2023 Great Plains Annual Conference

 

A week after the Great Plains Conference approved the disaffiliations of 156 churches in Kansas and Nebraska in an online business session, clergy and lay members were ready to mold the future during the in-person portion of annual conference, at the La Vista Convention Center in La Vista, Nebraska, an Omaha suburb.

“Clay in the Hands of Our Creator” was the theme of this year’s annual conference, with Wanda Jackson with Centering Souls Retreat at Parksville, Missouri, at the potter’s wheel in front of the stage throughout many of the plenary sessions.

Opening his first annual conference as episcopal leader, Bishop David Wilson reprised the themes of his installation sermon, talking about how pottery can be both decoration and functional.

“My friends, in this room alone is a great wealth of talented and gifted people,” the bishop said. “However, there is also a wealth of talent and gifts that is going unused for the kingdom of God not just in this room, but across the Great Plains Annual Conference.

“God has gifted us all with various gifts to be used to transform lives and this world,” he later added. “Some of us have been given opportunities to do so and others have not, for whatever reason.”

Despite the loss of churches, the conference — numbering more than 750 congregations after the recent disaffiliations and closings — is excited for the future, Bishop Wilson said.

“They are excited to see what God will do through us in the days ahead,” he said. “We are ready to put this chapter of our lives behind us and to ‘get into the best’ as Paul writes.”

Scott Brewer, director of administration and chief of staff, said during his report that he has felt energized by the annual conference and was excited about the future.

“I want to build,” Brewer said. “I want to build a church where all are welcome and all are changed. I want to build a church filled with such joy and grace, we cannot help but share it with everyone we meet. I want to build a church where we seek justice for all God’s children. I want to build a church that’s filled with children.

“I want to build a church where we love one another, trust one another, where we are accountable to one another,” he continued. “And I want to build that church with you — not the one of building and steeple we have meetings about, the one with all kinds of people that we sing about.”

The church of 2050 has been a focus of the Rev. Jeff Clinger, congregational excellence director, since his appointment began in July.

“To be clear, I have no crystal ball, but there are some things we can know,” Clinger said. “2050 will be here before we know it, and the question for us is if we’re going to be intentional about being the church of 2050, or are we just going to wake up in 2050 and go, ‘Ohmigosh, here we are.’”

Clinger led a session on the church of 2050, and some of the most moving testimony came from the youth he invited to the lectern.

“We want to have fun. We want God to love us, and we want to love God,” said Zander Seth, 18, Lyndon, Kansas, president of the Conference Council on Youth Ministries. “In 2050, we want to focus more on including all people. … We’re going to continue to focus on social justice and activism. … We’re going to continue to focus on community engagement.

“We’re not afraid to stand up for what’s right, and as 2050 nears closer, we’re going to be able to do so, so much,” he added. “If we push away the next generation, will there be a church of 2050?”

Isaac Langley, a teenager from Topeka, told the audience that he grew up Southern Baptist, where being gay was not discussed and women held no position of power beyond nursery coordinator. That changed when he and his family started attending Topeka First United Methodist Church.

“It was the most eye-opening experience I’d ever had, going from this very, very, very conservative church to The United Methodist Church, which is really open. Just seeing gay people and LGBTQ people in the church as well,” he said. “I have so much hope for the future of The United Methodist Church. I am very excited to see what happens in the future.”

Emma Yeon, a youth from Paola United Methodist Church, added: “No matter what, the leadership we’re going to have in 2050 is going to be able to allow us to grow with the church and be able to spread the love of Jesus to everyone.”

A record number of 50 elders — 24 ordinands and 26 commissioned, including 10 deacons — were ordained and commissioned in services on the night of June 9.

“The Great Plains Conference is so blessed to have such a committed, diverse group of women and men who have been on this sometimes-tumultuous journey to be ordained,” Bishop Wilson said.

In an online special session a week earlier, the conference overwhelmingly approved the disaffiliations of 156 churches and the closings of 10 others.

