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United Methodist Church
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The United Methodist Church (UMC) is a worldwide mainline Protestant[8] Christian denomination based in Africa, The Philippines, Europe, and the United States, and is a major part of Methodism.[9] In the 19th century, its main predecessor, the Methodist Episcopal Church, was a leader in evangelicalism. The present denomination was founded in 1968 in Dallas by union of the Methodist Church and the Evangelical United Brethren Church, and is shaped by the voluntary separation of 25% of the United States churches leading up to the delayed 2020 General Conference held in 2024. The UMC traces its roots back to the revival movement of John and Charles Wesley in England, as well as the Great Awakening in the United States.[5][10] As such, the church's theological orientation is decidedly Wesleyan.[11] It embraces liturgical worship, holiness, and evangelical elements.[12][13][14][15] According to its Book of Discipline, "The mission of the Church is to make disciples of Jesus Christ for the transformation of the world."[16]
The United Methodist Church has a connectional polity, a typical feature of a number of Methodist denominations. It is organized into conferences. The highest level is called the General Conference and is the only organization which may speak officially for the UMC. The church is a member of the World Council of Churches, the World Methodist Council, and other religious associations.
Between 1968 and 2022, the UMC's membership has declined from 11 million to 5,424,175 members[7] and 29,746 churches in the United States.[6] As of 2022, it had 9,984,925 members and 39,460 churches worldwide.[6] In 2025, the Pew Research Center estimated that 3 percent of the U.S. population, or 7.8 million adult adherents, identified with the United Methodist Church, revealing a larger number of adherents than registered members.[17]
On January 3, 2020, a group of Methodist leaders proposed a plan to split the United Methodist Church over issues of sexual orientation (particularly ordination of clergy in same-sex marriage) and create a new traditionalist Methodist denomination;[18][19][20] the Global Methodist Church was formed in 2022.[21] Prior to the establishment of the Global Methodist Church, some Methodist congregations had already left the UMC to join the Free Methodist Church, a traditionalist Methodist denomination aligned with the Wesleyan-Holiness movement.[22][23] Other former United Methodist congregations joined various conservative Methodist denominations, such as the Congregational Methodist Church, or became members of the Association of Independent Methodists.[24][25] As of December 30, 2023, the number of UMC churches in the United States that were approved for disaffiliation stood at 7,660. This figure represented approximately one-quarter of the UMC churches in the United States.[26][27] In May 2024, the United Methodist Church General Conference repealed bans on LGBTQ clergy and same-sex marriage.[28][29]
In November 2025, the United Methodist Church ratified Worldwide Regionalization, a series of Constitutional Amendments passed at the 2024 General Conference to restructure the UMC designed to give equal autonomy to various regions of the church, renaming former Central (non-US) Conferences to Regional Conferences and the creation of a US Regional Conference on an equal basis, which many United Methodists believe would help decolonize the church and aid global unity.[30][31][32]
History
[edit]Church origins
[edit]
The movement which would become the United Methodist Church began in the mid-18th century within the Church of England. A small group of students, including John Wesley, Charles Wesley, and George Whitefield, met at Oxford University. They focused on Bible study, methodical study of scripture, and living a holy life. Other students mocked them, saying they were the "Holy Club" and "the Methodists", being methodical and exceptionally detailed in their Bible study, opinions, and disciplined lifestyle. Eventually, the so-called Methodists started individual societies or classes for members of the Church of England who wanted to live a more religious life.
In 1735, John and Charles Wesley went to America, hoping to teach the gospel to the Native Americans in the colony of Georgia. Instead, John became vicar of Christ Church in Savannah. His preaching was legalistic and full of harsh rules, and the congregation rejected him. After two years in America, he returned to England dejected and confused. While sailing on his original journey to America, he had been impressed with the faith of the German Moravians on board, and when he returned to England he spent time with Peter Böhler, a German Moravian who was passing through England and who believed that a person is saved solely through the grace of God and not by works. John had many conversations with Böhler about this topic. On May 25, 1738, after listening to a reading of Martin Luther's preface to the Epistle to the Romans, John came to the understanding that his good works could not save him and he could rest in God's grace for salvation. For the first time in his life, he felt peace and the assurance of salvation.
