Connectional Table Affirms Four 'Provocative Proposals' |
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by Fran Coode Walsh |
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FORT WORTH, Texas (UMNS) - The Connectional Table, a 60-member group responsible for coordinating the mission, ministries and resources of the United Methodist Church, has proposed four goals for the 10 million-member denomination. The group selected the four from 54 "provocative proposals" that were considered during an Oct. 22-24 meeting. The four proposals will be further developed and presented to the 2008 General Conference, the church's top legislative body. "We've now come to the point where our listening needs to be turned into some proposals for 'how does this church move forward into the future?'" said Bishop Sharon Rader, interim executive secretary of the table. Proposals selected for further development: 1. Address the leadership crisis in the church in the United States. Covenant for collaboration Statistics show that the average United Methodist is 57 years old, and United Methodists under age 18 account for only 4.6 percent of church members. There are 850 ordained and commissioned elders under age 35, and U.S. membership has slipped below 8 million for the first time since the 1930s. In contrast, churches in the central conferences (regions in Africa, Asia and Europe) have seen membership increase. Developing congregations The group set a goal of 350 new churches a year in the United States, with 80 percent of those churches averaging 250 people in worship within five years of their launch. If successful, the United Methodist Church would welcome 87,500 new members in five years. Partnering with the poor
Global health initiative One element of a global health plan would involve the Nothing But Nets campaign, an effort to raise funds for anti-malarial bed nets. The United Methodist General Board of Global Ministries, United Methodist Communications, and the Division on Ministries with Young People at the General Board of Discipleship are teaming with the United Nations Foundation, the Millennium Promise, the Measles Initiative, Sports Illustrated magazine and the National Basketball Association to promote the program. There will be an emphasis on good health practices at the next General Conference, and efforts will be made to strengthen community-based health care through radio and other communication tools. During the meeting, the health task force presented information to the group that health care claims by United Methodist clergy in the United States are 16 percent higher than those of other employers with more than 500 employees across the nation. Barbara Boigegrain, chief executive of the United Methodist General Board of Pension and Health Benefits, explained that the surveys showed United Methodist clergy are also obese in greater numbers than the national average. Boigegrain said the data lead the group to question: "What is going on in the lives of the clergy that is causing them to be heavier, to have higher stress, and to be measurably less healthy than the rest of the population? …We need to look at the systems of the church." The task force suggested that annual conferences and agencies provide comparative data and best practices to focus on the systemic issues and prepare recommendations for General Conference. Health task force members were asked to calculate budgets for each of the four proposals. The propositions will be presented to the Council of Bishops' Nov. 1-6 meeting in Mozambique. Other reports
These suggestions will also be presented to the Council of Bishops at their meeting in Mozambique. Preliminary findings for a "State of the Church" report were shared with the group. Meera Buck of the Martec Group described findings based upon one-on-one interviews and phone surveys with 300 United Methodist lay members and clergy, who were asked to describe their feelings about the denomination and their spiritual lives. An online survey is under way with similar questions. A complete "State of the Church" report is expected by the group's next meeting in May. Proposals to General Conference Dora Washington, a representative from the Southeastern Jurisdiction, said these proposals are "consistent with our mandate to be visionary. This will answer for some what the Connectional Table is doing." Washington and other members of the table said the group worked to determine its role in three previous meetings. Following the Fort Worth gathering, she said, "We are more and more seeing concrete results of the Connectional Table. It was a new thing, and we had to envision what it's all about. We are becoming clearer on what our charge is." The Connectional Table's next meeting will be May 21-24 at Simpsonwood Conference Center near Atlanta. *Walsh is strategic project coordinator for the Media Group at United Methodist Communications.
Date posted: Nov 02, 2006 |
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