Bishop Thomas honored for his role in
eliminating segregated structures
April 30, 2004
By Suanne Whorl
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A UMNS photo by Mike DuBose.
Bishop James S.
Thomas (left) is honored by General Conference for the
contributions he made dismantling the former Central
Jurisdiction of the church.
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PITTSBURGH (UMNS) - The United Methodist
agency responsible for retaining historical records honored retired
Bishop James Thomas for his contributions in the former Central
Jurisdiction and for his role in eliminating that racially
segregated structure in 1968.
Thomas received an award from the General Commission on Archives and
History during a General Conference session that celebrated the
contributions of African Americans who stayed with the Methodist
Church while others left to form new denominations.
During an April 30 interview, Thomas reflected on the difference
between this General Conference and one held here in 1964, shortly
before his election as bishop.
It was a contentious conference, he reminisced. Race seemed to be
the single dominant issue. After painful debate the delegates voted
to dismantle the racially based structure. His task, as head of a
five-member committee of the Central Jurisdiction, was to craft a
solid biblical and theological rationale for the church’s view on
race. This document, "Bridges to An Inclusive Church," can still be
found in the Archives and History library at Drew University.
As a member of that committee, Thomas was charged with developing a
plan to realign the annual conferences after the elimination of the
Central Jurisdiction. He also was asked to prepare Central
Jurisdiction churches for the changes that lay ahead. Some felt that
the racial divide could not be crossed. "There are still vestiges of
that today, but we have come a long way," he commented.
Thomas broke racial barriers four years prior to the 1968
eradication of the racial divide.
In 1964, the year of his election to the episcopacy, Thomas was
named bishop of the Iowa Area. The Northeastern and North Central
jurisdictions were the only two white jurisdictions who said they
would accept a black bishop. In an historic move, the Iowa Area
requested that Thomas be named their bishop. The bishop said he
found Iowa Methodists to be "wonderfully accepting," and he spent 12
years in that Area.
"I didn’t come to be a black bishop," Thomas told the white
conference, "I’ve always been black. I have come to be the best
bishop I can be." He later served 12 years in the Ohio East Area
before retiring in 1988.
When asked about his vision for the church, Thomas, who also served
in the 1973-76 quadrennium as chair of the Social Principles
Commission, said it needs to move to a deeper understanding of its
life and mission. "We’ll never get beyond the domination of single
issues until there is a deeper modeling of a Christ-like spirit of
disagreeing in love with a determination of living together for the
larger mission of the church, which includes spreading the gospel
throughout the world."
His advice to General Conference delegates wrestling with
potentially divisive issues is to listen to each other. "No one
person or faction or denomination has the absolute truth alone," he
said.
Whorl is a correspondent for United Methodist
News Service.