During the in-person session, Great Plains Conference clergy and laity rejected both a petition and a resolution that would have extended the deadlines for disaffiliation.

The conference had set an April 30 deadline, but the petition and the resolution wanted it extended to the end of 2023 and following the 2024 General Conference, respectively.

The conference did pass resolutions that supported the creation of a regional conference that would encompass the United States separately from the rest of the denomination; and prohibit membership on boards, councils and committees when immediate family members serve on boards, committees or councils to which a conference employee is accountable.

The 2024 conference budget of $15,124,101, a decrease of about $672,000 or 4% from the 2023 budget, was approved June 10. 

The Rev. Amy Lippoldt, president of the conference Council on Finance & Administration, said half of the mission shares from disaffiliated churches, about $552,000, would be included in the 2024 budget. 

Earlier, Lippoldt said CF&A had approved $500,000 for the conference congregational excellence department to provide support for churches and individuals whose congregations had been split by disaffiliation votes.

2023 Annual Conference Report Worksheet

Name of conference: Great Plains

Location of conference gathering: La Vista Conference Center, La Vista, Nebraska

Dates of conference gathering: June 7-10

Did the gathering have a theme or slogan, and if so, what was it? “Clay in the Hands of Our Creator”

Officiating bishop: Bishop David Wilson

Guest speakers and memorable points or quotes by speakers: No guest speakers.

Main actions enacted by the conference: Approved 156 disaffiliations a week earlier; voted down petition and resolution to extend deadline for disaffiliations.

Resolutions or actions related to the postponed 2020 General Conference, now set for 2024: None

Did any churches disaffiliate or leave the conference (and if so, please list each church)? 156

KANSAS

Dodge City District: Burdett, Copeland, Deerfield, Elkhart, Greensburg, Hugoton, Jetmore, Kismet, Lakin, Lydia, Offerle, Plains, Richfield, Rolla, Satanta

Five Rivers District: Baldwin City Vinland, Blue Mound, Burlington, Fulton, Kincaid Selma, Paola Plum Creek

Flint Hills District: Cottonwood Falls, Dwight, Leonardville, Madison, Marysville, Oketo, Olpe Ebenezer, Randolph, Swede Creek

Hays District: Agra, Amherst, Arnold, Bazine, Brewster, Downs Rose Valley, Grainfield, Healy, Kanorado, Kirwin, Long Island, Lucas, Luray, McCracken, Natoma, Natoma Pleasant Plains, Ness City, Quinter, Ransom, Russell Otterbein, Sharon Springs, Stockton, Utica

Hutchinson District: Bushton Salem, Ellsworth, Kanopolis

Kansas City District: Leavenworth Fairmount, Overland Park Central Korean

Parsons District: Caney, Cherryvale, Howard, Liberty

Salina District: Alida, Beloit, Burr Oak, Cawker City, Concordia Huscher, Glasco, Glen Elder, Green, Gypsum, Ionia, Jewell Trinity, Miltonvale, Republic, Wakefield, Webber

Topeka District: Cottonwood Falls Camp Creek, Denton, Effingham, Lancaster, Leona Bellevue, Mayetta Potawatomi, Oneida, Robinson Zion, Sabetha, Topeka New Hope

Wichita East District: Oxford, Tisdale

Wichita West District: Coats Glendale, Iuka, Medicine Lodge, Norwich, Sawyer, Wellington, Wichita New Covenant

NEBRASKA

Blue River District: Daykin, Endicott, Fairbury, Raymond

Elkhorn Valley District: Atkinson, Bartlett, Bassett, Laurel, Looking Glass, Newman Grove, Newport Jamison, O’Neill, Springview

Gateway District: Ansley, Banner, Bartley Kemper Memorial, Bertrand, Burwell, Callaway Morning Star, Cambridge, Elwood, Eustis, Farnam, Holdrege, Huntley, Taylor Calvary

