “unduly”
separated the family.
The service, she said, would pave the way for United Methodists
because “we are getting our house in order.” Holding the service at
a General Conference was a way to verbalize how the denomination
“has been blessed by the presence of faithful, strong
African-American members,” she said.
 |
|
A UMNS photo by Mike DuBose.
Bishop Woodie W. White leads a prayer during a service of
appreciation for African Americans. |
Kammerer thanked the generations of black
Methodists who stayed in an institution that excluded them.
“For all those faithful, courageous black Methodists who stayed in
an inhospitable place and abusive church, we say, ‘Thank you, God’
for you,” Kammerer said. “Those of us in the white majority confess
that we have sinned against you and against God who made us all one
family. We have excluded you from our sanctuaries, schools,
colleges, our public domains, our neighborhoods, our homes and,
worst of all, our hearts. For that we are truly sorry.
“We confess our sin and ask with humility that God move us toward
repentance and a place of reconciliation and forgiveness.”
During a press conference after the service, Harris said the service
will be in vain if United Methodists do not move outside their
comfort zones and engage others, and assist in civic and legislative
processes that will help in education and alleviating poverty.
At the service’s conclusion, the General Conference approved a
motion directing the churchwide Commission on Christian Unity and
Interreligious Concerns to lead the church in continuing acts of
repentance and reconciliation. The delegates also directed the
council, with assistance from other churchwide agencies, to collect
data on African Americans in the United Methodist Church and its
predecessor bodies in preparation of a resource or resources that
will inform the church and other faith communities of the
contributions African Americans have made and are making in the
denomination.
 |
|
A UMNS photo by Mike DuBose.
The Rev. Renita Thomas offers a prayer of thanksgiving
during a service of appreciation at General Conference.
|
“As with many marginalized groups in
majority societies, the majority society writes its history through
its own lens and through its own eyes, and the richness of the
history of other persons in those communities or cultures is often
lost,” Weaver said.
Today, the United Methodist Church is in a new era and is “claiming
that we need to do the hard work of study and celebration in print,
in books, in media resources of the rich gifts that are here,” he
said. “Much of that is still present in the oral history, but it
needs to be brought together, so that as we move forward in the
church, we continue to learn from both the things we should not have
done as well as the things that were done right.”
The delegates also recognized Bishop James S. Thomas for the
historical contributions he made in the former Central Jurisdiction
and as the chief architect of the plan that helped dissolve that
racially segregated jurisdiction in 1968 and merge it into regional
jurisdictional conferences. He was also awarded for the vision he
cast in his book, Methodism’s Racial Dilemma, where he stated that
the “opportunities before the church are always better than
dilemmas.”
Thomas thanked the United Methodist Commission on Archives and
History, the bestowers of the award, and the delegates. “Over the
last 40 years,” he said, “I tried to do what I could do.”
*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.
BACK TO APRIL 30
BACK TO GENERAL CONFERENCE PAGE
NCCUMC HOME |