As church exits rise, proposed budget drops

Key Points:

  • The United Methodist Church’s financial leaders met to shrink its budget proposal that will go before General Conference next year.  
  • Even with these stresses, the boards of both the Connectional Table and General Council on Finance and Administration were able to mutually agree on how to divide the reduced funds. 
  • The latest reduction comes with new projected losses to the denomination’s financial base due to church closures and disaffiliations. 
  • At the same time, leaders point out that the vast majority of congregations are staying in the United Methodist fold and efforts at revitalization have already started. 

The United Methodist Church will look and operate very differently going forward. 

That was the frequent refrain at a May 17-19 meeting that saw the denomination’s financial leaders shrink an already record-low proposal for the denominational budget in the wake of new projected losses from church disaffiliations and closures. The leaders also heard input on reducing the number of United Methodist bishops. 

Yet even while grieving the departures, the leaders also discussed The United Methodist Church’s opportunities to revitalize and share God’s love with renewed vigor.  

“Thinking about mission and ministry while trying to ensure stewardship for years to come is a delicate balance,” said the Rev. Moses Kumar, top executive of the denomination’s General Council on Finance and Administration.

“All of us have dedicated hours to this because each one of us cares deeply about The United Methodist Church.” 

He was addressing a gathering that brought together the boards of both the finance agency and the Connectional Table, a leadership body that coordinates denominational ministries and resources. 

What’s in the budget?

U.S. conferences distribute their apportionments among seven general-church funds. Each fund supports a different category of ministry: bishops, ministerial education, general administration, the Black College Fund, Africa University, ecumenical work and the World Service Fund, which supports the work of most general agencies.

Read more

The GCFA board now is proposing a 2025-2028 denominational budget of about $370.5 million to next year’s General Conference, the denomination’s top policymaking assembly. That’s about $3 million less than the budget the finance agency began working on last fall. 

The new bottom line also marks a nearly 40% reduction from the denomination-wide budget that General Conference approved at its last regular meeting in 2016

The proposal requires significant cuts to all funds that support denomination-wide ministries — including United Methodist general agencies and bishops.

It also will be the lowest budget to come before General Conference since 1984, when the international denomination had far fewer members on the African continent and had yet to establish Africa University, now supported with denominational funds.

Figuring out how to manage such steep reductions and maintain vital ministry around the globe has been a source of tension between the GCFA and Connectional Table directors.

However, after months of negotiations, the two groups on May 18 each unanimously approved recommendations on how to divvy up a much-smaller budget.

“We’ve had some disagreements with GCFA, and we’re happy to end in a spirit of agreement on these numbers,” said Dave Nuckols, the Connectional Table’s treasurer, in presenting the leadership body’s recommended budget allocations. 

However, he added that he hoped conversations could continue to restore the collaborative budget process the two boards had previously used in developing the budget recommendations that go before General Conference.

Both the GCFA board and Connectional Table have long agreed the denomination-wide budget should be significantly reduced. But they differed on how low to go while still sustaining ministries at all levels of the denomination.

In The United Methodist Church, local churches provide a share of church giving — called apportionments — to annual conferences, church regional bodies that in turn pay apportionments to general-church ministries. 

Beware of scams

Amid rising disaffiliations, the General Council on Finance and Administration has noticed an increase in wire-transfer scams seeking to profit from the situation.

Churches that leave the denomination with property must pay various exit fees to their conferences. The finance agency warns disaffiliating churches to be wary of scammers seeking to reroute these payments.

The agency also urges conferences to share the following message with congregations: “If you receive a notice that our payment details have changed, you should contact the conference immediately by phone for verification. We do not plan on making any changes throughout this process.”

The U.S. provides the bulk of funding for denomination-wide ministries. In the U.S., the formula for determining an annual conference’s apportionments is its total local church net expenditures multiplied by a General Conference-approved base percentage. 

The GCFA board and Connectional Table were at odds about how much to decrease the base percentage proposed to General Conference. The GCFA board initially supported reducing it by 25% in November, while the Connectional Table supported an 18% base-percentage reduction.

Ultimately, the GCFA board decided to reduce the base rate by 22.9%. 

The continued drop in the budget proposal — even with a slightly higher base percentage — is the result of the net-expenditure side of the ledger. Net expenditures are what a church spends after capital expenses, apportionments and benevolent giving.

Basically, they are an indicator of the denomination’s financial base. In 2021, U.S. annual conferences saw an overall 7% reduction in church net expenditures due in part to church disaffiliations but especially from church closures amid the COVID-19 pandemic. With that drop in mind, the finance agency has adjusted its projections on net expenditures downward.

This year is likely to see the peak of church disaffiliations under a church law that allows congregations to leave with property if they meet certain conditions. That law is set to expire at the end of 2023.

So far, annual conferences have approved 3,838 disaffiliations — representing a loss of about 12.5% of U.S. congregations since the church law took effect in 2019. Put another way: The majority of U.S. United Methodist churches appear to be remaining in the fold. 

It is also unclear how much membership loss these departures will represent since a number of members of exiting congregations are opting to remain United Methodist by transferring to other churches or planting new United Methodist faith communities. 

