Vaccines may not be enough to save an in-person General Conference this year — but virtual technology may not suffice either.
General Conference organizers have made no final decisions about whether The United Methodist Church’s top lawmaking assembly can go forward as planned on Aug. 29-Sept. 7 in Minneapolis.
However, the Commission on the General Conference chair recently outlined the challenges facing the group as it weighs options for the international gathering already postponed from 2020 by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Kim Simpson, the chair, spoke during the Feb. 4 online meeting of the Connectional Table, a church leadership body that coordinates ministry and resources for denomination-wide ministries.
Information for delegates
The event will include presentations on the Episcopal Fund, the Jurisdictional Study Committee report and General Conference options. The webinar can be viewed on ResourceUMC.org.
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The coming General Conference could be pivotal. Delegates face multiple proposals to resolve United Methodists’ intensifying debate over homosexuality by splitting the denomination along theological lines.
The commission plans to meet online Feb. 20 to review a report from its technology study team, appointed last fall to look at virtual options for the coming gathering.
The coming General Conference has 862 voting delegates — 55.9% come from the U.S., 32% from Africa, 6% from the Philippines, 4.6% from Europe and the remainder from concordat churches that have close ties to The United Methodist Church. In addition, the global gathering typically requires bishops and hundreds of staff and volunteers — including marshals, pages, interpreters and translators — to function.
Meeting in person may be out of the question. COVID-19 vaccines are rolling out slowly worldwide, more contagious virus variants are emerging and travel restrictions continue around the globe. At present, the state of Minnesota is limiting indoor gatherings to no more than 150 people.
Yet in this time of Facebook Live worship and daily Zoom hangouts, taking the denomination’s biggest church meeting online is no simple task.
Simpson listed eight issues the commission must consider for General Conference to meet electronically:
• Connectivity: “Internet and even electricity is not readily available to everyone equitably in areas where The United Methodist Church is located,” Simpson said.
• Time zones: There is a 16-hour difference between the West Coast in the United States and the Philippines.
• Interpretation: Nine languages are spoken at General Conference. Church law also requires that proposals and the proceedings be translated into four languages: English, French, Portuguese and Kiswahili.
• Legislative committees: Legislative committees are the first stop for most petitions submitted to General Conference, with only committee-approved legislation heading to the plenary for a vote by all delegates. The coming General Conference has 14 legislative committees, and each includes delegates from around the globe who speak multiple languages.
• Presiding officers: Presiding officers elected by delegates lead individual legislative committees, and bishops preside in plenary sessions. “How will presiding officers be accommodated and where will they be located?” Simpson asked.
• Safety and integrity of the voting process: The commission was already looking to enhance identification requirements after finding that at the contentious special 2019 General Conference, four ineligible people cast votes using the credentials of delegates who were not present.
• Book of Discipline and General Conference rules: General Conference must meet requirements laid out in the Discipline, the denomination’s law book, and its own rules approved by delegates. Simpson noted the commission would need to make sure that the ways delegates meet together and vote satisfy those requirements.
• Christian conferencing: Simpson wondered how church leaders could have meaningful discussions in virtual settings.
Simon Mafunda, a veteran delegate from Zimbabwe, also has raised concerns about connectivity and accessibility, especially for African delegates.
“I am happy that there has been a technology study team, which has looked at some of these issues,” he told United Methodist News. “The planners of GC need to come up with innovative ways to be able to go over these hurdles.”
He pointed out that General Conference has used technology before to increase accessibility. In 2016, General Conference organizers worked with United Methodist Communications to provide tablets and training to delegates from central conferences — church regions in Africa, Europe and the Philippines.
Still, Mafunda also worries about fairness. “If GC goes virtual,” he said, “we will need an assurance or a way of making sure that delegates express themselves freely without any form of pressure around them.”
One option on the table is for delegates to meet together in different regional gatherings so they can share technological support.
The Rev. Ande Emmanuel, a delegate from Nigeria, said that would work for Nigerian delegates. He said a virtual General Conference is possible, but it would need a streamlined agenda.
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Among them is the Rev. Jeremy Smith, a frequent blogger on United Methodist issues who has written about barriers to a virtual General Conference.
“I sympathize with these hard choices, even as I think a virtual General Conference is too easily manipulated, lacks representation, and excludes too many people,” Smith, pastor of First United Methodist Church in Seattle, told UM News.
Still, Smith said, delaying General Conference would require bishops to pledge to continue to hold in abeyance any complaints against LGBTQ inclusion, namely the denomination’s bans on same-sex weddings and “self-avowed practicing” gay clergy.
The denomination’s intensifying debate around the status of LGBTQ Christians — which has already led multiple congregations to disaffiliate — has many United Methodists arguing that General Conference must happen sooner rather than later.
Before COVID-19 caused shutdowns worldwide, a diverse group of United Methodists had negotiated the Protocol of Reconciliation & Grace Through Separation. The widely endorsed proposal would allow traditionalists to leave with church property and $25 million to form their own denomination, but it needs General Conference approval to take effect. The traditionalists want to maintain church restrictions related to marriage and ordination.
The Rev. Thomas Lambrecht, vice president and general manager of the traditionalist group Good News, has written a commentary arguing for a virtual General Conference. He plans to publish the second part of his case Feb. 12 with a specific focus on how the meeting might work.
“My larger concern is that we will continue to be stuck in our current conflict in which no significant decisions can be made,” he told UM News. “There will be issues around the number of bishops, the budget, jurisdictional and annual conference boundaries, to name just a few. Until we know who is going to continue in the post-separation UM Church, none of those decisions can be made. We are paralyzed.”
Christine Schneider, a reserve delegate from Switzerland, echoed all the concerns about a virtual General Conference.
Still, the veteran delegate added, General Conference in normal times has its problems including sometimes-poor translations, the difficulties of Robert’s Rules of Order and frequent distrust about how presiders handle debate.
Schneider is part of an informal, international group of delegates trying to help the denomination focus on a shared vision rather than its divisions.
“However we hold the next GC, guaranteeing fairness seems to be the main challenge,” she said. “Without fairness, we lose trust. And that would be disastrous at this critical time in the life of the UMC.”
Hahn is assistant news editor for UM News. Contact her at (615) 742-5470 or [email protected]. To read more United Methodist news, subscribe to the free Daily or Weekly Digests.
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