| Our Basis for Concern
A Brief Recounting of
Questionable Actions on the part of the Women's Division of the General
Board of Global Ministries
A White Paper
Prepared by the RENEW
Network
December 2001
Opening Statement
United Methodist Women and its predecessor
groups have done immeasurable good through works of Christian love and
service around the world--and still do. However, over the years the RENEW
Network (the women's program arm of the Good News organization) has observed
and documented an underlying philosophy in many of the programs and policies
of the Women's Division that fails to represent the theological and
political/social views of the majority of United Methodist Women at the
local level.
The immediate catalyst that compelled the
preparation of this document was several actions taken by the staff and
directors of the Women's Division at its Fall 2001 board meeting. The
opposition to the U.S. "Enduring Freedom" campaign against terrorism and the
resurrecting of obvious connections to the Re-Imagining Community expressed
at this meeting must not go unchallenged. At this board meeting:
- A "Resolution on Terrorist Attacks" was
passed calling for a halt to the bombing of Afghanistan, favoring
negotiation over action against terrorism. In various committees, invited
speakers, directors and staff persons discouraged the displaying of the
U.S. flag, expressed disdain for American overtures toward Afghanistan
citizens and spoke disparagingly of U.S. policies that supposedly evoked
the horrific 9/11 attacks.
- Plans were devised for the
implementation of a "Mobilization Against (the Anti-) Terrorism Act." The
U.S. House of Representatives passed the Anti-Terrorism Act by 357-66, the
U.S. Senate by 98-1. Despite this strong showing of bipartisan support by
the U.S. Congress, the Women's Division plans to work against this Act,
even to challenging it in the courts.
- The directors voted to continue to
allow official status for a District Unit of UMW, "Sophia Circle," whose
stated purpose is to gather monthly "for an hour's lively discussion on
material from the Re-Imagining Newsletter." (This is the newsletter of
the Re-Imagining Community, formed out of the infamous 1993 Re-Imagining
Conference which shook the mainlines with its radical feminist theology,
worship of "Sophia" and sanctioning of lesbianism.)
- It was announced the Barbara Lundblad
has been invited to be a plenary speaker at the upcoming UMW Assembly
scheduled for Philadelphia in April of 2002. Barbara, a speaker at the
1993 Re-Imagining Conference, boasted: "We did not last night name the
name of Jesus. Nor have we done anything in the name of the Father, and
of the Son and of the Holy Spirit" (laughter and cheers). She went on to
advocate for the acceptance of lesbian practice, and referred to Jesus as
the "child of Sophia" and to God as "Sophia."
- According to The Book of Discipline the
Women's Division "…shall interpret the purpose of United Methodist Women"
(Par. 1317) and is "To serve as the national official policy-making body
of United Methodist Women" (Par. 1319). In addition to this
authoritative role, the Discipline also states that the Women's Division
"…shall be actively engaged in fulfilling the mission of Christ and the
Church" (Par. 1317) and, "…shall engage in activities that foster growth
in the Christian faith" (Par. 1317).
United Methodist Women fund the Women's
Division, elect its leadership and pay the salaries of staff. They,
therefore, have the responsibility and capability of assuring that the
oversight for purpose, program and policy assigned to the Division
faithfully fulfills the mission of Christ and the Church and fosters growth
in the Christian faith.
This White Paper provides documented
information that supports the need for reform and accountability on the part
of the Women's Division. The issues we have identified expand on two major
problems identifiable in the decisions at the Fall Board of Directors
meeting--theological misdirection and narrow, partisan, leftist
perspectives.
Long-standing Issues
In this document we will address six
long-standing issues that are important for us to revisit. These include:
1. The pro-abortion position of the
Women's Division;
2. Division actions showing endorsement of
homosexual/lesbian practice;
3. The Women's Division involvement in the
1993 Re-Imagining Conference and continued connection to the Re-Imagining
Community;
4. The Division's questionable theological
teaching and social justice mission concept;
5. The ongoing support of the Women's
Division for a politically left-leaning ideology;
6. The autonomy/accountability issue as it
relates to the Women's Division.
I. Pro-Abortion Position:
- In October 1972 the Women's Division
and Theressa Hoover filed a Friend of the Court brief in support of total
freedom for abortion in the Roe v. Wade case (LIFEWATCH 9/30/89).
- The Women's Division was a plaintiff in
the court case of McRae v. Califano, which challenged federal law
restricting the use of federal funds for abortion (U.S. House of
Representatives, March 24, 1976).
- In 1973 the Women's Division helped
start the Religious Coalition for Abortion Rights (RCAR). The name was
later changed to Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice (RCRC). The
Division continues active participation in RCRC, and the Women's Division
is listed on the RCRC letterhead.
- The January, February and March 1990
issues of Response magazine carried pro-choice articles with no reference
to the pro-life viewpoint. "Reproductive choice" is a code for
"abortion."
