I was supposed to be in Minneapolis right now. My pastor and I were scheduled to fly out
yesterday for the 2020 General Conference of the United Methodist Church, a
gathering of people from all over the world.
This was the conference that was supposed to decide the future of our
global church. Would we split or figure
out how to stay together? And now we
must wait until 2021.
I had attended General Conference in 2016 as a volunteer for
the Love Your Neighbor Coalition, a protester standing up for equality for
LGBTQ people in our church. (I blogged
about it.) I have been watching our
church politics closely ever since then.
When my pastor asked me to go with her, I jumped at the chance. She signed up as a conference volunteer, as clergy
in the prayer room and as a greeter. I
was hoping to balance my time between serving as a conference volunteer and a
volunteer with Love Your Neighbor Coalition.
Before I could sign up, the coronavirus made its appearance.
After experiencing the divisive and emotionally difficult
General Conference in 2016, I knew that this conference would not be easy. Four years ago I had been in community with
people who were directly affected by the church’s injustice. We sang together and lifted each other up. I had hoped that delegates could find a just
solution this time. Now we wait some
more.
Tonight the Reconciling Ministries Network hosted a virtual
worship service, “Be Still and Know,” celebrating the strength of the
reconciling movement and offering hope and healing. Clergy participants spoke from their homes
from all around the United States and even in Kenya. The music was from a gathering that occurred
9 weeks ago, before social distancing was necessary. We sang a lot of the same music during GC
2016 and it brought back memories of what it felt like to be in that
community. I sang along to a couple
songs and choked back tears. Four years
have passed and we haven’t made the progress we had hoped for. The service ended on a positive note. During the final song, there were photos of
the 323 congregations and communities who joined the reconciling movement since
the hateful special General Conference 2019.
That gives me hope.
The world waits for this pandemic to end. And so the church waits too. Waiting is hard, especially when there is no
equality for LGBTQ people during the waiting.
“Be still and know that I am God.”
What does God want us to do? I
truly believe in an inclusive God, a God who loves all God’s children. That God is the one Jesus showed to us. What can we learn during this time of
waiting? Is it possible to end the harm
and keep the church together? Can we be
an inclusive and loving church? I’m
waiting. . . but I hope it is not too much longer.
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