In less than two years, the "Holy Club" disbanded. John Wesley met with a group of clergy, and afterwards said "they appeared to be of one heart, as well as of one judgment, resolved to be Bible-Christians at all events; and, wherever they were, to preach with all their might plain, old, Bible Christianity." The ministers nonetheless retained their membership in the Church of England. Though not always emphasized or appreciated in the Anglican churches of their day, their teaching emphasized salvation by God's grace, acquired through faith in Christ. Three teachings they saw as the foundation of Christian faith were:
- People are all by nature dead in sin and, consequently, children of wrath.
- They are justified by faith alone.
- Faith produces inward and outward holiness.
These clergymen quickly became popular, attracting large congregations. The nickname students had used against the Wesleys was revived; they and their followers subsequently became known as Methodists.[33]
Predecessors
[edit]
The English preacher Francis Asbury arrived in America in 1771. He became a "circuit rider", taking the gospel to the furthest reaches of the new frontier as he had done as a preacher in England .[34] The first official organization in the United States occurred in Baltimore, Maryland, in 1784, with the formation of the Methodist Episcopal Church at the Christmas Conference with Francis Asbury and Thomas Coke as the leaders.[35][36]

Though John Wesley originally wanted the Methodists to stay within the Church of England, the American Revolution decisively separated the Methodists in the American colonies from the life and sacraments of the English Church. In 1784, after unsuccessful attempts to have the Church of England send a bishop to start a new church in the colonies, Wesley decisively appointed fellow priest Thomas Coke as Superintendent (the equivalent of a bishop) to organize a separate Methodist Society. Together with Coke, Wesley sent The Sunday Service of the Methodists, Methodism's first liturgical text and the Articles of Religion, which were received and adopted by the Baltimore Christmas Conference of 1784, officially establishing the Methodist Episcopal Church. The conference was held at the Lovely Lane Methodist Church, considered the mother church of American Methodism.[37]
The new church grew rapidly in the young country as it employed circuit riders, many of whom were laymen, to travel the mostly rural nation by horseback to preach the Gospel and to establish churches until there was scarcely any village in the United States without a Methodist presence. With 4,000 circuit riders by 1844, the Methodist Episcopal Church rapidly became the largest Protestant denomination in the country.
St. George's United Methodist Church, located at the corner of 4th and New Streets, in the Old City neighborhood of Philadelphia, is the oldest Methodist church in continuous use in the United States, beginning in 1769. The congregation was founded in 1767, meeting initially in a sail loft on Dock Street, and in 1769 it purchased the shell of a building which had been erected in 1763 by a German Reformed congregation. At this time, Methodists had not yet broken away from the Anglican Church and the Methodist Episcopal Church was not founded until 1784.

Richard Allen and Absalom Jones became the first African Americans ordained by the Methodist Church. They were licensed by Saint George's Church in 1784. Three years later, protesting racial segregation in worship services, Allen led most of the black members out of St. George's; eventually they founded the Mother Bethel A.M.E. Church and the African Methodist Episcopal Church. Absalom Jones became an Episcopal priest. In 1836, the church's basement was excavated to make room for a Sunday school. In the 1920s, a court case saved the church from being demolished to make way for the Benjamin Franklin Bridge. The case resulted in the bridge being relocated. Historic Saint George's welcomes visitors and is home to archives and a museum on Methodism.
In the more than 220 years since 1784, Methodism in the United States, like many other Protestant denominations, has seen a number of divisions and mergers. In 1830, the Methodist Protestant Church split from the Methodist Episcopal Church over the issue of laity having a voice and vote in the administration of the church, insisting that clergy should not be the only ones to have any determination in how the church was to be operated. In 1844, the General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church split into two conferences because of tensions over slavery and the power of bishops in the denomination.
The two general conferences, Methodist Episcopal Church (the northern faction) and Methodist Episcopal Church, South remained separate until 1939. That year, the northern and southern Methodist Episcopal Churches and the majority of the Methodist Protestant Church merged to create The Methodist Church. The uniting conference took place at First Methodist Church (now First United Methodist Church) of Marion, Indiana.
