CHARLOTTE, N.C. — United Methodist delegates repealed their church’s longstanding ban on LGBTQ clergy with no debate on Wednesday, removing a rule forbidding “self-avowed practicing homosexuals” from being ordained or appointed as ministers.
Delegates voted 692-51 at their General Conference — the first such legislative gathering in five years.
“We passed it by an overwhelming majority,” said Jessica Vittorio, a lay delegate representing the North Texas Conference. “In the moment the vote was taken, it seemed anticlimactic.” Shortly after the vote, she said, people were crying, hugging one another and singing the hymn “Draw the Circle Wide.”
The vote’s overwhelming margin contrasts sharply with the decades of controversy around LGBTQ policies in the United Methodist Church. Past General Conferences had steadily reinforced the LGBTQ clergy ban and related penalties amid debate and protests, but many of the conservatives who had previously upheld the ban have left the denomination in recent years, and this General Conference has moved in a solidly progressive direction.
Keri Lynn Lucas, executive pastor of family ministries and missions at Creekwood United Methodist Church in Allen, watched a livestream of the vote from her home in Plano. “I started weeping,” she said of her response to the vote. “I’m a straight cisgender woman. This does not affect me personally. But it affects so many people and generations of clergy.”
The change doesn’t mandate or even explicitly affirm LGBTQ clergy, but it means the church no longer forbids them. It’s possible that the change will mainly apply to U.S. churches, since United Methodist bodies in other countries, such as in Africa, have the right to impose the rules for their own regions. The measure takes effect immediately upon the conclusion of General Conference, scheduled for Friday.
From the founding of Methodism by John Wesley in the 18th century, at the heart of the movement “was this idea that God’s grace is available to all people,” said Clayton Oliphint, senior pastor of First United Church in Richardson and the lead clergy delegate for the North Texas Conference. The vote, he said, “puts us back on a track to say we really mean that.”
The consensus was so overwhelming that it was rolled into a “consent calendar,” a package of normally non-controversial measures that are bundled into a single vote to save time.
Also approved was a measure that forbids district superintendents — a regional administrator — from penalizing clergy for either performing a same-sex wedding or for refraining from performing one. It also forbids superintendents from forbidding or requiring a church from hosting a same-sex wedding.
That measure further removes scaffolding around the various LGBTQ bans that have been embedded in various parts of official church law and policy. On Tuesday, delegates had begun taking steps to dismantle such policies.
Delegates are also expected to vote as soon as today on whether to replace their existing official Social Principles with a new document that no longer calls the “practice of homosexuality … incompatible with Christian teaching” and that now defines marriage as between “two people of faith” rather than between a man and a woman.
The changes are historic in a denomination that has debated LGBTQ issues for more than half a century at its General Conferences, which typically meet every four years. On Tuesday, delegates voted to remove mandatory penalties for conducting same-sex marriages and to remove their denomination’s bans on considering LGBTQ candidates for ministry and on funding for gay-friendly ministries.
At the same time, it comes following the departure of one-quarter of the U.S. churches within the UMC. And it could also prompt departures of some international churches, particularly in Africa, where more conservative sexual values prevail and where same-sex activity is criminalized in some countries.
Last week, the conference endorsed a regionalization plan that essentially would allow the churches of the United States the same autonomy as other regions of the global church. That change — which still requires local ratification — could create a scenario where LGBTQ clergy and same-sex marriage are allowed in the United States but not in other regions.
More than 7,600 mostly conservative congregations in the United States disaffiliated between 2019 and 2023 reflecting dismay over the denomination not enforcing its bans on same-sex marriage and LGBTQ ordination.
The conference last week also approved the departure of a small group of conservative churches in the former Soviet Union.
The denomination had until recently been the third largest in the United States, present in almost every county. But its 5.4 million U.S. membership in 2022 is expected to drop once the 2023 departures are factored in.
The denomination also counts 4.6 million members in other countries, mainly in Africa, though earlier estimates have been higher.
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Joy Ashford covers faith and religion in North Texas for The Dallas Morning News through a partnership with Report for America.