- The pro-choice position was strongly
endorsed at the 1992 spring meeting of the Women's Division when postcards
were provided at each table for attendees to pick up and mail to their
senators in support of the Freedom of Choice Act. (Postcards printed by
RCAR.) The Freedom of Choice Act, in the unrevised form endorsed at this
meeting, went far beyond Roe v. Wade in lifting restrictions on abortion
(RENEW Network Press Report).
- The Women's Division paid the expenses
of Anne Thompson Cook, Executive Director of RCAR, to attend the 1992
General Conference to lobby for the maintaining of the RCAR/United
Methodist connection threatened by proposed legislative action (LIFEWATCH
flyer).
- In April 1996 the United Methodist
Board of Church and Society and the Women's Division endorsed a letter
sent to U.S. House of Representative members by RCRC expressing agreement
with President Clinton's veto of HR 1833, the "Partial-Birth Abortion
Ban," and urging Congress not to override the veto.
II. Actions showing support for
homosexual practice:
- At the 1988 General Conference a
minority report was submitted which read, "We the undersigned move to
amend the last paragraph of Petition 501-CS-71-D by deleting 'Although we
do not condone the practice of homosexuality and consider the practice
incompatible with Christian teaching' and substitute the following: 'We
find mixed testimony about the practice of homosexuality in Scripture,
tradition, and in the human sciences.'" The first signature was that of
Sally Ernst, then national president of United Methodist Women.
- A book on the 1991 reading list,
Revolutionary Forgiveness (Orbis Books, 1987), is the travel diary of the
Amanecida Collective, a group of thirteen persons from the Harvard
Divinity School who went to Nicaragua to fulfill an agenda which was
clearly spelled out in the introduction. "Amanecida is committed to the
well-being and human rights of gay men and lesbians in the United States
and elsewhere…. Our commitment to the liberation of lesbians and gay men
requires that we confront those people and policies which proclaim sexual
relationships between men and women, heterosexual marriage, and nuclear
family constellations as normative for the health of society."
- In Deputy General Secretary Joyce
Sohl's report to the Women's Division, April 12, 1991, reference was made
to a "multicultural community" as defined at an earlier workshop at the
Scarritt-Bennett Center. "Let me remind you of the definition of
multiculturalism that was used: 'The process of recognizing,
understanding, and appreciating cultures other than one's own. It
stresses an appreciation for the impact of differences -- race, class,
age, sex, physical, sexual/affectional orientation, and religious.' …I
have a vision of the Women's Division being a multicultural community
where the contribution of each is valued," Mrs. Sohl told the Women's
Division directors. The reference to sexual/affectional orientation
cannot be misunderstood.
- Among the gaps to be bridged among
women, identified in the new Policy Statement of the Women's Division
(March 1993), was the gap between "lesbian women and heterosexual women."
- In the 1993/94 spiritual growth mission
study, Jesus in the Gospel of Matthew: "Who Do You Say That I Am?", by
Nancy A. Carter with contributions by Bishop Leontine T.C. Kelly, frequent
references were made to "homophobia" and "heterosexism." On page 105
Bishop Kelly speaks of her experience of seeing "lesbian Christians"
silenced and of receiving a "deluge of homophobic mail" because a
conference board of discipleship had funded a retreat for lesbian and gay
members of the annual conference.
- An article in the July/August 2001
issue of Response magazine, by J. Ann Craig, Executive Secretary for
Spiritual and Theological Development for the Women's Division, identified
Christian Fundamentalists as those who "…use terms and beliefs to promote
the subservience of women, deny reproductive freedom, label homosexuality
as sin, lift up wealth as a sign of God's blessing and undermine the basic
welfare rights of children."
Translated, this means that pro-life Christians, or United Methodists
who agree with the church's position on homosexual practice are
"fundamentalists," in the most negative sense of the term. This statement
interprets out that financial success is a negative [Is poverty then a
blessing?] and that those who hold to the fundamentals of the faith would
oppose the welfare rights of children. These are derogatory, demagogic
claims.
- A program by Inelle Cox Bagwell appears
in the 2002 UMW Program Book, Seeking Shalom. Ms. Bagwell is a former
director of the Women's Division and a former vice president of the
Division serving as chairperson of the Section of Christian Social
Relations. Among other board memberships, she serves on the Amarillo (TX)
Coalition for Choice and the board of Planned Parenthood. In the program
"Invisible Families in the United States Today," Ms. Bagwell postulates
the same perspective on families as the earlier mission study, Family:
Drawing the Circle Wide. She asserts that it is time to "let go of some
of our most cherished certainties about families in order to affirm the
complexities of the diversity of God's creation." Ms. Bagwell's program
strongly implies that homosexual families are to be affirmed when she
postulates that unborn children do not know "whether they will be born
female or male, heterosexual or homosexual or bisexual…."
No substantiated research data is
provided to support Ms. Bagwell's claims about the family or being born
homosexual. No other viewpoints are considered. The strong body of
evidence verifying the significance of the nuclear, traditional family and
the significant studies discounting the claim that homosexuality is
hereditary go unmentioned.