1939 merger and the Central Jurisdiction in the Methodist Church
[edit]In 1844, the Methodist Episcopal Church (South) split from the Methodist Episcopal Church over slavery despite that John Wesley was against slavery.[38] In 1939, the Methodist Episcopal Church, the Methodist Episcopal Church (South) and the Methodist Protestant Church merged to form the Methodist Church. The 1939 merger was created at the expense of African Americans. At the behest of the southern faction, the Central Jurisdiction was created as a compromise which segregated the Methodist Church.[39]There were five administrative jurisdictions in the US that were on the basis of geography, but a sixth jurisdiction, the segregated Central Jurisdiction was exclusively for African American churches, conferences, and pastors.[40] The Central Jurisdiction lasted from 1939 to 1968 but it took until 1972 for all conferences to be integrated.[41] The 1968 merger with the Evangelical United Brethren church had a condition for merger, which was the abolition of the Central Jurisdiction. The merger created the United Methodist Church.[42] In the wake of the Central Jurisdiction’s abolition, the organization Black Methodists for Church Renewal and the agency the General Commission on Religion and Race were created to work for an end to racism in the church and society and to advocate for Black United Methodists.[43]
1968 merger and formation of the UMC
[edit]On April 23, 1968, the United Methodist Church was created when the Evangelical United Brethren Church (represented by Bishop Reuben H. Mueller) and The Methodist Church (represented by Bishop Lloyd Christ Wicke) joined hands at the constituting General Conference in Dallas, Texas. With the words, "Lord of the Church, we are united in Thee, in Thy Church and now in The United Methodist Church"[44] the new denomination was given birth by both churches which had distinguished histories and influential ministries in various parts of the world.
2020–2024 schisms
[edit]Prior to the United Methodist Church's May 2024 General Conference, the UMC had rules, found in the Book of Discipline, that prohibited same-sex unions and the ordination of noncelibate homosexuals. Many progressive UMC leaders and churches, especially in the United States, are supportive of gay marriage and ignored the injunctions in the Book of Discipline. Many conservative members of the UMC did not like the trend of the UMC towards endorsing gay marriage and, hence, have initiated movements to split-off from the UMC.[45][46]
On January 3, 2020, the denomination's leadership released a proposal to split the Church over what it described as "fundamental differences" over homosexuality, particularly same-sex marriage (see § Homosexuality below).[19] The United Methodist Church would hold a special session to repeal the ban on same-sex marriage.[47] The proposal would need to be approved by the General Conference in order to take effect. The 2020 General Conference, originally scheduled to be held in Minneapolis, Minnesota, was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[48]
In November 2020, a small group of the progressive wing announced their intention to create a new denomination, the Liberation Methodist Connexion.[49][50] It was launched on the First Sunday in Advent through an online service.[51] However, organizers of the Liberation Methodist Connexion announced on 18 December 2021 that no progress had been made to set up a separate denomination.[52]
In March 2021, conservative leaders of the UMC unveiled the name Global Methodist Church for the new traditionalist denomination, along with a new website and logo. The next General Conference was set for 2024.[53] At that time, delegates were expected to vote on the Protocol for Reconciliation and Grace through Separation.[54] The conservative Transitional Leadership Council said the Global Methodist Church would be officially started, with individual churches or conferences able to join, when the General Conference adopted legislation implementing the Protocol, although the Council intended to "consider bringing the new church into existence without delay" "if it becomes apparent" that leaders "who covenanted to support the Protocol no longer do so."[55] Not wanting to wait for the General Conference to occur, some conservative United Methodist congregations left the United Methodist Church to become a part of the Free Methodist Church, a traditionalist Methodist denomination aligned with the holiness movement.[22][23] After the launch of the Global Methodist Church on May 1, 2022, a number of traditionalist United Methodist churches entered into the Global Methodist Church.[21] Other former United Methodist churches that disaffiliated joined various Methodist denominations, such as the Congregational Methodist Church and Methodist Protestant Church, or became members of the Association of Independent Methodists.[56][25][24]
On May 10, 2022, the Judicial Council of the United Methodist Church ruled that annual UMC conferences in the United States cannot leave the church for the Global Methodist Church; only individual churches may do so. The Romania-Bulgaria Conference has left the UMC. As of May 2022, the South Georgia and Northwest Texas conferences were making preparations to leave the UMC; however, these proposed transitions would require UMC General conference legislation.[57]
Early in 2022, according to the United Methodist News Service, the United Methodist Church approved 300 requests by individual churches to leave the denomination. The Wesleyan Covenant Association, which was helping congregations join the Global Methodist Church, said that 1,000 more churches were expected to hold votes on proposed departures from the UMC later in the year and that 300 of 800 Western Pennsylvania Annual Conference churches were considering leaving. Methodist churches and congregations in Slovakia, Bulgaria, Croatia or Romania also expressed dissent and intentions to disaffiliate from the UMC due to progressive tendencies in the American leadership of the UMC.[58] Over 100 churches in Florida and North Carolina had filed or were considering lawsuits. Some of the largest churches in Arkansas, Georgia, Louisiana, Missouri, Oklahoma and Texas were planning to leave. As of 2022, any church that disaffiliated would be responsible for paying two years of apportionments and unfunded pension liabilities.[59] Fifty-eight churches belonging to the Louisiana Annual Conference left the United Methodist Church, with seven congregations being from Baton Rouge and six from New Orleans.[60] The disaffiliations from the conference were scheduled to take effect after December 31, 2022.[60] St. Timothy, one of the largest Methodist churches in Louisiana, voted for disaffiliation on November 1, 2022.[60] To prevent certain congregations from disaffiliating, the UMC ordered that certain churches be closed before disaffiliation votes could occur.[61][62] Several annual conferences designated certain remaining congregations as "lighthouse congregations", which offer support to UMC parishioners who objected to their former congregations' disaffiliation.[63]
