By Mark Tooley on 6.30.09 @ 6:07AM
American Methodists avoid the splits that now characterize U.S.
Episcopalians.
Arguably the Episcopal and Methodist Churches have been America's
historically most influential. Numerous American elites,
including many of the Founders, were and are Episcopalian, making
it often the de facto "established" church. And Methodism became
America's largest church in the 19th century, creating the
evangelical populist ethos that robustly survives today, if now
mostly among other denominations.
Like other Mainline denominations, Episcopal and Methodist
seminaries succumbed to theological liberalism early in the 20th
century, reaching radical crescendos in the 1960s, when both
churches began numerically to decline, a decline that continues
until this day.
But the two denominations now seem set on different trajectories,
as vividly illustrated by very recent events. Last week, the
newly formed Anglican Church in North America (ACNA) convened its
first provincial assembly, bringing into one denomination an
estimated 100,000 regular worshipers and 700 congregations. Most
of these Anglicans have left the Episcopal Church since 2003,
when Gene Robinson became the first openly homosexual Episcopal
bishop.
"There is a great Reformation if the Christian Church underway,"
ACNA's new Archbishop Robert Duncan told the ACNA
audience last week in Bedford, Texas. "We North American
Anglicans are very much in the midst of it. While much of
mainline Protestantism is finding itself adrift from its moorings
(submission to the Word of God), just like Western Anglicanism,
there is an ever-growing stream of North American Protestantism
that has re-embraced Scripture's authority (just as we have)."
Duncan was formerly the Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of
Pittsburgh, which, with several other U.S. dioceses, left the
Episcopal Church and joined ACNA. "The Father truly is drawing
His children together again in a surprising and sovereign move of
the Holy Spirit," Duncan said. "He is again Re-Forming His
Church. This also explains why there is such keen interest in
what is happening here in these days among our Catholic and
Orthodox brothers and sisters."
One Orthodox "brother" was Metropolitan Jonah of the [Russian]
Orthodox Church in America, who joined ACNA last week in Bedford.
So too did California megachurch pastor Rick Warren, who told approving
Anglicans: "God has not called the ACNA to be a reactionary
group. In the first place, you didn't leave them [the Episcopal
Church]." Warren asserted that it was the old denomination that
left the Anglican tradition.
Most in ACNA see the Episcopal Church as theologically
irretrievable. Its membership now stands just over 2 million,
more than 90 percent of it in the U.S., and the small remainder
scattered in Latin America, Taiwan and Europe. The Episcopal
Church belongs to the global Anglican Communion, with nearly 80
million members, and symbolically headed by the Archbishop of
Canterbury, who has not yet recognized ACNA. But Anglican
primates in Nigeria, Rwanda, Uganda, Kenya, and elsewhere in the
Global South, with tens of millions of members, have recognized
ACNA, with some no longer in communion with the Episcopal Church.
The U.S. Episcopal Church's General Convention will meet in July
in Anaheim, California. As an almost all-U.S. body, American
Episcopalians can largely do as they please. Global Anglicans can
threaten sanctions or ultimately ouster but have no direct
juridical authority over the U.S. Episcopal Church.
United Methodists are organized very differently, hence their
avoidance of schism. Nearly a third of the over 11 million member
denomination lives overseas, mostly in Africa, in countries like
the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Nigeria, and Liberia. In 45
years, the U.S. church membership has fallen from 11 million to
7.9 million, while the overseas membership has surged to over 3
million and is fast growing. In two decades or less, most United
Methodists will likely be African.
Unlike the Episcopal Church, the United Methodist Church began
enacting strict guidelines on marriage and homosexuality starting
in 1972, prohibiting actively homosexual clergy and same-sex
unions, while affirming sex only in marriage between man and
woman. Church courts have repeatedly affirmed these policies in
high profile cases. Liberal efforts to overthrow these stances at
the quadrennial governing General Conference, mostly recently
last year, have met defeat, especially thanks to outspokenly
conservative African delegates, who were 20 percent of the
delegates and will be at least 30 percent next time.
Frustrated by the African obstacle, United Methodist liberals
advocated creating a new U.S. only "regional" conference to
deliberate over U.S. church business, omitting Africans and other
internationals. Potentially a U.S.-only church convention could
have redefined marriage and sexual standards for the U.S. church.
Despite strong backing from U.S. bishops, which included a lesbian
couple's testimony even at the church's Mississippi Annual
Conference, this U.S. "global segregation plan" is being defeated
by a nearly 2 to 1 in votes across the state-level annual
conferences in the U.S. African conferences will vote later this
year and almost certainly will follow suit.
"Here's the great virtue of our church," United Methodist
theologian Billy Abraham of Southern Methodist University's
seminary told Virginia
United Methodists a few weeks ago. "Our canon law has turned out
to be extraordinarily healthy and good. And we have a universal
canon law that works right across the face of the church. The
Anglicans and the Episcopalians do not have that, and that has
cost them dearly in dealing with the whole debate about
homosexuality."
The Episcopal Church has split, with the new ACNA looking to
leadership from Anglican primates (archbishops) in Africa. United
Methodism has not split, thanks to leadership from its African
members. Episcopal elites and Methodist circuit riders of 200
years ago did not foresee that the spiritual spawn of U.S.
missionaries in Africa would play such a role in their own U.S.
churches. But they likely would have enjoyed the irony
topics:
Religion, Protestantism, Africa