One reference cited at the end of this
program is Sensuous Spirituality: Out From Fundamentalism by radical
feminist Virginia Ramey Mollenkott. Virginia Mollenkott is
self-identified as a lesbian in Sensuous Spirituality (pg. 163). She says
of her sexual preference, "My lesbianism does not make me any worse than
anyone else, and neither does it make me better. It is simply a good
gift, as all sexuality is a good gift. It is intended to be used
responsibly, as one way of glorifying God and enjoying Her forever" (pg.
162).
III. Support for 1993 Re-Imagining
Conference and the Re-Imagining Community:
Commitment to a radical religious feminist
viewpoint was revealed when the staff and directors of the Women's Division,
along with selected Conference UMW officers, were encouraged to attend, at
Division expense, the 1993 Re-Imagining Conference. This conference was the
mid-point event for The Ecumenical Decade, Churches in Solidarity with
Women. Re-Imagining focused its worship on Sophia, goddess of wisdom; stood
in solidarity with Christian lesbians; denied the necessity of Christ's
atoning death; and promoted a syncretism of religions. The total cost for 56
WD staff, directors and conference officers attending came to $35,081, plus
$2,500 for scholarships for the Minnesota Conference UMW.
While the Women's Division has not openly
funded or encouraged participation in Re-Imagining Conferences subsequent to
the 1993 event, at no time has the Division denounced the deviant theology
of Re-imagining or discouraged participation in the Re-Imagining Community
on the part of staff, directors or United Methodist Women.
As a matter of record, the Women's
Division was directly connected to an early defense of the theology of
Re-Imagining when a document entitled "A Time of Hope -- A Time of Threat"
was released to the Religious News Service on March 8, 1994. (The R-I
Conference took place in November of 1993.) The paper was drafted by nine
United Methodist women and signed on to by 830 United Methodist women.
Among the drafters of the document was J. Ann Craig, Executive Secretary for
Spiritual and Theological Concerns for the Women's Division.
Additionally, the following connection of
the Women's Division with the Re-Imagining Community indicates ongoing
endorsement:
- Mary Gates, former conference UMW
president for the Minnesota Conference, served on the Coordinating Council
of the Re-Imagining Community. While serving on the R-I Council, she
became the North Central Jurisdictional President for United Methodist
Women and ultimately a director for the Women' Division. Apparently no
conflict of interest was acknowledged.
- Church Women United, heavily funded by
the Women's Division with grants of over $30,000 per year, has shown
strong support for radical feminist concepts and for the Re-Imagining
Community. The 1998 CWU World Community Day program advocated the
celebration of five women theologians, four of whom were speakers at the
1993 Re-Imagining Conference.
- The support of CWU for the Re-Imagining
Community was confirmed at the 1998 UMW Assembly (sponsored by the Women's
Division). A focus group, Celebrating the Ecumenical Decade, was led by
Dr. Kathleen Hurty, then General Director for Church Women United. At the
workshop a Fact Sheet on the 1998 Re-Imagining Revival was handed out.
According to the fact sheet, this event marked "the culmination of the
World Council of Churches' Ecumenical Decade," and "was grounded in the
priorities and objectives of the Ecumenical Decade." This claim showed
clear support for the radical feminist theology of Re-Imagining,
considering it a part of a major church program.
- A March 2001 Re-Imagining email had the
following listed under the "Small Groups" category: "Soon entering its
fourth year, Sophia Circle, a District Unit of United Methodist Women
gathers at mid-day for an hour's lively discussion on material from the
Re-Imagining Newsletter."
When Joyce Sohl, Deputy General
Secretary of the Women's Division, was questioned about the existence of
an "official" UMW unit to study Re-Imagining material, the existence of
this group was defended. After further correspondence with Ms. Sohl and
the directors of the Division, the matter was referred to the Policy
Committee at the October 2001 board of directors' meeting. The Policy
Committee recommended that the official status for Sophia Circle
continue. Their statement to the voting body indicated only that groups
were encouraged to use UMW resources, but made no indication that a
request would be made for Sophia Circle not to use Re-Imagining materials.
The directors passed this recommendation unanimously.
- At the October 2001 board of directors
meeting of the Women's Division it was announced that one of the plenary
speakers for the April 2002 UMW Assembly (sponsored by the Division) would
be Barbara Lundblad. Barbara was a speaker at the 1993 and 1998
Re-Imagining conferences. At the '93 conference she boasted, to cheers
and laughter, "We did not last night name the name of Jesus. Nor have we
done anything in the name of the Father, and of the Son and of the Holy
Spirit." She went on to advocate the acceptance of lesbian practice, and
referred to Jesus as the "child of Sophia" and to God as "Sophia."
IV. Questionable Theological Teaching
and Social Justice Mission Concept:
While the Women's Division's connection to
Re-Imagining and the Division's failure to denounce the theology of this
radical feminist movement raise serious questions about the Division's
ability to provide spiritual oversight for United Methodist Women, other
actions intensify this concern.
- As early as 1972, the Women's Division
gave $10,000 to eight women's liberation action groups around the country
("Women's Activities in the Major Denominations," GRAPEVINE, Vol. 4, No.2,
editor Sheila Collins). A Women's Division Policy Statement, adopted in
March, 1976, stated that the overall Women's Division program would have
as one of its results, "to bridge gaps between church women and the
women's movement" (Women's Division: A Policy Statement, 1976). This goal
was restated in the new policy statement that was adopted in March 1993
(Ministries with Women and Ministries with Children and Youth).