As of December 30, 2023, the number of UMC churches in the United States that were approved for disaffiliation stood at 7,660. This figure represented approximately one-quarter of the UMC churches in the United States.[26][27]
The 2024 General Conference, the first since the delayed 2020 conference[64] ran from April 23 to May 3 in Charlotte, North Carolina.[65] With no debate since many of the more conservative congregations had left, proposals approved included having separate regions outside the United States in order to allow each region to have its own policies, removing language stating "the practice of homosexuality is incompatible with Christian teaching", and ending bans on same-sex weddings and gay clergy.[66]
On May 28, 2024, the Côte d’Ivoire Conference voted to leave the UMC in response to the General Conference decision to allow same-sex marriages and gay clergy.[67][68] With 1.2 million members, the Côte d’Ivoire Conference was the UMC's largest single presence outside the United States.[67]
From 2024 to 2025, violence occurred in Nigeria between United Methodists and Global Methodists. 3 United Methodists were killed, and several buildings were damaged.[69]
2025-present: Worldwide Regionalization
[edit]At the May 2024 General Conference, delegates approved a Constitutional Amendment called Worldwide Regionalization that would give Regions of the church around the world equal autonomy to adapt the Book of Discipline, create a regional hymnal, and set policies on membership, ordination, and marriage within different cultural contexts, missional needs, and legal contexts around the world. Over the course of a year and a half, Annual Conference (local) delegates around the world voted on whether to ratify the amendments. The amendments were officially and overwhelmingly ratified in November 2025. What were Central Conferences have been renamed Regional Conferences and a US Regional Conference is created by the amendments. Before regionalization, the US was unable to make adaptations to the Discipline, unlike other places in the church and any such efforts by the US required action to be taken at General Conference, a worldwide body, instead of locally. There are four Regional Conferences in Africa, three in Europe, one in the Philippines, and there will be one in the United States. Advocates for Regionalization deemed the restructuring necessary to decolonize the church and to advance church unity.[30][31]
Beliefs
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The United Methodist Church seeks to create disciples for Christ through outreach, evangelism, and through seeking holiness, also called sanctification, by the power of the Holy Spirit. The flame in the church logo represents the work of the Holy Spirit in the world, and the two parts of the flame also represent the predecessor denominations, the Methodist Church and the Evangelical United Brethren, united at the base symbolizing the 1968 merger.
The United Methodist Church understands itself to be part of the holy catholic (or universal) church and it recognizes the historic ecumenical creeds,[70] the Apostles' Creed[71] and the Nicene Creed;[72] which are used frequently in services of worship.[73] The Book of Discipline also recognizes the importance of the Chalcedonian Creed of the Council of Chalcedon.[74] It upholds the concept of the "visible and invisible Church," meaning that all who are truly believers in every age belong to the holy Church invisible, while the United Methodist Church is a branch of the Church visible, to which all believers must be connected as it is the only institution wherein the Word of God is preached and the Sacraments are administered.
Some argue that the United Methodist Church can lay a claim to apostolic succession, as understood in the traditional sense.[75] As a result of the American Revolution, John Wesley was compelled in 1784 to break with standard practice and ordain two of his lay preachers as presbyters, Thomas Vasey and Richard Whatcoat. Thomas Coke, already an Anglican priest, assisted Wesley in this action. Coke was then "set apart" as a Superintendent (bishop) by Wesley and dispatched with Vasey and Whatcoat to America to take charge of Methodist activities there. In defense of his action to ordain, Wesley himself cited an ancient opinion from the Church of Alexandria, which held that bishops and presbyters constituted one order and therefore, bishops are to be elected from and by the presbyterate. He knew that for two centuries the succession of bishops in the Church of Alexandria was preserved through ordination by presbyters alone and was considered valid by the Early Church. Methodists today who would argue for apostolic succession would do so on these grounds.[76]
While many United Methodist congregations operate in the evangelical tradition, others reflect the mainline Protestant traditions. Although United Methodist practices and interpretation of beliefs have evolved over time, these practices and beliefs can be traced to the writings of the church's founders, especially John Wesley and Charles Wesley (Anglicans), but also Philip William Otterbein and Martin Boehm (United Brethren), and Jacob Albright (Evangelical Association). With the formation of the United Methodist Church in 1968, theologian Albert C. Outler led the team which systematized denominational doctrine. Outler's work proved pivotal in the work of union, and he is largely considered the first United Methodist theologian.
