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Feedback sought on global Discipline effort

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The fallout of the special General Conference has slowed the yearslong effort to specify which United Methodist policies can be adapted in Africa, Europe and Asia.

For nearly eight years, church leaders have been combing through the Book of Discipline, The United Methodist Church’s main policy book, to determine what parts are essentials to the denomination's worldwide identity and what parts are nonessentials that can be adapted.

They initially planned to bring their recommendations for a vote at the 2020 General Conference, the next gathering of the denomination’s top lawmaking body.

However, at a March 21-26 meeting in Manila, the Standing Committee on Central Conference Matters decided instead to ask General Conference delegates to give feedback on the work they have done so far on what church leaders call the General Book of Discipline.

Central and Southern Europe Area Bishop Patrick Streiff addresses fellow members of the Standing Committee on Central Conference Matters. He urged the committee to delay putting work on a General Book of Discipline up for a vote at General Conference until 2024. Photo by Heather Hahn, UMNS.
Central and Southern Europe Area Bishop Patrick Streiff addresses fellow members of the Standing Committee on Central Conference Matters. He urged the committee to delay putting work on a General Book of Discipline up for a vote at General Conference until 2024. Photo by Heather Hahn, UMNS.

“At present, we live in a situation of huge anxiety in the church and of low trust,” said Central and Southern Europe Area Bishop Patrick Streiff, one of the project’s leaders. “That is not a good moment for really clarifying how much adaptation ... we give to parts in the church.”

If delegates are asked to vote on recommendations so soon after the 2019 General Conference, Streiff said the discussion could turn into another battlefield. 

“We would all lose on something where we first have to learn to be a worldwide church,” he said.

Streiff hopes the 2020 General Conference will provide time for delegates to discuss what binds the church together around the globe rather than make any final decisions.

Church leaders will ask the delegates to allow them to continue the work with the goal of presenting recommendations for final action at the 2024 General Conference. Ultimately, their goal is to collect the essentials in the General Book of Discipline.

The project to clarify what in the Discipline can be adapted began with General Conference itself. In 2012, the lawmaking assembly assigned the Standing Committee on Central Conference Matters to determine what in the Book of Discipline truly applies around the globe. At the time, Streiff was the standing committee’s chair and he continues to serve as chair of one of the committees working on the General Book of Discipline.

The central conferences are seven church regions in Africa, Europe and the Philippines. Like their U.S. counterparts — the five jurisdictions — central conferences encompass groups of annual conferences and oversee the elections of bishops.

Who is working on the global Discipline?

The 43-member Standing Committee on Central Conference Matters is a permanent committee of General Conference. It serves as a coordinating body that studies the structure and supervision of The United Methodist Church in Africa, Asia and Europe. It also has the General Conference mandate to make recommendations related to the General Book of Discipline.

In doing the work, the standing committee has the following partners:

  • The 17-member Committee on Faith and Order, which works under the Council of Bishops to give leadership on matters of faith, doctrine, order and discipline.
  • Part of the 24-member Ministry Study Commission that works with the United Methodist Board of Higher Education and Ministry to examine matters of leadership preparation and ordination. They are helping with paragraphs related to ordination.
  • Part of the 64-member Connectional Table, which coordinates mission, ministries and resources in The United Methodist Church. They are helping with paragraphs related to agencies.

However, unlike U.S. jurisdictions, central conferences have authority under paragraph 31 of the denomination’s constitution to make “such changes and adaptations” to the Book of Discipline as missional needs and differing legal contexts require.

For example, central conferences already adapt parts of the Discipline to accommodate the requirements of different property laws. Some central conferences, such as the Philippines, have different ways of credentialing clergy. Some central conferences have written these adaptations into their own Books of Discipline. In others, adaptations operate more like tradition.

The central conferences’ freedom to adapt the Discipline predates the 1968 union that formed The United Methodist Church. Streiff said central conferences needed that ability because the Discipline was by the U.S. and for the U.S.

The 2012 General Conference in Paragraph 101 of the Discipline also specified that certain sections of the Discipline apply to the whole multinational denomination. Those parts are the Constitution, Doctrinal Standards and Our Theological Task, The Ministry of All Christians and The Social Principles. Changing them requires at least General Conference action and, in the case of constitutional amendments, annual conference action as well.

That still leaves the Book of Discipline’s Part VI, Organization and Administration, the biggest section in the denomination’s policy book.

To decide what’s adaptable, the standing committee has worked with three other denominational leadership bodies — the Committee on Faith and Order, the Ministry Study Commission and the Connectional Table.

Much of what the leaders are doing is going through Part VI’s paragraphs one by one to see what can be adapted in local contexts. Whatever they deem adaptable, they propose moving to a new Part VII in the Book of Discipline, which would still apply to the United States.

However, that method hasn’t worked with Part IV’s Chapter 5, which deals with the denomination’s general agencies.

In other action

The Standing Committee on Central Conference Matters is submitting legislation to the 2020 General Conference, unrelated to the adaptability work. The legislation includes:
  • Three petitions that clarify the purpose, duties and organization of provisional annual conferences. One petition states that if a provisional conference after 12 years does not show progress towards becoming an annual conference, the central conference will consult with the standing committee and recommend to General Conference if the provisional annual conference should continue.
  • A separate petition that would require some form of conferencing before a piece of legislation is submitted to General Conference. Basically, the petition would require that legislation come from individuals but have the support of a church body such as a local congregations, annual conference, agency board or other church leadership group.  

“It’s really difficult to divide the work of agencies into an adaptable part and a non-adaptable part,” said Dr. Kasongo Peniel, a standing committee member from Kolwezi, Democratic Republic of Congo, who has helped lead the work on Chapter 5.

Instead, the committee plans to ask the 2020 General Conference to change the mandate related to Chapter 5 so that the committee, working with agency executives, could submit legislation that rewrites the entire chapter with more theological grounding.

As with the rest of the General Book of Discipline effort, the hope is to develop legislation to be acted on by the 2024 General Conference.

The non-adaptable Social Principles contain the denomination’s definition of marriage and the assertion that the practice of homosexuality is “incompatible with Christian teaching.”

However, Part VI contains ordination requirements, including the ban on “self-avowed practicing” gay clergy, and the denomination’s chargeable offenses, which includes both being “self-avowed practicing” gay clergy and officiating at same-gender unions.

Leaders working on the General Book of Discipline have been striving to keep their work completely separate from the ongoing debate and have not touched these restrictions.

For example, those working on the Book of Discipline’s section dealing with judicial administration list the chargeable offenses paragraph as non-adaptable, even if they personally would like to see a change. But they hope to specify what principles in the judicial process should apply throughout the church.

In May, standing committee members plan to finalize what they are submitting to the 2020 General Conference for delegates’ feedback.

Throughout the effort, Streiff has championed the goal that the denomination ultimately will have a slimmer, more globally applicable Discipline.

“It is my deep conviction that the Discipline is a covenant of what essentially binds us together,” he said. “What is needed for building such a covenant? Conferencing is needed. Talking and sharing and finding where the consensus is on what is essential.”

Hahn is a multimedia news reporter for United Methodist News Service. Contact her at (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.To read more United Methodist news, subscribe to the free Daily or Weekly Digests.


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