- Radical feminist authors have been
featured through the reading program and mission studies and in Response
magazine over the years. A 1975 mission study book carried the following
quote in support of feminist theology: "A new perspective in theology is
being articulated by women like Mary Daly, Rosemary Radford Reuther, Letty
Russell and Sheila Collins. …The cumulative effect of the women's
movement can infuse society with new perspectives, new values, ethics and
worldview, new style of living…. There is no more important issue"
(United States: People Questions, Judith Leaming-Elmer and Nancy Grissom
Self, Friendship Press, 1975). All of these individuals listed are
recognized as proponents of radical feminist theology.
In her book The Feminist Gospel Mary
Kassian explains how the teaching of radical feminists alters the historical
Christian understanding of Scripture, God, Jesus, Sin, Salvation, Church and
Eschatology (the study of end times). Regarding the topic of Biblical
revelation Kassian states, "Reuther and Russell adopted Mary Daly's
presupposition regarding the dynamic nature of revelation. They believed
that liberation occurred as a result of human reflection on, and interaction
with, the Biblical message of freedom. In other words, the Bible was not
regarded as a guidebook full of directives for all time, but rather as a
tool that assisted people to understand how God had worked throughout
history to free the oppressed. According to Reuther, only the Biblical
texts that spoke to women's contemporary quest for liberation were valid"
(pg. 90).
- At the 1982 UMW Assembly, Dr. Hazel
Henderson invoked Gaia, the Greek earth goddess who "managed the biosphere
very well by herself" before human beings came along (CANDLE, Vol. 5, No.
1, September 1982).
- An article in the February 1991 issue
of Response magazine entitled "Was Jesus Born to Die?" answered its own
title with "no." The death of Jesus was not seen by author John Baron as
pre-planned by God and necessary for the provision of salvation of
humankind. Rather, Mr. Baron said, "He (Jesus) did all these things
because there was no way of being God's love in our world except by being
caught in the web of accidental encounters…. Jesus did not get himself
executed. …There was no 'must' about it, except the compulsion of divine
love to be true to itself whatever happens…."
- The 1992/93 mission study We Belong
Together: Churches in Solidarity with Women expressed high regard for the
work of the feminist movement without identifying any of its excesses.
This book lifted up Rosemary Radford Reuther's book Women-Church, as a
favorable guide for women. An examination of some of the ceremonies and
rituals recommended in this book show them to be neo-pagan and devoid of
sound Christian theology.
- In the 1993/94 mission study book Jesus
in the Gospel of Matthew author Nancy A. Carter takes the opportunity to
tell about "Christa," the bronze sculpture created by Edwina Sandys which
portrays an unclothed female Christ with outstretched arms upon a cross.
Ms. Carter concludes, "It is not unusual today for women to speak of
'Christa' or Sophia (the Greek word for Wisdom) and image her not just on
the cross, but in other arenas…" (pg. 108).
- In support of religious syncretism, J.
Ann Craig, Executive Secretary for Theological Development for the Women's
Division, presented an apology for the New Age movement and chided groups
who oppose this movement in her article "Fear of New Age Dismantled,"
Response, October 1993. Ms. Craig acknowledged, "the New Age movement is
such a mix of popular religion in the United States. New Age expressions
include practices from Eastern religions, healing practices, meditation,
gurus, shamans, music, mystics, tarot cards, astrology, physics and
virtually anything creative." Still, Ms. Craig issued this challenge to
Christians in her closing paragraphs, "In a world where diverse religions
increasingly rub elbows, each must struggle with how to relate to other
faiths…. Before condemning New Age people, find out if they are loving
God and serving their neighbor."
- An equality of all religions and an
understanding that one exemplifies a knowledge of God by doing justice was
conveyed in an address by Deputy General Secretary Joyce Sohl at the
Spring 1998 board of directors meeting. Ms. Sohl spoke on the topic,
"They Have Known God: Women and Justice." She gave examples of Christian,
Jewish and Muslim women who have done justice work, and said of each
individual, she "knew God and did God's work of justice." No distinction
was made between the various faiths, and no mention was made of the
uniqueness of Jesus Christ, as the one true way.
- The concept of a mission mandate driven
by "justice" permeated the 1998 UMW Assembly. The pre-Assembly Bible
studies in Response magazine set the tone for the "justice" focus of the
Assembly. Justice issues, the stories and struggles of women and a sense
of being a prophetic voice for a new world order were pervasive in the
handbook and in Assembly presentations. Bible study leaders, plenary
speakers and various guests shared their interpretation of the vision that
United Methodist Women need to embrace and make plain. They all concurred
that this vision makes justice its chief component. In her closing
speech, Joyce Sohl, Deputy General Secretary, Women's Division, told her
audience, "As change agents for God's vision, we must have a passionate
conviction for justice…."