Doctrine
[edit]The officially established Doctrinal Standards of United Methodism are:
- The Articles of Religion of the Methodist Church;[77]
- The Confessions of Faith of the Evangelical United Brethren Church;[77]
- The General Rules of the Methodist Societies;[78]
- The Standard Sermons of John Wesley;[77]
- John Wesley's Explanatory Notes on the New Testament.[77]
These Doctrinal Standards are constitutionally protected and nearly impossible to change or remove.[77] Other doctrines of the United Methodist Church are found in the Book of Discipline of the United Methodist Church.
Summary of basic beliefs
[edit]The basic beliefs of the United Methodist Church include:
- Triune God. God is one God in three persons: Father, Son and Holy Spirit.[79]
- The Bible. The Bible is the inspired word of God. F. Belton Joyner argues that there is a deep division within Methodism today about what exactly this means. Questions include whether the Bible was inspired when written (and the text today is always true and without error), or if it is inspired when actually read by a Christian (and therefore dependent on the interaction with the reader.) In the first case, says Joyner, the Christian is concerned only with the precise wording of the original manuscript, without regard to historical setting. In the other case, the reader tries to read the biblical text in terms of all of the influences of modern thought, with little regard for the meaning offered in the ancient texts. In that Wesleyan tradition, United Methodists balance these two extremes, aware that the same Holy Spirit who inspired the Scriptures is alive and well to bring the written Word alive for the present. United Methodists take seriously both the original inspiration and today's contemporary inspiration. "...In this way, the Bible itself becomes the balancing, clarifying, even correcting tool for understanding the Scripture. God's gifts in the written Word are so rich that they can continue to give light and life as one digs again and again into the same Scriptures."[80][81]
- Sin. While human beings were intended to bear the image of God, all humans are sinners for whom that image is distorted. Sin estranges people from God and corrupts human nature such that we cannot heal or save ourselves.[82]
- Salvation through Jesus Christ. God's redeeming love is active to save sinners through Jesus' incarnate life and teachings, through his atoning death, his resurrection, his sovereign presence through history, and his promised return.[82]
- Sanctification. The grace of sanctification draws one toward the gift of Christian perfection, which Wesley described as a heart "habitually filled with the love of God and neighbor" and as "having the mind of Christ and walking as he walked."[83] This emphasis in Methodism has led to the heralding of the motto "Holiness unto the Lord".[84]
- Sacraments. United Methodists recognize two sacraments: Holy Baptism and Holy Communion. Other rites such as Confirmation, Ordination, Holy Matrimony, Funerals, and Anointing of the Sick are performed but not considered sacraments. In Holy Baptism, the Church believes that "Baptism is not only a sign of profession and mark of difference whereby Christians are distinguished from others that are not baptized; but it is also a sign of regeneration or the new birth.[85] It believes that Baptism is a sacrament in which God initiates a covenant with individuals,[86] people become a part of the Church,[86] is not to be repeated,[86] and is a means of grace.[87] The United Methodist Church generally practices Baptism by sprinkling, pouring, or immersion[88] and uses the Trinitarian formula.[89] United Methodists also recognize as valid baptisms performed in several other Christian denominations.[90] The Church practices and encourages infant baptism; when persons baptized as infants mature, they may confirm (or reject) the baptismal vows made on their behalf as infants by families, guardians, and congregations through a process of Christian education called Confirmation. The United Methodist Church affirms the real presence of Christ in Holy Communion, but does not hold to the Catholic dogma of transubstantiation.[91] The Church believes that the bread is an effectual sign of His body crucified on the cross and the cup is an effectual sign of His blood shed for humanity.[92] Through the outward and visible signs of bread and wine, the inward and spiritual reality of the Body and Blood of Christ are offered to believers. The Church holds that the celebration of the Eucharist is an anamnesis of Jesus' death,[93] and believes the sacrament to be a means of grace,[94] and practices open communion.[95]
- Free will. The UMC believes that people, while corrupted by sin, are free to make their own choices because of God's divine grace enabling them, and that people are truly accountable before God for their choices.
