Young people speak up through twitter

I finally have become one of those people – the ones who walk into fountains or stumble down stairs because they are texting and tweeting too much.

I never thought that would happen to me, but I have become part of a conversation going on around the world with young people who are absolutely fascinated by what is taking place here in Florida. Over and over we hear that technology is changing our lives, but never has it felt more real to me than this. For the first time, I understand in an experiential way how the Arab Spring took place.

When young people can dialogue about what they are watching – whether it be in their neighborhood or on their computer screen – it changes the conversation and transforms their level of engagement. We are in a new era – an era when young people are not sitting at home, unaware that General Conference is even happening, possibly hearing a report about what took place a month or two later at their Annual Conference – if they happen to be one of the handful of young people there.

Instead they are watching what we are doing; they are hearing what we are saying; they are engaging; they are forming opinions, and they are getting involved. Watching from the bleachers as visitors, sitting at the delegate tables, or watching the livestream of the proceedings at computer screens all over the world, they are engaged as they have never been before. And as a result, the conversation here at General Conference is changing as well. This morning security of appointments, or what we often call guaranteed appointments, was removed as a right of ordained Elders. This means that in two weeks, when I am hopefully ordained as an Elder in full connection in the Eastern Pennsylvania Conference, I will become one of the first Elders in decades ordained without expectation of a guaranteed appointment.

When that decision was passed on the consent calendar this morning, many delegates were not even aware of what they had done. Young people watching from the stands and from their computer screens realized it, however, and the twitter discussion went viral. Folks around the world were voicing their dismay and shock that there had been no discussion. Delegates on the floor became aware of this through the twitter outcry and many who did not realize that they had just voted to end security of appointment became aware of it. As a result, a younger clergy person from the New England Conference, the Rev. We Hyun Chang, stepped to the microphone to ask if we could somehow bring the conversation up for discussion because of the profound justice issues involved. Another young clergy person from Eastern Pennsylvania Conference, the Rev. Dawn Taylor-Storm stepped to the microphone and gave an eloquent description to the gathered body of what was happening in the twitter-sphere and the outcry that was emerging globally. She was echoed by the Rev. Robin Hynicka, also from Eastern Pennsylvania Conference, who offered another speech for discussion. However, in the end the body voted once again not to take the time during plenary to discuss the decision that had been made previously in Committee. After the vote, the plenary session took a break; and when it took them a while to return, those tweeting became hopeful, thinking that the delegates were taking a stand and refusing to return. When that turned out to not be the fact, however, one young man tweeted that he felt like General Conference was playing “red light, green light” with people’s emotions – and he was heard by people watching the discussion around the world.

That is just one example of how technology is transforming the way that the conversation is taking place, but I could share many others. Another example is when Adam Hamilton presented the restructuring plan consistently referring to “young people” as the reason for many of the decisions, while young people around the room and the world tweeted that they did not agree. They asserted that they were a diverse people with diverse opinions and wanted to be heard; instead they mourned constantly having to hear established church leaders attaching the phrase “young people” to issues to promote the issue without regard to whether it authentically represented the diverse and passionate voices of young people.

Yet, I am convinced that all of that is changing. Voices previously unheard are now being heard. In the age of Twitter, Facebook and texting, most of us do not have a vote – but all of us can have a voice if there are people who are willing to listen.

If you want to become a part of the conversation, go totwitter.comcreate a name and password; and then search for #gcyp or #gc2012. When participants tweet, they attach those hashtags to their tweets so that people who want to know what General Conference Young People or General Conference 2012 people are thinking, they can easily search for it with those letters. When you do this all the tweets that have been written with those hashtags will come up. You don’t have to search for a person, you can search for an idea and the comments of all who are discussing that idea will come up.

*Hannah Adair Bonner is Northeast Jurisdiction staff person for Young People’s Ministry, General Board of Global Ministries, and is a provisional Elder in the Eastern Pennsylvania Annual Conference.


Like what you're reading? Support the ministry of UM News! Your support ensures the latest denominational news, dynamic stories and informative articles will continue to connect our global community. Make a tax-deductible donation at ResourceUMC.org/GiveUMCom.

Sign up for our newsletter!

Subscribe Now
Church History
The Methodist Church’s 1956 General Conference meets from April 25 to May 7 in the municipal auditorium in Minneapolis. On May 4, the first Friday of the legislative assembly, the delegates voted to make women eligible for full clergy rights. “Now it is up to us to prove in clear and deep witness to the whole church our consecration and our loyal devotion to the work of the Kingdom of God,” said Margaret Henrichsen, a General Conference visitor, after the vote. In 1967, she became the first U.S. woman appointed district superintendent. Photo courtesy of Archives and History.

Why the 1956 women-clergy vote matters

Seventy years ago, the Methodist Church supported full conference membership for women clergy — a decision that would have a resounding impact when The United Methodist Church formed in 1968 and even today.
General Conference
Emily Allen, a veteran lay delegate from the California-Nevada Conference, delivers a report during the 2024 United Methodist General Conference in Charlotte, N.C. on May 3, 2024. Allen has been elected to serve as the interim General Conference secretary beginning July 1. She will lead the planning of The United Methodist Church’s international legislative assembly, scheduled May 8-16, 2028, in Minneapolis. Photo by Larry McCormack, UM News.

Bishops elect interim General Conference head

Emily Allen will lead the planning of The United Methodist Church’s international legislative assembly, next scheduled in 2028.
General Conference
The skyline of Minneapolis, which is scheduled to host the 2028 General Conference. The Commission on the General Conference, meeting online April 17-18, voted to shorten General Conference to May 8-16, 2028. The group is also taking steps to protect delegates amid heightened immigration enforcement. Photo by Lane Pelovsky, courtesy of Meet Minneapolis.

Planners shorten GC2028, discuss Minneapolis

Organizers are pressing forward with holding the 2028 United Methodist General Conference over eight days in Minneapolis. The group is also taking steps to protect delegates amid heightened immigration enforcement.

United Methodist Communications is an agency of The United Methodist Church

©2026 United Methodist Communications. All Rights Reserved