Still, the denomination’s bishops, agency staff and other church leaders are already adjusting to a new reality. Since before the pandemic, the denomination’s general agencies have been budgeting each year with lower giving in mind

Bishops, too, are trying to shore up the long-shaky Episcopal Fund, the apportionment-supported fund that enables their work.

During their meeting in Nashville, both the Connectional Table and GCFA boards heard from Council of Bishops President Thomas J. Bickerton, who urged the leaders to include the bishops in discussions about reducing their numbers. 

He said he is already in conversation with other denominational leaders about the number of bishops needed. 

“I don’t think that there’s anyone who is wanting to preserve the episcopacy in its current form,” he said. “The numbers speak for themselves.”

The proposed 2025-2028 budget allocates $68.82 million to the Episcopal Fund. That’s a 25.2% reduction from the budget General Conference approved in 2016. 

At present, The United Methodist Church has 59 active bishops — 39 in the U.S.; 13 in Africa; four in Europe and three in the Philippines. That’s seven fewer U.S. bishops than the previous General Conference-approved budget. 

Subscribe to our
e-newsletter

Like what you're reading and want to see more? Sign up for our free daily and weekly digests of important news and events in the life of The United Methodist Church.

Keep me informed!

However, Rick King, GCFA’s chief financial officer, warned the leaders that under this budget, the Episcopal Fund will be at risk of running out of money if The United Methodist Church returns to a full roster of bishops.

Bickerton said he and his episcopal colleagues recognize this challenge. 

He noted that five U.S. bishops face mandatory retirement in 2024, with another two or three who also may retire. 

He said leaders of jurisdictions, which elect U.S. bishops, already are considering how to address future elections. In 2028, he added, 16 U.S. bishops face mandatory retirement. 

Between 2024 and 2028, he said, denominational leaders will need to think strategically about where bishops can best serve and are most needed. Simply removing bishops from U.S. areas with high numbers of disaffiliations may be counterproductive in reaching the new mission field, he said.

Meanwhile, the entire Eurasia Episcopal Area has embarked on the multi-step process to leave The United Methodist Church, and there are no plans to elect another bishop in that region. 

At the same time, church leaders have long been at work on a plan to add five bishops to Africa. Bickerton said his African colleagues are realistic about the financial challenges the denomination now faces.

“My prayer is that we can find a way to collaborate and strategize together to get to the same goal that we all desire,” Bickerton said. “And that’s to position the church to make disciples and make an impact in the world.”

Bishop Mande Muyombo, the Connectional Table’s chair, echoed Bickerton’s sentiments. 

In a reflection that opened the meeting on May 18, he acknowledged that church finances are not just about numbers but about lives being transformed.

“That’s the power of The United Methodist Church, a church that has given some of us hope, taken us from a place of scarcity and hopelessness to a place of experiencing God’s love and grace,” prayed Muyombo, who leads the North Katanga Area, which encompasses parts of Congo and Tanzania.

“Lord, I know I speak on behalf of many — not only on my continent of Africa but in the world.”

Hahn is assistant news editor for UM News. Contact her at (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org. To read more United Methodist news, subscribe to the free Daily or Friday Digests.

Sign up for our newsletter!

Subscribe Now
Bishops
United Methodist bishops from the Philippines, Africa and the U.S. pray during morning worship Nov. 6. The Council of Bishops joined together in worship each day of its Nov. 3-8 meeting at Epworth by the Sea Conference Center on St. Simons Island, Ga. The bishops also took on a number of challenges facing The United Methodist Church. Photo by Rick Wolcott, Council of Bishops.

Bishops zero in on challenges ahead

As The United Methodist Church starts a new season, bishops discussed financial concerns and ministry needs ahead — including faith formation and care for immigrants.
Central Conferences
Council of Bishops President Tracy S. Malone (center) addresses the council during its Nov. 3-8 fall meeting. Sitting beside Malone is Bishop L. Jonathan Holston (left), Council of Bishops secretary, and Bishop Ruben Saenz Jr., president-designate. Malone leads the Indiana Conference, Holston leads the North Alabama and Alabama-West Florida conferences, and Saenz leads what will be the Horizon Texas Conference starting Jan. 1. Photo by Rick Wolcott, Council of Bishops.

Bishops urge halt to Côte d’Ivoire funding

The United Methodist Council of Bishops is asking the denomination’s finance agency to suspend all funding for bishop compensation and related expenses in Côte d’Ivoire.
Connectional Table
Ragghi Rain Calentine (left), a member of the Connectional Table and chairperson of the Native American International Caucus of The United Methodist Church, displays a Noohkom scarf during the Connectional Table’s Oct. 24-27 meeting in Dallas. Native American women carry the scarves to remind them that their grandmothers are always walking with them, especially during troubling times. Also pictured are North Katanga Area Bishop Mande Muyombo, chair of the Connectional Table, and Judi Kenaston, the leadership body’s chief connectional officer. Photo by Jim Patterson, UM News.

Connectional Table plans for work ahead

Members of the Connectional Table — most of whom are new to the United Methodist leadership body — met for an orientation that focused on regionalization, rejecting colonial attitudes and plans for “a new future.”

United Methodist Communications is an agency of The United Methodist Church

©2024 United Methodist Communications. All Rights Reserved