- Social Justice. The Church opposes evils such as slavery, inhumane prison conditions, capital punishment, economic injustice, child labor, racism, and inequality.[96]
Distinctive Wesleyan emphases
[edit]The key emphasis of Wesley's theology relates to how divine grace operates within the individual. Wesley defined the Way of Salvation as the operation of grace in at least three parts: Prevenient Grace, Justifying Grace, and Sanctifying Grace.[97]
Prevenient grace, or the grace that "goes before" us, is given to all people. It is that power which enables us to love and motivates us to seek a relationship with God through Jesus Christ.[98] This grace is the present work of God to turn us from our sin-corrupted human will to the loving will of the Father. In this work, God desires that we might sense both our sinfulness before God and God's offer of salvation. Prevenient grace allows those tainted by sin to nevertheless make a truly free choice to accept or reject God's salvation in Christ.[98]
Justifying Grace or Accepting Grace[98] is that grace, offered by God to all people, that we receive by faith and trust in Christ, through which God pardons the believer of sin. It is in justifying grace we are received by God, in spite of our sin. In this reception, we are forgiven through the atoning work of Jesus Christ on the cross. The justifying grace cancels our guilt and empowers us to resist the power of sin and to fully love God and neighbor. Today, justifying grace is also known as conversion, "accepting Jesus as your personal Lord and Savior," or being "born again."[98][99] John Wesley originally called this experience the New Birth.[100] This experience can occur in different ways; it can be one transforming moment, such as an altar call experience,[101] or it may involve a series of decisions across a period of time.[102]
Sanctifying Grace is that grace of God which sustains the believers in the journey toward Christian Perfection: a genuine love of God with heart, soul, mind, and strength, and a genuine love of our neighbors as ourselves. Sanctifying grace enables us to respond to God by leading a Spirit-filled and Christ-like life aimed toward love. Wesley never claimed this state of perfection for himself but instead insisted the attainment of perfection was possible for all Christians. Here the English Reformer parted company with both Luther and Calvin, who denied that a man would ever reach a state in this life in which he could not fall into sin. Such a man can lose all inclination to evil and can gain perfection in this life.[103]
Wesleyan theology maintains that salvation is the act of God's grace entirely, from invitation, to pardon, to growth in holiness. Furthermore, God's prevenient, justifying, and sanctifying grace interact dynamically in the lives of Christians from birth to death.
According to Wesleyan understanding, good works are the fruit of one's salvation, not the way in which that salvation was earned. Faith and good works go hand in hand in Methodist theology: a living tree naturally and inevitably bears fruit. Wesleyan theology rejects the doctrine of eternal security, believing that salvation can be rejected.[104] Wesley emphasized that believers must continue to grow in their relationship with Christ, through the process of Sanctification.[105]
A key outgrowth of this theology is the United Methodist dedication not only to the Evangelical Gospel of repentance and a personal relationship with God, but also to the Social Gospel and a commitment to social justice issues that have included abolition, women's suffrage, labor rights, civil rights, and ministry with the poor.[106][107]
Characterization of Wesleyan theology
[edit]Methodist theology stands at a unique crossroads between evangelical, holiness and sacramental,[15] as well as between liturgical and charismatic, and between Anglo-Catholic and Reformed worship. It has been characterized as Wesleyan–Arminian theology with an emphasis on the work of the Holy Spirit to bring holiness into the life of the participating believer. The United Methodist Church believes in prima scriptura, seeing the Bible as the primary authority in the Church and using sacred tradition, reason, and experience to interpret it, with the aid of the Holy Spirit (see Wesleyan Quadrilateral).[108] Therefore, according to The Book of Discipline, United Methodist theology is at once "catholic, evangelical, and reformed."[109]
Today, the UMC is generally considered one of the more moderate and tolerant denominations with respect to race, gender, and ideology, though the denomination itself includes a wide spectrum of attitudes. Comparatively, the UMC stands to the right of liberal and progressive Protestant groups such as the United Church of Christ and the Episcopal Church on certain issues (until recently regarding sexuality), but to the left of historically conservative evangelical traditions such as the Southern Baptists and Pentecostalism, in regard to theological matters such as social justice and Biblical interpretation. The UMC is made up of a broad diversity of thought, and so there are many clergy and laity within the UMC that hold differing viewpoints on such theological matters.
