Facing a wave of open defiance to church law, the top court of the
United Methodist Church is set to consider rulings challenging church
teaching on homosexuality.
The United Methodist Judicial Council will decide whether church
ministries can advocate for the acceptance of homosexuality, whether
ministers can officiate at same-sex ceremonies and whether a regional
conference can urge members to ignore portions of Methodist law.
The rulings made by regional conferences are among 17 items the court will consider at its Oct. 23-26 meeting in Baltimore.
The United Methodist Church has repeatedly voted to retain language
in its constitution, the Book of Discipline, that says “the practice of
homosexuality is incompatible with Christian teaching” and that
“self-avowed practicing homosexuals” are not allowed to serve as clergy.
In addition, the church explicitly says that churches may not host,
and ministers may not celebrate, “ceremonies that celebrate homosexual
unions.”
Multiple regional conferences called for greater acceptance of gay
couples during the recent conference season, saying the church’s current
teachings are unjust and ought to be ignored.
The Judicial Council hearings come as at least four United Methodist
ministers — including the former dean of Yale Divinity School — are
facing trial for officiating at same-sex weddings, and more than 1,500
clergy have signed a statement offering to marry gay couples.
The
court has no power to change existing church policy — only the
quadrennial General Conference can do that — but it can set boundaries
on how far clergy and congregations can go in adhering to current
policy.
Rev. Thomas Lambrecht, vice president of Good News, a conservative
group within the United Methodist Church, said he believes the high
court will maintain church doctrine and that accepting the resolutions
would entirely undermine church law.
“What is concerning to us at this point is that so many people are
attempting to essentially disregard our church’s position,” Lambrecht
said. “If people are putting themselves forward as United Methodist
clergy and bishops and are not willing to abide by United Methodist
policies, that seems to us to be somewhat dishonest and reflects moral
confusion . . . How can you claim to be a United Methodist and take
actions that are contrary to that?”
The regional council rulings say the inconsistencies are instead
within the Book of Discipline, which calls Methodists to minster to all
people yet bans clergy from officiating at same-sex ceremonies, said
Matt Berryman, executive director of Reconciling Ministries Network, an
independent United Methodist group that advocates full inclusion of gay
people.
Berryman said the rulings coming before the Judicial Council could be
beneficial because they will further the conversation about the
church’s response to gay people.
“We have to look at the tension between what’s in the Discipline and
the reality of what’s going on,” Berryman said. “We have to decide what
it means to love God and love our neighbor. And that’s not always clear,
given the deep ambiguities in the Scripture.”
Also among the items to be considered is a review of the decision to
remove a lesbian woman from the ordination process.
Mary Ann Barclay
(formerly Mary Ann Kaiser, before her August wedding to another woman)
had been recommended for ordination by her district committee.
She is
appealing a decision by Southwest Texas Conference’s Board of Ordained
Ministry to remove her from the process without interviewing her.