Wednesday, July 2, 2008
Drawing Beyond the Lines
This past week, the Leadership Team and Cabinet collaborated with the Welcoming Task Force to send a Letter of Guidance regarding several of the resolutions passed by the Annual Conference Session. The resolutions addressed issues raised by the California State Supreme Court’s recent ruling to legalize same-gender marriages, as well as the ballot initiative scheduled for November that would in essence countermand that decision. We passed other resolutions—on immigration, homeless, support for the troop, etc., and as I thought about all this, a few things came to mind…
When the Methodist Church met for General Conference in the years leading up to and following the American Civil War, the Book of Discipline was—as always—the battleground for contrasting views on a number of issues. The issue of slavery was of course the dominant cultural issue: it was an ugly, literal battleground that wounded many and cost thousands of lives.
But the changes in the Book of Discipline were of a more quiet nature, even as they reflected a related shift in understanding about people and relationships: for the first time, we Methodists shifted the language of our wedding ceremony from the union of “man and wife,” to the new language of “husband and wife.” No longer was a woman viewed as property acquired by a man; now it was two persons entering into an equal partnership (sort of—this was still over 100 years ago!) The underlying issues of identity, status, equality and relationships were