Diversity within beliefs
[edit]In appealing for tolerance of diversity of theological opinions, John Wesley said, "Though we may not think alike, may we not all love alike?" The phrase "In essentials, unity; in non-essentials, liberty; in all things, charity" has also become a maxim among Methodists, who have always maintained a great diversity of opinion on many matters within the Church.
The United Methodist Church allows for a wide range of theological and political beliefs. For example, former President George W. Bush (R-TX), former First Lady Laura Bush and former Attorney General of the United States, Jeff Sessions, are United Methodists, as are Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (D-NY) and former Senator Max Cleland (D-GA).
The Pew Research Center's 2014 US Religious Landscape Study concluded that the political preferences of US adult members of the United Methodist Church was 54 percent Republican / lean Republican, 35 percent Democrat / lean Democrat, and 11 percent independent / no lean / other.[110]
Social issues
[edit]Abortion
[edit]
The topic of abortion is complex for the United Methodist Church. The United Methodist Church affirms these two sentences in The Social Principles: "Our belief in the sanctity of unborn human life makes us reluctant to approve abortion. But we are equally bound to respect the sacredness of the life and well-being of the mother and the unborn child." (Book of Discipline ¶161.J).[111] The denomination is committed to "assist[ing] the ministry of crisis pregnancy centers and pregnancy resource centers that compassionately help women find feasible alternatives to abortion."[112] In 2016, the United Methodist General Conference voted to withdraw from the Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice (RCRC),[113] an organization in which it formerly held membership.[114] Annual Conferences could still choose whether to remain a part of the RCRC locally.[115][116][117] At the same General Conference, delegates voted to delete a four-decade-old statement from the Book of Resolutions which affirmed the Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision on the legality of abortion. A new resolution was re-adopted 56–2 in a resolutions subcommittee, decrying gender-selective abortion while also describing abortion as "violent" and opposing abortions done for "trivial reasons." The resolution passed in the daily consent agenda with no debate.[118] As an official organization, however, "the General Board of Church and Society continues to be an advocate for a full range of safe and legal reproductive health care – including, in certain cases, the option to safely and legally end a pregnancy."[119]
Nevertheless, the United Methodist Church holds that "while we understand the need for women to have access to safe, legal abortions, we also 'mourn and are committed to promoting the diminishment of high abortion rates'."[120] and they "are equally bound to respect the sacredness of the life and well-being of the mother, for whom devastating damage may result from an unacceptable pregnancy. In continuity with past Christian teaching, we recognize tragic conflicts of life with life that may justify abortion, (in the eyes of God) and in such cases we support the legal option of abortion under proper medical procedures."[121] The Church cautions that "Governmental laws and regulations do not provide all the guidance required by the informed Christian conscience."[121] The Church emphasizes the need of a supportive ministry to women who have experienced abortions: "We further encourage local churches to make available contact information for counseling agencies that offer programs to address post-abortion stress for all seeking help."[121]
Members of the United Methodist Church who identify with the anti-abortion position come mostly from the Confessing Movement within the denomination and have organized into the Taskforce of United Methodists on Abortion and Sexuality (TUMAS) to further their position within the denomination.[122] On the other side, the Methodist Federation for Social Action and United Methodist Women continue to represent pro-choice views.[123][124]
Alcohol
[edit]Historically, the Methodist Church has supported the temperance movement.[125] John Wesley warned against the dangers of drinking in his famous sermon, "The Use of Money",[126] and in his letter to an alcoholic.[127][128] Today the United Methodist Church states that it "affirms our long-standing support of abstinence from alcohol as a faithful witness to God's liberating and redeeming love for persons."[129] In fact, the United Methodist Church uses unfermented grape juice in the sacrament of Holy Communion, thus "expressing pastoral concern for recovering alcoholics, enabling the participation of children and youth, and supporting the church's witness of abstinence."[130] Moreover, in 2011 and 2012, the United Methodist Church's General Board of Church and Society called on all United Methodists to abstain from alcohol for Lent.[131][132][133]
Anti-racism
[edit]The United Methodist Constitution says “The United Methodist Church proclaims that from God’s goodness and love, God created all persons as God’s unique and beloved children. Racism opposes God’s law, goodness and love and diminishes the image of God in each person. Fueled by white privilege, white supremacy and colonialism, the sin of racism has been a destructive scourge on global society and throughout the history of The United Methodist Church. It continues to destroy our communities, harm persons, obstruct unity and undermine God’s work in this world. Racism must be eradicated. Therefore, The United Methodist Church commits to confronting and eliminating all forms of racism, racial inequity, colonialism, white privilege and white supremacy, in every facet of its life and in society at large.” This statement strengthened the United Methodist Church’s commitment to ending racism, and was passed at the 2024 General Conference and ratified into its Constitution by the worldwide church in 2025. [134][135]
Capital punishment
[edit]The United Methodist Church, along with some other Methodist churches, condemns capital punishment, saying that it cannot accept retribution or social vengeance as a reason for taking human life.[136] The Church also holds that the death penalty falls unfairly and unequally upon marginalized persons including the poor, the uneducated, ethnic and religious minorities, and persons with mental and emotional illnesses.[137] The United Methodist Church also believes that Jesus explicitly repudiated the lex talionis in Matthew 5:38–39 and abolished the death penalty in John 8:7.[136] The General Conference of the United Methodist Church calls for its bishops to uphold opposition to capital punishment and for governments to enact an immediate moratorium on carrying out the death penalty sentence.
