Know What You are Going to Do! (2020 Edition) #UMCrapstorm

 

I have played competitive softball since I was fourteen years old at every imaginable level.  Up to a handful of years ago, I played over a hundred games each season and now in my late fifties, I still play twenty or thirty.  For much of that time I was a shortstop.  The shortstop is the captain of the infield and a part of my role was to make sure the other players were practicing situational awareness.  My constant exhortation to my teammates before the ball was pitched? “Know what you are going to do!”  My exhortation to United Methodist pastors and churches as we enter General Conference 2020 (GC2020) is very much the same, “Know what you are going to do!”

 

A handful of churches have already decided what they are going to do and won’t hang on until GC2020.  They are the outliers and the wildcards.  For them, the aftermath of General Conference 2019 was just too horrible to experience all over again.  Most still haven’t stabilized.  They do not find the new Protocol prospects particularly encouraging. They don’t care what is decided at GC2020; release them from the Trust Clause and they will be gone.  Leaving the denomination under the present rules involves a jagged and potentially contentious process but at least such churches can provide their own narrative.  Leaving a contentious denomination feels very different than leaving over disagreements over human sexuality.  The former is institutional; the latter personal.  For these churches, attempting to get out will be their only move and they should be treated graciously.  They did not ask for our current denominational dysfunction.  To make them stay is a bad play for everyone.

 

The vast majority of UMC churches will stick it out until after General Conference 2020.  They will see what unfolds and they will respond…or not.  These churches and pastors need to be asking some important questions right now.  Primary among them are, “What will our congregation do in response to GC2020 decisions?” and “What will our pastor do in response to GC2020 decisions?”  Unless a pastor started the church, has been in place over a decade or is enjoying a near perfect fit; these will be two considerations with two very different sets of implications, not one.

 

In softball, you never know where the ball will be hit so you have to anticipate all possibilities.  Anything could happen.  Clearly the UMC is at a tipping point; there is no end in sight concerning the conflict and the status quo is unsustainable.  The early hopes of stopping the fighting brought by the Protocol proposal seem more tenuous by the day. Regardless, I believe it to be the best play for anyone wanting to stay in the process.

Whether you sit on the left, right or center (is there still a center?) it is a good time to practice situational awareness.

 

What could happen at GC2020?

 

  1. The denomination formally divides
  2. The denomination moves further right
  3. The denomination shifts left
  4. Things stay about where they are
  5. An exit ramp is offered
  6. An exit ramp in not offered
  7. Things are passed that are later ruled unconstitutional by the Judicial Council

 

What will happen at GC2020?

 

  1. The delegates will be flooded with multiple plans, political maneuvering and mutually exclusive agendas
  2. Those plans will be subjected to the political processes of the floor
  3. The human sexuality debate will overshadow all other business
  4. The UMC brand will be further diminished
  5. Many churches will be further destabilized
  6. Whatever is decided will be rejected by about half the church
  7. Whatever is decided will require more deciding in 2024 and beyond

 

In the meantime, I would encourage churches and pastors to ask themselves some very specific questions:

 

The Big Questions

 

  1. Can we survive until GC2020? If not, what would be the process of negotiating an exit?  If we leave, where will we go?  What is involved in legally reorganizing the church once we leave?  Who owns the assets?  How will ordination work for pastors who leave?
  2. If the UMC formally splits, where will we land? How many ways might the UMC split?  How long will the process for formal separation take? The Protocol leaves a lot of questions on the table.
  3. If the UMC moves further right, can we stay?
  4. If the UMC shifts left, can we stay?
  5. Can our congregation survive a congregational vote on human sexuality? Should this be avoided at all costs? What would it take to get them ready?
  6. If a clear exit ramp offered, will we take it? Can we afford the terms?  If we take an exit; do we go independent, independent but affiliated, form a new denomination or join an existing one?
  7. If there is no resolution to the UMC conflict in 2020, will we stay?

 

These are difficult questions that anticipate a number of outcomes and grapple with a number of responses.  Churches and pastors, even of the same theological ilk, will posit in different places.  I encourage everyone to be as proactive as possible on one hand and to carefully “think things through” on the other.  A failure to plan for what could happen now will almost certainly be a leadership mistake later.  Having informed, prayerful and non-anxious conversations with your church leadership right now will prevent pandemic fear in the present and knee-jerk responses in the near future.

 

Ready or not, GC2020 will be here in a minute and a half.  The press will have a field day. More things will be written and said to further widen the divide. Everything now bad may very well get worse. The non-participants will NOT be rewarded. The path of least resistance will be catastrophic in the long run for both clergy and congregations. The future will not be easy for anyone and only the prepared will be in position to navigate it.

The field is lined, the opposing teams are warming up, the umpires are discussing the rules, coaches are going over the game plan and players are already trash talking.  The first pitch will soon be thrown.  Like softball, you never know where the ball will be hit; you just have to know what you are going to do.

-Rev. Shane L. Bishop, a Distinguished Evangelist of the United Methodist Church, has been the Sr. Pastor of Christ Church in Fairview Heights, Illinois since 1997.

 

 

Published by Rev. Shane L. Bishop

Senior Pastor of Christ Church, Fairview Heights, IL since 1997. Author. The Foundry Network. I am an orthodox Christian but I am not in a bad mood about it.

17 thoughts on “Know What You are Going to Do! (2020 Edition) #UMCrapstorm

  1. Like the analogy. Clear message for the church. Can you expand more on what happens to an exiting UM pastor?

  2. Timely wisdom. Thank you, Shane, for your efforts to equip the Church for the days ahead. Though it could get worse before it gets better, I really sense greater days ahead! Let’s all know what we’re gonna do!

  3. Like baseball, something must happen. Whether it is a homerun or a strike something happens. The can that has been kicked so many times is no longer able to roll. IMO

  4. The Trust Clause is a big issue not enough people are talking about. It needs to be done away with. It should have never been part of the church to begin with.

  5. As if this isn’t stressful enough, our Pastor has already announced that he will be moved July 1st after only 3 years with us!

  6. The author is asking all the right questions. The only answer to some is “time will tell.”

    I’m a retired UM clergyperson. Five of my six grandchildren attend independent, non-denominational churches. In Texas, they’re popping up all over. (Can’t speak for other states.)

    The age of the liberal, bureaucratic, hierarchical protestant denominations (AKA “Seven Sisters) has long passed. In each year of my service in the UMC, it declined – except when the mission to Africa expanded. This split didn’t happen over-night. Though it may seem that way among those in their forties.

    The end of the UMC will be difficult – particularly those my age – to accept. But my generation is at the narrow end of the actuarial table. My grandchildren’s’ generation seeks another means to worship and be faithful. And I applaud that.

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