A project promoting and celebrating ethnic inclusion across the Methodist Church comes to an end this week.
The Belonging Together project was a response to the "Towards an
Inclusive Church" report presented to the Methodist Conference in 2010.
Over the last three years, the project has sought to affirm values of
inclusiveness across the Methodist Connexion through new resources and
ways of working together.
Churches have been encouraged to be intentional about ethnic
diversity in leadership and stationing decisions in order to be
consistently inclusive.
This includes developing and implementing strategies that enable the
contribution, representation, access and participation from people from
all backgrounds.
The Reverend David Shaw, minister at Wesley Methodist Church, said
the project had initiated the momentum for change at the church.
The church had a time of visioning and prayer at an open Church
Council meeting and from this, developed a 12-month plan for change that
has impacted who is involved in the welcome, worship and leadership of
the local church.
The Reverend Jane Earl, secretary to the Church Council, said:
"Belonging Together gave us the tools and the impetus to have
conversations in a range of places within church about the skills and
background of all of our congregations in the context of our hopes and
dreams for the Church for the future.
"We've been working on three themes: to develop our worship and
music life, to develop our welcome to those who come new to the church
and to those who have been with us for some time and to develop and
maintain our work with young people."
The Revd Katei Kirby, Partnership Officer for Belonging Together,
said: "The Methodist Church in Britain is one of the most ethnically
diverse churches in the UK, and that is something to be celebrated. This
three-year project gave the Church the opportunity to see what could
happen when people of all ethnic backgrounds are encouraged to become
and belong.
"As the project closes, the Church now has the responsibility to
continue to be intentional and deliberate about ethnic inclusion, so
that the rich diversity of the whole people of God is both visible and
sustained."
The Revd Dr Martyn Atkins, General Secretary of the Methodist Church,
said: "The end of this project should mark the beginning of a more
excellent way of being an ethnically inclusive Church, and I invite us
all to help make it so."