Ecclesial Disobedience and the Ordained

Many of my theological friends in the UMC–brothers and sisters in Christ–are much more progressive than I am. I feel the need to state publicly that I value these friends a great deal. I learn from them. They challenge me and keep me from becoming too comfortable with my own positions. They remind me that my own ideas are necessarily fallible and incomplete. I hope they value me, too. I’d like to think that our conversations have in some small ways helped them to grow in the life of faith.

I’m afraid, though, that after 2016, these theological friends and I–these brothers and sisters in Christ–will no longer share a worshipping community. The denomination has reached a breaking point. Of course, our disagreements over many topics, most prominently “homosexual practice,” are nothing new. What is different now than in the last four decades? The answer is quite clear: ecclesial disobedience. Some clergy, including some bishops, have made the decision to disobey publicly the denomination’s church law regarding gay marriage and ordination. The hope seems to be to embolden others who hold similar ethical positions and bring about a change of denominational policy.

The model for this practice of ecclesial disobedience is the U.S. civil rights movement which brought about change through peaceful, public acts of civil disobedience. There are, however, at least three important ways in which civil disobedience is unlike ecclesial disobedience.

1. For most of us, our national citizenship is not altogether voluntary. It’s much more difficult to say, “You know, I think I’d make a better Norwegian or Guatamalan than American,” than it is to say, “You know, I think I’d fit better in the UCC or the Southern Baptist Church than in the UMC.” Yes, hypothetically, each of us could emigrate to another country, but for most of us this simply isn’t a live option.

2. Unlike our national citizenship, ordination is a sacred covenant between the individual, God, and the church. If we engage in acts of civil disobedience, we are not violating a sacred covenant as we are in the case of ecclesial disobedience.

3.Presumably, we know what we’re signing on for when we’re ordained. (If not, you need to have a talk with your UM Polity instructor.) We know what kind of body we’re joining. We know its ideals, rules, standards, and ethical positions. Unless we immigrate to the U.S. from another country, this isn’t the kind of decision we make about national citizenship. When folks do immigrate from another country to the U.S., it is often because they are seeking a better way of life, and not because they wish to undermine the ideals of our nation. In fact, we take a very dim view of immigration with the intention of undermining our national ideals.

Willful acts of disobedience to the church as acts of protest, then, are quite different than acts of civil disobedience. I’m sure that some readers could point out differences that I haven’t brought up here. In light of these differences, it is incumbent upon the protesters to demonstrate that this is an ethical and appropriate way to bring about change in the denomination. 

Let’s be clear: the inevitable result of this kind of action, if it continues, will be a division of the denomination. It will not be reform of the denomination. That would have to come through some action of the General Conference, but what has precipitated these acts of ecclesial disobedience to start with is the fact that the progressives cannot get what they want at the General Conference level. Acts of ecclesial disobedience will not sway conservatives toward the progressive position. In fact, it will probably bring about a greater level of entrenchment. One reason for further entrenchment will be the fact that the denomination cannot allow this kind of action to change church law in lieu of the decisions of the General Conference. If we do allow this, then every group that feels strongly about its position in opposition to the Discipline can move its agenda forward by circumventing our established procedures.

It’s worth noting that the Protestant “Reformation” was really a Protestant schism. The Protestant impulse ever since has been to divide when we cannot agree. Now, let’s keep in mind that we Wesleyans are really not very good Protestants. Our parent tradition, the Anglican Church, was not born out of a theological protest (as, say, the Lutherans were), but out of a political dispute. Further, rather than being the heirs of sola Scriptura, we are the heirs of the Anglican “Middle Way,” which relied upon the three-legged stool of scripture, tradition, and reason. All this notwithstanding, however, we’ve soaked in enough real Protestantism from other traditions that we know a good opportunity to split off from one another when we see one. The disintegration of our structures of governance and authority will surely provide sufficient reason.

This is all leading up to a few questions that we should think through denominationally:

1) At what point does one’s individual conscience supersede the collective decisions of the body to which one is ordained?

2) What is the appropriate response when we feel the body to which we are ordained is acting unethically?

3) What are we to think about people who seek ordination with the intention of undermining the collective decisions of the body that will ordain them?

To be clear, I’m not calling for division. I don’t want division. I want to worship alongside brothers and sisters in the faith who help me think more deeply about God. I’m simply pointing out what I think is going to happen if we continue on our current trajectory. I’m interested in reading your comments and hope you’ll help me think through these issues.

 

 

74 thoughts on “Ecclesial Disobedience and the Ordained

  1. I rejoice in worship with all flavors of Christians. The small membership church I pastor has Anglicans, Catholics, Baptists, Pentecostals, Nazarene, Presbyterian, some Methodists that don’t know what that means, and some Methodists that do; fundamentalists, radical progressives, middle way people…The only thing we have to agree on to be in worship with each other, is to agree to worship with each other. So that is where I strive to focus. The College of Bishops has defined they have no intent but to protect their own golden parachutes and have abdicated leadership in the pretense of “Unity at any cost”. The polity has become so convoluted it leaves itself exposed to those who would impose administrative violence. So I mourn the divided UMC that has become so dysfunctional, it can’t even respond to the division. But I proceed, for now, realizing that folks and churches are not saved by the “UMC Connection” , but by the power of the Holy Spirit. When it becomes Spiritually unbearable, those who long for credible leadership and find none, will leave what is now called the UMC and return to the streets to seed store front churches and the Kingdom of God will proceed.

  2. In my previous church connection (The Church of God – Anderson, IN) a lot of emphasis was put on the biblical mandate to “come out from among them.” Holiness unto the Lord means not going the way of the world, separating ourselves for Jesus’ sake. Living for Him and being His disciple does not mean looking the other way as the world takes hold of a portion of the UMC through a politically correct, secular progressive movement which is pro-homosexual in its philosophy and totally intolerant of those who stand for biblical authority, thousands of years of church history and the worth of the Book of Discipline . It is not so much a division as it is a separation from the powers of sin among us. It’s way past time to “come out from among them” and reclaim the importance of holiness in our hearts and lives. The Lord will bless us if we do so.

  3. Desire to worship with others who will “help me think more deeply about God” is being overwhelmed by desire to flee the corruption which magnifies itself idolatrously day by day in the United Methodist system. Martyrs (the real ones) must have shuddered in realization of “hard facts” right before they gave their lives. The United Methodist Church will not be spared by a flimsy compromise between light and darkness, “but wholly lean on Jesus’ name.” We must declare, and accept the consequences.

  4. I said something similar, thought not as eloquently, in the recent NYAC dialogue. Using the methods of civil disobedience within the church is a fundamental categorical error. We are bringing knives to a prayer fight. Thanks for this, David.

  5. First, David, I appreciate your posts on disabilities and down syndrome, even if I don’t comment on them. Thanks for keeping yoru blog interesting by not solely focusing on conflicts that drag people like me into anxiety-producing online arguments (haha).

    I think another key difference is that by patterning “ecclessial disobedience” after “civil disobedience,” one group necessarily defines the other as the enemy. My progressive friends would argue that the church has done that to the LGBT community, and I agree with that assessment in several situations (though not with respect to defining marriage). But either way, when we approach each other as enemies instead of as brothers and sisters in Christ, it inevitably leads to further division, and as you point out, leaving a church body in a place that respects freedom of worship is easier than leaving one’s home country.

    Finally, I do not think that a split is inevitable unless the influential parts of orthodox-evangelical-conservative Methodism say it is inevitable. There are plenty of remedies General Conference can review to enhance ecclessial accountability, which may cause a small minority of people/groups to leave the denomination, but would not require a split of the denomination itself.

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