"Justice" issues are no doubt of great
importance, and ministering to human need a significant element in
Christian discipleship. However, it is unfortunate that not a single
speaker at the UMW Assembly put forward Jesus Christ's atoning death on
behalf of sinful humankind as the most powerful change agent in all of
history--nor promoted the fact that proclaiming Christ remains God's chief
mandate for us today. Neither did Ms. Sohl's report to the board of
directors reflect this understanding.
- UMW Mission Studies, produced in the
past by Friendship Press, and now by the Women's Division, are often
vehicles for a highly questionable theology regarding the Bible, salvation
through Jesus Christ and the role of evangelism in missions.
The Bible: The Book that Bridges the
Millennia, Part One and Part Two, 1998/99 & 1999/2000, undermined Biblical
authority with an undeclared, but clear underlying, liberal bias. Part
One was dismissive of everything from the biblical worldview to the divine
inspiration of the Word. While Part Two was not as egregious, it still
showed a strong bias. This is revealed, for example, in the author's
assessment of the historical-critical method of interpretation which, she
says, brought to light "errors and contradictions in Scripture" thus
undermining "the inerrancy claimed by Protestants and Catholics." A
clearer effort to discount the authority of Scripture appeared in the
youth material (The Bible: The Book that Bridges the Millennia, Part One
& Two, adult and youth studies, reviewed by Donna F.G. Hailson).
In the 2001/2002 mission study New Life
on the MeKong, Buddhism is not regarded as a stumbling block. The author
would have us see it as an alternate religion and Buddhists as "companion
pilgrims." While the study book places great emphasis upon the need for
human reconciliation, nothing is said regarding the need for
reconciliation between God and humanity. Everyone, we are to
conclude--whatever her or his faith--would get along if we would just give
understanding, help and caring during the difficult times described in
this study.
- The November 2000 issue of Response was
devoted to "Interfaith Challenge--Interfaith Response." The articles in
this issue of the magazine went far beyond love and respect for those of
different religious persuasions. It also exceeded the legitimate call for
Christians to understand other religions. This issue conveyed the concept
that all religions are equally redemptive, and, as one article put it,
"Christian faith must see itself as one of the religious options for the
Peoples of the world."
Nowhere in the magazine copy is the
supremacy of Christ uplifted nor the uniqueness of Christianity defined.
When the name of Jesus Christ is mentioned, it is in the context of His
"good works and examplary life." Mission and evangelism are defined so
that the Great Commission, "Go and make disciples of all nations…" is
inappropriate. The highest achievement advocated by this issue of
Response is to accept other faith communities as equally valid, and to
work with them to build a "peaceful, just society."
This kind of religious syncretism is
what prompted a young woman attending a missions training camp sponsored
by the Women's Division in August of 1999 to stand and read the first
stated goal of the General Board of Global Ministries, "to witness to the
Gospel for initial decision to follow Jesus Christ." And, to then ask,
"If this is a missions conference, and this is your number one goal, then
why hasn't it even been mentioned?"
V. Left-leaning Political/Social
Actions:
- As early as 1978, the China mission
study (China: Search for Community, Friendship press, 1978) voiced strong
support for Maoism, despite its culpability for mass killings and brutal
repression. This book lauded Chinese Marxism in the statement, "I think
China is the only truly Christian country in the world in the present day,
in spite of its absolute rejection of all religion" (p. 55) .
Subsequent regional studies have
expressed an almost knee-jerk reaction against the policies of the U.S.--
opposition to democratic capitalism and endorsement of the
socialist/Marxist elements within the systems of those countries studied
(i.e., Korea, the Caribbean, South Africa, Central America, Brazil).
- A major source of support for socialism
was exhibited in the Economic Primer, which was offered as a resource book
for United Methodist Women for 1981-1984 and used in numerous workshops
across the country. This resource promoted one economic view which Dr.
Gustav Papanek, himself a socialist, called "a type of socialism so narrow
that most socialists living outside of nations with communist governments
would disagree with it" (Beck, United Methodist Reporter, October 22,
1982).
- In the same vein as the Economic
Primer, the 1993/94 mission study, Global Economics: Seeking A Christian
Ethic, while moderating blatant pro-Marxism in the light of the collapse
of the Soviet Union, continued to express distrust of free market
economies and continued a romance of sorts with "command"
(socialist/communist) economies.
- UMW Assemblies have provided platforms
for the expressing of anti-free market, anti-U.S. sentiment. The 1986
Assembly was rife with accusations against the U.S., placing blame at its
feet for aggression and world domination, for apartheid in South Africa,
for militaristic pillage and rape in Central America and the Philippines
and for world health problems (Good News, July/August 1986).
