Agency QA: Religion and Race

Editor's Note: As the 2012 General Conference approaches, United Methodist News Service is looking at details of legislation and offering information to help readers better understand how the church works. A number of proposals are aimed at restructuring the denomination and its general ministries, so UMNS asked the top executives of each agency to answer five questions about their agency's role in the church. This is the response from the Commission on Religion and Race.

4. How does the average United Methodist pastor or member benefit from your agency's work? Social advocacy? Curriculum? Scholarships? Please give a concrete example, ideally quoting a testimonial from someone outside of your agency.
The Commission on Religion and Race works with pastors, annual conference leaders, seminaries and general agencies of the church. The direct benefit is that the church is more open, more welcoming, more just and better equipped for ministry in and with a global church. One clear benefit of the commission's ministry is found in the impact of the Minority Group Self-Determination Fund, or CORR Action Fund, that since its inception has granted more than $20 million of support to more than 500 projects in local churches and communities and throughout the United Methodist connection.

In 2011, Religion and Race awarded more than $300,000 to 13 recipients for innovative programs promoting cultural competency and racial equity within the denomination. Seven conferences, five United Methodist seminaries and a jurisdictional organization received grants for projects ranging from developing intentional multicultural community, immersion programs, creating cultural competency training for clergy and lay leadership, and for one seminary, the complete redesign of the school's theological program.

The Rev. Kah-Jin Jeffrey Kuan, dean of Drew University Theological School, one of 13 United Methodist schools of theology, described the seminary plans to use a $75,000 grant as seed money to revamp the school's curriculum. "We want to provide the students we are preparing today with the competency to be multicultural religious leaders tomorrow," he said. According to Kuan, Drew is one of the most racially and ethnically diverse theological schools in the United States, with 48 percent of its full-time faculty being people of color. Kuan said revamping the school's 20-year-old curriculum was a priority for faculty and staff, and the grant positioned them to move forward in concrete ways, including the creation of a new set of goals for a multicultural Master of Divinity curriculum.

This type of partnership represents a new opportunity for Religion and Race to work with and support vital congregations throughout the denomination. The development of this latest commission Action Fund cycle of grants is a direct result of listening to what annual conferences and the denomination need from the commission and providing tools that address their needs.

5. How much money and how many employees does it take to maintain the work your agency is currently doing?
The Commission on Religion and Race's mandates have expanded since its founding. The requests for support from congregations, annual conferences and jurisdictions for resources and services increase every day. Now is the time, especially as the church faces challenges of engaging new people in new places of ministry, where it is clear that the demographics of communities are different from those found in the pews, to expand capacity in order to meet increased needs. Currently Religion and Race is understaffed with a staff of 10, including an intern, and operates with a yearly budget of $2.2 million. Seventy-five percent of program staff time is spent responding to requests for training and resourcing in annual conferences and local churches.

Learn more: Website of the General Commission on Religion and Race

For more information, visit the 2012 General Conference website.

 

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