General Conference 2004
Rocky Mountain Conference News and Resources
Day 9
Group holds silent demonstration for inclusion of homosexuals
May 4, 2004
By Melissa Lauber*
PITTSBURGH (UMNS) - More than 200 United Methodists braved near-freezing
temperatures early May 4, to kneel or stand in prayer in front
of the David L. Lawrence Convention Center in Pittsburgh in silent
witness to their desire for inclusiveness.
The witness came during the 2004 General Conference of the United
Methodist Church. The denomination’s legislative assembly
is meeting April 27-May 7 at the convention center.
"I am here this morning trusting in God’s spirit to
work. Prayer is the way to tune into the spirit," said Bishop
Susan Morrison of the Albany (N.Y.) Area. "How could I be
anywhere else?"
The silent protest supporting the full inclusion of lesbian, gay,
bisexual and transgender people in the United Methodist Church
was sponsored by the grassroots group Common Witness. It is made
up of people from the Methodist Federation for Social Action, Reconciling
Ministries Network, the Parents Reconciling Network and Affirmation:
United Methodists for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Concerns.
The group gathered at 6 a.m. at Smithfield United Church in Pittsburgh,
several blocks from the convention center. Morrison led the march
to the convention center with a prayer for "a bodacious spirit
of gentleness."
Several of those present expressed an appreciation for the spirit
of peace that prevailed, claiming that the time for tension and
confrontation has passed.
"It is important to have a witness of prayer for inclusiveness," said
the Rev. Diane Summerhill of the Baltimore-Washington Conference. "Prayer
connects us with a power that can change the world. Things won’t
change quickly, but like drops of water, prayer can erode the hardest
rock."
The Rev. Lee Williamson of the California-Nevada Conference, agreed. "A
witness of presence is important," he said. "Showing
up demonstrates that you care. It goes back to relationship and
our essential relationship with God."
But whatever its form, a demonstration had to be made, said the
Rev. Gilbert Caldwell of Denver.
Caldwell was present in a similar demonstration in 1964 when the
General Conference met in Pittsburgh. "The issue then was
race," he said, and abolishing the racially segregated Central
Jurisdiction.
Standing in prayer outside the convention center once again, Caldwell
said, "This is part of my ministry, my calling. The church
is continuing to hurt people."
He said he regrets that the church seems to be lagging behind
society in justice issues. "In 1954, the U.S. Supreme Court
invalidated ‘separate but equal,’" he said. "Until
1968, the church remained segregated." The church is also
behind in accepting the sacred worth of those with different sexual
orientations, he said.
Caldwell is reluctant "to compare the faces of bigotry. It
is a waste of time to say my oppression is more difficult than
yours. Comparisons are irrelevant," he said. "It is still
human pain."
That pain manifests itself in a countless number of small ways,
said Sue Laurie of the Reconciling Ministries Network, an unofficial
United Methodist group advocating more inclusiveness in the church. "Ordination
is not the most important form of exclusion.
"Many times the church says, ‘Welcome, our doors are
open,’ but lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people
know when people don’t want their family photos in the church
directory, or their flowers on the piano, or them teaching Sunday
school. It is condemning."
Throughout the day the delegates continued to pray, rising in
prayer when issues of homosexuality were brought to the floor of
General Conference.
"From a faith perspective, we must begin with prayer," said
the Rev. Monica Carsaro of the Reconciling Ministries Network. "Our
prayer is that we live together. We’re United Methodists;
we don’t have to be of one mind, but of one heart. Our prayer
is for justice. It is a prayer of wholeness and holiness."
*Lauber is a staff writer for the United Methodist News Service.
Sue Whorl contributed to this article.
News media contact: (412) 325-6080 during General Conference,
April 27-May 7. After May 10: (615) 742-5470
United Methodist News
Service
Photos and stories also available at:
http://umns.umc.org
General Conference links:
*Please note: people have been experiencing access problems with
the GC site and related pages, due
to the high volume of traffic they are receiving. Don't
be afraid to try again later!* You can also try some of the General
Church agency web sites below, or the unofficial ones listed on
the main RMCUMC GC2004 page.
Please keep the Rocky Mountain Conference Delegates in
prayer: Janet Forbes, Youngsook Kang, Olon Lindemood,
Chuck Schuster, Aaron Gray, Judy Hill, Brad Laurvick, Dan O'Neill,
Liwliwa Robledo, and Peggy Sewell.
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