- At no time was the Women's Division's
partisan political position more obvious than when the power shifted in
Congress to a Republican majority. At the Spring 1995 board of director's
meeting there was an almost frenzied attempt to oppose virtually
everything Congress recommended. There was opposition to the "Contract
With America." A presentation was given by the Rev. Dr. Paul Sherry
opposing the Balanced Budget Amendment. Anna Rhee, Executive Secretary
for Public Policy, called the proposals making their way through the
Congress "mean-spirited" and "negative." In her report, Ms. Rhee
expressed grave concern about the proposals being made regarding welfare
reform, cuts in human services and changes in the affirmative action
program. Steps were taken to enlist United Methodist Women in the
Division's campaign to hinder the passage of legislation including a
National UMW Call-in and the encouragement of post-card campaigns at
various UMW events. Unfortunately, United Methodist Women were educated
from a singular perspective by the Women's Division--a very partisan
position.
"The Partisan Temptation" was an article
that appeared in the Spring 1995 issue of Partnership Briefing, a
publication of The Institute on Religion and Democracy (IRD). This
article shared an important perspective on the Church's political witness.
"Within the evangelical community, many leaders have worried about
excessive partisanship--not because it undermines democracy, but because
it may damage the Church. The Rev. Don Argue, former president of the
National Association of Evangelicals, warned, 'To wrap ourselves in the
flag of any one political party is very dangerous.' Conservative
columnist Cal Thomas charged that the mission of the Church is compromised
'when the Gospel is politicized, when the pulpit becomes a tool of
political organization.'"
- Schools of Christian Mission, UMW
Assemblies and other UMW gatherings are often used to encourage action on
political issues from a partisan viewpoint. Two examples:
(1) During Dessert Storm, the Women's
Division orchestrated a campaign in opposition to the Gulf War, asking
United Methodist Women to write letters of protest. Thousands of letters
were delivered to Capitol Hill two weeks after the war was successfully
over.
(2) At the 1998 UMW Assembly, officials
distributed among the over 10,000 women there a single-page fact sheet
advocating support for the ratification of the United Nations Convention
on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW).
Each woman was given sample letters, a chart indicating each Senator's
position on CEDAW and paper for writing letters. Following a brief
supportive speech (less than five minutes), program time was dedicated to
the letter-writing campaign. Boxes were placed at the door so that staff
members could collect and deliver the letters to the offices of the
senators.
CEDAW is a complex issue that has not
been addressed recently in the public arena. Serious and valid criticisms
have been raised regarding CEDAW, but none of these were mentioned, nor
was cause given as to why the treaty has not been approved already by the
U.S., despite the fact that it was first adopted by the United Nations
General Assembly in 1979.
- The February 1999 issue of Response
magazine covered the topic of Hate Crimes. In this issue, the leap was
made from legitimate hate crimes concern to accusations that many
Christian organizations and even churches are instigators of hate crimes
because of their belief that homosexual practice is incompatible with
Christian teaching, and their acceptance of benevolent male headship.
James Dobson and a group of Promise Keepers were pictured along with John
King and Lawrence Brewer, two of the men charged with the heinous murder
of James Byrd, as representative of those who perpetrate hate crimes.
Official church positions were likened by one author to Travis Brin and
Aaron McKinney, who beat homosexual Matthew Shepherd to death, "when they
put the question of human community up for a denominational vote."
- One of the 2001/2002 mission studies,
New Life on the MeKong--Vietnam--Cambodia--Laos, fails to present the true
picture of what God is doing in this area and spends a good deal of time
railing against the U.S. for interfering in the political affairs of these
countries, with particular reference to the Vietnam war.
- Another 2001/2002 mission study,
Abundant Living: Global Health and Christian Response-Ability, devotes
four chapters to issues of global health and then turns to advocacy for a
wide variety of policies regarding income redistribution, to treatment of
women, to socialized medicine. A major weakness is the scatter shot and
anecdotal description of global health problems. The notion postulated by
the text that socialized health care will provide an answer is not
supported by evidence. Other advocacy statements and positions on
economic issues are also problematic in the studies. The notion that
third world poverty results from colonialism is untenable, as is the
notion that the free market system has failed. This study shows the
one-sided presentation often made on social issues about which Christians
may legitimately disagree. In the case of this study, many of the answers
postulated seemed biased and poorly researched.
- As referenced at the beginning of this
document, The Women's Division opposed the war on terrorism at its Fall
2001 board of directors meeting and passed a "Resolution on Terrorist
Attacks" urging President Bush to "end the bombing of Afghanistan." In
various committees, invited speakers, directors and staff persons
discouraged the display of the U.S. flag, expressed disdain for American
overtures toward Afghanistan citizens and spoke disparagingly of U.S.
policy that supposedly evoked the horrific 9/11 attacks.
- Also, at this same 2001 Fall board
meeting, the Women's Division approved plans to implement a "Mobilization
Against (the Anti-) Terrorism Act." The Division voted to oppose The
Anti-Terrorism Act despite the fact that it was passed by the U.S. House
(357-66), and the Senate (98-1) in an overwhelming show of bipartisan
support.
VI. Autonomy/Accountability Issue:
Prior to 1964 the Methodist women's
organization was an autonomous mission agency maintaining its own
institutions and programs. In light of historic restrictions against women
in mission and against the representation of women in the general church
structure, women formed their own missionary sending agency and established
many prayer and bible study groups, hospitals, schools and other
institutions to share the Gospel and to aid women and children worldwide.
