Annual conference 2010 photo gallery

Celebrate God’s LGBT Children at Gay Pride 6/27

Youth at Gay Pride 2009
SPSA youth group members brought a truly creative take on the God's embrace of diverse families.

Morning worship at five churches, afternoon march in NYC

Gay Pride Sunday – the last Sunday in June, commemorating the anniversary of the Stonewall Riots in 1969 that sparked the modern gay rights movement – is celebrated every year the world over by LGBT people. It is our chance to take pride in who we are, in what we have accomplished in our fight for equal rights, and to rejuvenate and rededicate ourselves to the struggle to end prejudice and discrimination against queer people.

The day will be begin with special Gay Pride services at each of five congregations: PSUMC in Brooklyn, Church of the Village in Manhattan, SPSA in Manhattan, Asbury UMC in Yonkers and Memorial UMC in White Plains. In the afternoon we will all march together in the annual Gay Pride March in New York City.

Our official march time is 12pm. We’re in section 8, 38th St. between 5th and 6th Aves. While we wait to march, we’ll make signs and celebrate communion.

As United Methodists, we have a special obligation to show the world on Pride Sunday that our denomination’s bigoted doctrine and policy do not speak for us.

At the march we will be part of a religious contingent of over 1,000 people joining the half million-strong annual Gay Pride March. We will share communion, and we will share the Good News with the crowds that the Kingdom of God welcomes all and that sexuality is indeed God’s good gift to everyone.

Bring food and water and sunscreen and wear comfortable clothes and walking shoes. We will have a support vehicle for those unable to walk the entire route.

MIND says “Welcome Home” on final day of conference

With cookies, conversation and a comfy couch, the MIND space at the Momentum of Ministries festival embodied the theme “Welcome Home.”

MIND participated in the “Momentum of Ministries” festival that was the highlight of the last day of the 2010 annual conference. The event, housed in three big circus tents outside the arena where the conference plenary sessions were held, drew thousands of new church members from throughout the New York Annual Conference. MIND’s theme for its space at the festival was “Welcome Home,” to celebrate that there is safe, welcoming space within the UMC through its Reconciling congregations and the work of MIND.

The MIND space was set up like a studio apartment to embody the home theme—with chairs, a table and a couch in the living room and a fridge and table in the kitchen. There were placemats with photos from Reconciling churches that said “You have a place at the table,” and there was MIND literature on the living room table. There were photos on the “walls,” some house plants, rugs and other homey touches.

There was also a basket of prayer ribbons and pens for people to write payers of hope on ribbons, which then got hung up around the space. And there were 1,500 rainbow M&M cookies to make it an especially inviting home.

The MIND space was packed all day as hundreds of people stopped by to ask what MIND is and does and learn more about the work of building a welcoming church. Dozens of people joined MIND, and hundreds walked away with flyers for upcoming events and other literature.

It was a great way to end annual conference, connecting with members of local congregations who took the message of welcome back to their home pews.

“Ministry to the Marginalized” ruled out of order at conference

Legislative votes, MIND lunch part of packed day

 

The third day of annual conference had everything, from moving testimony to parliamentary wrangling, legislative victories and defeat and more. Our witness and challenge to the conference took many forms – t-shirts, armbands, speaking and singing.

The highlight of the day was Mark Miller’s address to a packed room at the MIND lunch. “My God-given gayness is not up for a vote by some misguided Methodist,” said Miller, who is not only the best known worship leader and music director in the United Methodist Church but also the son, grandson, brother and cousin of United Methodist clergy. With humor, passion and extraordinary grace, Miller talked about how the church needs LGBT people and how the power of God’s love is stronger than fear. It is God’s love, he testified, that makes it possible to continue to love and serve the United Methodist Church even amidst the bitterness and pain we experience because of the church’s continued prejudice and discrimination against LGBT people.

Miller also brought his gifts of music to the MIND lunch, as did Nehemiah Luckett, who taught the group two songs that they later performed on the mezzanine of the annual conference floor.

Challenge to the bishop: “Will you stand with us?”

Bishop Park came to the lunch as well. In introducing him, MIND Chair Dorothee Benz noted that MIND leaders have met with him numerous times and have seen him moved by the injustice suffered by LGBT people at the hands of the church. Then she issued a direct challenge to him:

At the same time, what gay and lesbian and bisexual and transgender Methodists need to hear from you is a public acknowledgement of that injustice. We long to hear you say that you believe the church’s exclusion of us from ministry, from marriage and even sometimes from membership is wrong. We ache to hear you say that the church must change those rules if it is to be true to its calling.

This conference has affirmed dozens of times over several decades its opposition to our denomination’s exclusionary rules. We ache to hear you say the same. The silence from the stage of our annual conference has been deafening.

And so I ask you, on behalf of the 500 members of MIND and all those gathered here today, will you stand with us? Will you tell us now – and more importantly will you tell the annual conference from that stage this afternoon – that you support our full inclusion in the life of this church that we serve and love?

Bishop Park’s response was disappointing. He chose not to acknowledge the request nor to state his own views on church rules. He did say “Our God is not finished with our church yet….I take this journey with you.”

We can resolve to oppose discrimination, but cannot tell LGBT people

After lunch, in the plenary session debating resolutions before the body, Bishop Park ruled one of our resolutions out of order. “Ministry to the Marginalized: Welcoming LGBT People into NYAC” was amended twice in an effort to change the bishop’s ruling, but he still ruled that it was in violation of the Book of Discipline. That ruling was challenged by Benz, and in accordance with the procedures spelled out in the Discipline, a written request for a ruling of law from the bishop was filed that evening (signed by Benz and MFSA chair Kevin Nelson). This requires the bishop to explain in writing why he ruled the resolution out of order, a decision that will then be appealed to the Judicial Council.

The resolution, which had been written in consultation with counsel from RMN and MFSA to ensure that it did not violate the Discipline, calls on the conference to take out advertisements in LGBT publications that express the conference’s “heartfelt regret for the harm inflicted on LGBT people through the UMC’s homophobia and discrimination, and…share in these advertisements that NYAC has long been opposed to UMC policy on homosexuality and welcome and invite LGBT people to worship in NYAC churches.” The ads are to be paid for by voluntary contributions (because the Discipline prohibits the use of conference funds to “promote homosexuality”).

In challenging the bishop’s ruling on the floor, Benz emphasized that all the resolution seeks to do is to tell other people what our conference has already resolved and stated it believes. How can it be “out of order” to tell the very people affect by our pronouncements what they are? If we can pass resolutions saying we oppose discrimination, but we cannot tell those being discriminated against, what is the point?

Armbands witness now in its sixth year

Despite the shock of the ruling, there was also good news on the conference floor that afternoon. The three other resolutions MIND had submitted were passed, as were reconciling resolutions from Park Slope UMC and Mary Taylor Memorial UMC.

In the evening, while Benz and Nelson worked to finalize the written request for a ruling of law two dozen MIND volunteers handed out 1,000 armbands to the clergy and guests arriving for the ordination service. This witness, now in its sixth year, marks our solidarity with those who are excluded from ordination simply because they are gay.

On Saturday, MIND’s witness continues with a creative display during the conference’s “Momentum of Ministries” festival. Our theme is “welcome home” and we’ve created a space to invite people into that has everything from a fridge to comfy chairs and a kitchen table with placemats that say “you have a place at this table.” We also have 1,500 rainbow M&M cookies to hand out – how can we fail?