As one of the founders of the United Methodist Centrist Movement, the Rev. Doug Damron spend years hiding his rejection of his church's rule that the "practice of homosexuality is incompatible with Christian teaching."
Centrists used a "perfectly delicious" theological platform defined by words such as "unity," "peace" and "moderate," he said, during a recent guest sermon at the historic Broad Church United Methodist Church in Columbus, Ohio. After decades of fighting about sex, many hoped "traditionalists" and "progressives" could keep "United" attached to "Methodist."
The goal was "compromise," he said, a "sweet word" that hid a "status quo of oppression." But there was "an institution to protect" and many clergy feared being honest. Thus, they didn't openly attack the denomination's Book of Discipline.
"By nature, I am a rule follower," he said. "I knew that such defiance may have cost me my clergy credentials."
Now it's time for candor and courage, said Damron. When United Methodists finally split, conservatives will build a church defined "by who they will exclude today and who they will exclude tomorrow." The question is whether progressives will act on their convictions.
"It is time to speak into existence, following the Spirit's leading, a church which fully welcomes, includes, affirms not only God's beloved gay and lesbian ones, but a host of other folks who have found the door of the church closed," he said. This would include embracing and ordaining "trans folks, bi folks, kink folks, poly folk, gender-fluid folk and others."
The United Methodist clock kept ticking this summer, even as COVID-19 realities delayed -- again -- votes on the "Protocol of Reconciliation and Grace Through Separation" negotiated by activists on the left and right. The General Conference will not meet until August 2022, since the UMC establishment has declined to take actions in virtual forums.
Conservatives plan to create the Global Methodist Church once the Protocol is approved, merging their large minority among the old denomination's 31,000 U.S. congregations into a structure build around the booming churches of Africa and Asia. This new denomination will retain the Book of Discipline's teachings on marriage and sex.
The Protocol's preamble noted that "centrists" still hope to preach compromise after this divorce, while stating that doctrines can be modernized. Thus, the "post-separation United Methodist Church will strive to create a structure of regional conferences … adaptable to regional contexts" while removing all "restrictive language related to LGBTQ persons."
Meanwhile, in social media, podcasts and Zoom conferences, voices on the doctrinal left have declared that it's time to move past debates about committed gay relationships. Some say it's time to affirm those, including sexually active clergy candidates, cohabitating in straight or gay relationships or living in "poly" -- short for "polyamorous" -- unions of three or more.
One denomination -- the Liberation Methodist Connexion -- has already formed, rejecting what it believes are the "powers, principalities and privileges" plaguing Methodism, such as "colonialism, white supremacy, economic injustices, patriarchy, sexism, clericalism, ableism, ageism, transphobia and heteronormativity." The "LMX" is committed to all people "living out their God-given identities," including "gender expressions and sexual identity" as well as "monogamous and non-monogamous" relationships.
Earlier this summer, leaders of Love Prevails -- another liberal network -- announced their UMC exit in a letter stating: "We once thought the church's proclamations of grace were simply ironic, but now we understand them to be wicked hypocrisy. We wrongly assumed that the UMC would … welcome Queer people, if only out of institutional preservation. We failed to realize that the church would rather destroy itself than become fully inclusive."
Truth is, many clergy are still afraid to be honest, said the Rev. Austin Adkinson of the Pacific-Northwest Conference, a leader in the UMC's Queer Clergy Caucus. In a "Multiamory" podcast that is still being quoted, Adkinson stated: "I'm trying to find ways of being able to say, without pulling the carpet out from under some folks, that really it doesn't matter who you're sleeping with, but how you take care of those people. …
"I think a lot of more progressive clergy would have similar thoughts, but don't really have the courage to jump in and put themselves on the line for advocating something that's going to shake the boat. … Change is slow and change in the church is slower."