Ultimately, their outreach efforts, born out of a genuine desire to share
Christ and be in ministry, surpassed those of the general church. Perhaps
even because of this success, they were invited to integrate into the church
structure as part of the church's national and international mission
ministry.
Under the "1964 agreements" the women's
program was included in the general church missions board, with certain
clear stipulations. The women's group turned over its international and
domestic programs to the World and National Divisions, but continued to fund
those programs.
In return, it was determined that one
half of the World and National Division boards must be women (excluding
bishops) and 40% of the general board staff must be women, with additional
guarantees for representation of women in the top staff positions.
These agreements have been upheld through the 1968 merger with the
Evangelical United Brethren, the 1972 restructure of all of the UM church
agencies and the 1983 restructure of the General Board of Global Ministries.
The Women's Division receives its funding
directly through United Methodist Women, not through general church
apportionments. United Methodist Women give over 20 million dollars
annually through Undesignated Pledge to Mission. Other designated gifts and
investment income have averaged between 38 to 53 million per year over the
past five years. The total reported assets of the Division range from 90 to
over 100 million dollars (not including the market value of real estate
assets). The Women's Division has historically allocated around 5 million
dollars a year to National missions and the same to International missions
of the General Board of Global Ministries. The 2001 and 2002 appropriations
to National and International ministries was reduced by almost a million
dollars.
The Women's Division is a very wealthy and
powerful agency with enormous influence in both voting strength and
funding. The Division comes under the authority of the General Conference
and is supposedly bound by The Book of Discipline. It does not come under
other church authority at the national or local level. Even the local UMW
unit is autonomous from the local pastor or the church's administrative
council.
Some would question why these facts should
concern us. They might ask, "Isn't the present system a just correction to
earlier exclusions?" If the women's ministry of the church were continuing
its original intent of proclaiming Christ and providing a balanced ministry
of mercy and justice, this might be so. Sadly, the liberal ideology and
theology identified in this paper affects program, policy and spending
patterns so that United Methodist Women at the local level find themselves
subjected to and paying for resources and projects that are foreign to their
own. Beyond that, perhaps it is time to ask why United Methodist Women
should not be integrated into the total ministry of the United Methodist
Church, locally, nationally and internationally.
Learning of this total autonomy of the
Women's Division, and consequently local United Methodist Women, is
disconcerting for many women who believe that the ministry of the Church
should integrate ministry to men, women, youth and children.
Verification of local UMW autonomy was
given when a local member of UMW asked her conference UMW president and the
Women's Division to verify whether or not a statement made by a district UMW
president was accurate. The district president had stated in a letter:
"Your unit is a distinct group of disciples, separate from the local church
in administration, programming and accountability. You are in a covenant of
mutual accountability with the Women's Division of the General Board of
Global Ministries. You are partners in mission with your local church, but
not under the authority of the Church Council (or any other arm of the local
church)." The conference president responded, "All of the hard facts that
were given are stated in the Discipline. It is true that we are not under
the authority of the local church…we will make every effort to work in
harmony with the Church Council. …We often take the risk of being in the
middle of mission action; it may be that there are those who do not always
agree with our response." The Women's Division staff representative
responded, "I would like to verify that (your district president) presented
accurate information regarding the relationship of the local unit of United
Methodist Women to the local church according to the policies of the United
Methodist Church found in The Book of Discipline."
Giving the Women's Division the sole power
to determine the program and policy of United Methodist Women and to
determine how funds will be spent prevents the Division from coming under
examination when needed. The Division has taken this authority to restrict
the flow of information to United Methodist Women, to subject them to
narrowly-interpreted viewpoints on important issues and to fund groups,
programs and resources incompatible with local women's beliefs. Following
are some examples of the results of the autonomy and authority of the
Women's Division.
- At its spring 1991 meeting, the Women's
Division reaffirmed and updated a policy statement on "official" and
"unofficial" sources of information. Those listed under "official" are
those that are publications of the GBGM. "Unofficial" sources include:
Good News, The Mission Society for United Methodists, The Institute on
Religion & Democracy, the Evangelical Coalition for United Methodist Women
[previous name for RENEW Network] secular newspapers, Reader's Digest,
Esther Action Council [no longer existing], Challenge newsletter, and even
The United Methodist Reporter.
It is noteworthy that these restricted
sources are evangelical, conservative, or more fairly represent both sides
of issues. Yet, the Women's Division has refused to discourage the use of
Re-Imagining resources (as done by Sophia Circle in the California/Nevada
Conference) and also has refused to avoid using or praising Re-Imagining
speakers (as in the CWU resources and the invitation to Barbara Lundblad).
This is surely a failure to provide spiritual oversight and to "foster
growth in the Christian faith."
This tight control discourages United
Methodist Women from being informed from a broad perspective, and is
demeaning of their ability to consider a variety of views and come to
appropriate conclusions. In addition, it shows a bias against
evangelicals and a favor toward a more liberal, radical theology.
- Another approved policy pertained to
the display and sale of literature at United Methodist Women's events.