Great West District: Benkelman, Chappell, Clinton, Cody Hunt’s Chapel, Curtis, Curtis Garden Prairie, Elsie, Imperial, Lewellen, Lodgepole, Max, Maywood, McCook Memorial, Mullen, Oshkosh, Tryon Community, Wallace, Wuaneta

Missouri River District: Burchard, Hooper Faith, Logan Center, Louisville, Omaha Living Faith, Omaha Water’s Edge, Pender, Rulo Trinity

Prairie Rivers District: Benedict, Chester, Exeter, Giltner, Hebron, McCool Junction, Monroe, Phillips, Silver Creek, St. Edward, Trumbull

Number of churches that closed because no longer sustainable (please list each church): 10

Kansas: Burchfiel, Holcomb, Lenora, Mount Hope, Peru, Roeland Park and Virgil

Nebraska: Hollinger, Madrid and Melbeta

Any special annual conference set: No.

What budget did the conference pass and how did it change from last year? $15,124,101, a decrease of about $672,000 or 4% from the 2023 budget,

Other resolutions adopted by the conference: The conference did pass resolutions that supported the creation of a regional conference that would encompass the United States separately from the rest of the denomination; and prohibit membership on boards, councils and committees when immediate family members serve on boards, committees or councils to which a conference employee is accountable.

Did your clergy session approve any openly gay candidates for ministry? If so, how many? No.

Did the conference have to elect replacement delegates due to the delay? If so, which delegates are replacements and why? No.

Names of delegates for both General Conference and jurisdictional or central conference and designation of lay or clergy:

CLERGY
General Conference
Rev. Adam Hamilton (1st ballot)
Rev. Amy Lippoldt (3rd ballot)
Rev. Junius Dotson (4th ballot)(deceased 2021)
Rev. Kalaba Chali (4th ballot)
Rev. Dee Williamston (5th ballot) (elected bishop)
Rev. David Livingston (5th ballot)
Rev. Cheryl Jefferson Bell (10th ballot)

South Central Jurisdictional Conference
Rev. Dr. Anne Gatobu (2nd ballot)
Rev. Mark Holland (2nd ballot)
Rev. Eduardo Bousson (2nd ballot)
Rev. Ashley Prescott Barlow-Thompson (3rd ballot)
Rev. Stephanie Ahlschwede (4th ballot)
Rev. Zach Anderson (5th ballot)
Rev. Andrew Conard (7th ballot)
 
Jurisdictional Alternates
Rev. Ashlee Alley Crawford
Rev. Kurt Cooper
Rev. Nathan Stanton (deceased 2022)

LAITY
General Conference
Oliver Green (2nd ballot)
Lisa Maupin (2nd ballot)
Scott Brewer (2nd ballot)
Randall Hodgkinson (3rd ballot)
Steve Baccus (5th ballot)
Dixie Brewster (5th ballot)
Lisa Buffum (9th ballot)

South Central Jurisdictional Conference
Abigail Koech  (2nd ballot)
Dan Entwistle (2nd ballot)
Jesi Lipp (2nd ballot)
Shayla Jordan (3rd ballot)
Ally Drummond (4th ballot)
Esther Hay (5th ballot)
Joyce Jones (7th ballot)
 
Jurisdictional Alternates
Roy Koech
Abraham Ruffcorn
Charles File

Was there a push at your conference to elect younger delegates? If so, how many delegates under 35 were elected and what are their names and ages? n/a

Number of people ordained, commissioned or received into associate membership, and average age: 50; average age 38.5

Number of clergy retired: 32

Membership stands at 171,562 — down 13,860 from the previous year.

In-person worship attendance stands at 45,327 — up 5,261.

Church school attendance stands at 13,459 — down 2,962.

Professions or reaffirmations of faith for 2022, 2,620 — up 556 from 2021.

Adults and young adults in small groups for 2022, 29,742 — up 46 from 2021.

Worshippers engaged in mission for 2022, 36,078 — up 3,317 from 2021 

David Burke, communications content specialist

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