This policy revised and affirmed a 1956 statement and allows only for the
display and sale of materials obtained through Service Center for any
meeting sponsored in whole or in part by the Women's Division or the
organization of United Methodist Women from the district level up. Even
resources from other official UMC sources, such as Cokesbury, are
prohibited.
Again, this policy prevents women from
having resources readily available at these events to provide a balanced
perspective on issues of concern. Materials from Service Center support
the theological/philosophical viewpoint of the Women's Division and
requiring use of these materials alone is yet another attempt to control
the flow of information.
- The Women's Division marginalized the
voices of evangelical women at the United Methodist Women's Assembly in
1998. Among the gathering of over 10,000 women in Orlando, Florida were
12 women associated with the RENEW Network. Two of these individuals were
registered as press, the other ten as full participants in the Assembly.
The RENEW members were prevented by security guards from distributing
literature on convention center property. The guards indicated that they
were acting on instructions from Women's Division organizers that
specifically barred RENEW activities. As a result, the RENEW team had to
stand on public sidewalks removed from the convention center to distribute
their literature. Then, on Saturday evening, a disclaimer was projected
on the convention screens: "Materials being circulated outside the
convention center do not represent United Methodist Women and are not a
part of the organization."
United Methodist Women should be
disappointed to know that RENEW materials, which expressed views in
conformity with the church Discipline and in conformity with historic
Christian thought, were considered dangerous by the Women's Division. (By
contrast, Re-Imagining resources must not be considered dangerous.) This
exclusion on the part of the Division was equally demeaning to the women
it claimed to protect. United Methodist Women are capable of reading
material from varying perspectives and reaching their own informed
conclusions, guided by their Christian convictions.
- By far the most egregious act of
control and autonomy on the part of the Women's Division occurred when it
closed the December 28-31, 2000 National Gathering of Teens and
College/University Women (Young Woman, Rise Up!) to any independent
reporters or observers.
The closing of this event to press and
public drew severe criticism from leading United Methodist publications,
including The United Methodist News Service and The United Methodist
Reporter, because of its obvious violation of the church's open meeting
policy (Par. 721, The Book of Discipline). Thomas S. McAnally, director
of United Methodist News Service said, "For the Women's Division to close
their December meeting is a violation of both the spirit and letter of the
law as found in our Book of Discipline." McAnally continued, "Church
members expect their governmental organizations to operate openly. Why
shouldn't their church be expected to do the same? The 'sunshine rule' in
our Book of Discipline provides some specific instances when meetings can
legitimately be closed. The reasons given for closing the Women's
Division event clearly do not fit any of those exceptions."
RENEW conveyed its concern about this
closed gathering of young women in a letter to the Women's Division. The
letter stated, "If Young Woman, Rise Up! intends to be faithful to the
mission and ministry standards of the United Methodist Church as defined
in The Book of Discipline, then, there would seem to be no reason to
exclude press. If, on the other hand, excluding press is a means of
influencing United Methodist teens (12-17) and university and college
women (18-25) without a means of outside observance and accountability,
then United Methodist Women have cause for concern."
During the time of questioning the
closed meeting, the General Council on Finance and Administration (GCFA)
was contacted regarding accountability for funds spent for a closed event
in violation of the policy in the Discipline. GCFA responded, "GCFA has
responsibility under Par. 806.10 of the Discipline to approve plans for
financing all international or national conferences and convocations to be
held under the auspices of any general agency receiving general Church
funds. The United Methodist Women's Division does not receive any general
Church funds, so we do not approve its financing plans for its events."
This reveals that there is no mechanism to hold the Women's Division
accountable, even to the Discipline.
Closing Statement
It is understandable that United Methodist
Women want to trust the Women's Division to represent them well. Their
confidence has been rooted in the history of the organization to which, in
many cases, their mothers and grandmothers belonged. Their generous gifts
have kept the organization financially strong. However, God calls us as
Christian women to remain faithful to Scriptural Christianity and to a
mission vision that includes proclaiming Christ to the world. The Women's
Division's current priorities and programs are a betrayal of that historic
trust and an impediment to God's call today.
Most United Methodist Women understand
missions to mean reaching men and women, boys and girls with the gospel of
Jesus Christ, and ministering to the real needs of those individuals in
whatever ways possible. They are not adverse to engaging spiritual, social
or political structures in order to achieve that goal.
The Women's Division, on the other hand,
rallies to the cry of social justice as interpreted by a liberal, radical
feminist theology and a narrow, left-leaning political/social witness. The
Division has been able to further its ideological agenda with funding from
the women of the church and with their quiet acquiescence. The women of the
church have not seen the promotion of their understanding of biblical
mission.
While this report is not exhaustive,
readers will find it deeply troubling. The Women's Division claims fidelity
to the doctrinal standards of the United Methodist Church, but what comes
through in this documented study is much different. The theological
misdirection, coupled with a narrow, partisan perspective on most political
and social issues, should leave the women of the church very concerned about
the leadership the staff and directors of the Women's Division currently
provide for the organization of United Methodist Women. Now is the time for
action--a time for the women of the church to insist upon accountability and
reform. |