Creation
[edit]The United Methodist Church, like many mainline Protestant denominations and the Roman Catholic Church, has determined that there is no conflict between faith and the theory of evolution. Some clergy have stated that "it's time for people of faith to accept evolution."[138] Additionally, the UMC officially affirms the theory of evolution and "opposes introducing theories such as Creationism or Intelligent Design into public school curriculum."[139] In 2016, the denomination denied approval for a creationist group to be officially represented at the church's General Conference.[140]
Euthanasia
[edit]The United Methodist Church is opposed to euthanasia and assisted suicide. The official stance mentions that "The church has an obligation to see that all persons have access to needed pastoral and medical care and therapy in those circumstances that lead to loss of self-worth, suicidal despair, and/or the desire to seek physician-assisted suicide." It also states that "If death is deliberately sought as the means to relieve suffering, that must be understood as direct and intentional taking of life ... The United Methodist tradition opposes the taking of life as an offense against God's sole dominion over life, and an abandonment of hope and humility before God."[141]
The United Methodist Church, represented by Bishop Scott Jones of the Texas Annual Conference, on behalf of the Houston Methodist Research Institute, and the Roman Catholic Church, represented by Archbishop Vincenzo Paglia, of the Pontifical Academy for Life, signed a "Joint Declaration on the End of Life and Palliative Care", on 17 September 2018, reaffirming the common stance of both denominations in opposing euthanasia.[142]
Gambling
[edit]The United Methodist Church opposes gambling, believing that it is a sin which feeds on human greed and which invites people to place their trust in possessions, rather than in God, whom Christians should "love ... with all your heart."[143][144] It quotes the Apostle Paul who states:
But those who want to be rich fall into temptation and are trapped by many senseless and harmful desires that plunge people into ruin and destruction. For the love of money is a root of all kinds of evil, and in their eagerness to be rich some have wandered away from the faith and pierced themselves with many pains.
— 1 Tim. 6:9-10a[145]
The United Methodist Church therefore holds that:
- Gambling is a menace to society, deadly to the best interests of moral, social, economic, and spiritual life, and destructive of good government. As an act of faith and concern, Christians should abstain from gambling and should strive to minister to those victimized by the practice.[144]
- Where gambling has become addictive, the Church will encourage such individuals to receive therapeutic assistance so that the individual's energies may be redirected into positive and constructive ends.[144]
- The Church should promote standards and personal lifestyles that would make unnecessary and undesirable the resort to commercial gambling—including public lotteries—as a recreation, as an escape, or as a means of producing public revenue or funds for support of charities or government.[144]
Gun control
[edit]The United Methodist Church supports federal legislative efforts for strict gun control measures in the United States, and outright bans of most weapons in other nations.[146] The Church also declares all of its churches to be "a weapon-free zone."[147]
Sexuality
[edit]
According to The United Methodist Book of Discipline (a new edition of which is usually approved by the United Methodist General Conference every four years), the Church "affirm[s] that all persons are individuals of sacred worth, created in the image of God" and encourages United Methodists to be in ministry with and for all people.[148] During the 2024 General Conference, the United Methodist Church removed previous language prohibiting same-sex marriages and the ordination of partnered LGBTQ clergy.[149] According to polling from Pew Research, the majority of United Methodists in the US support the inclusion of homosexual persons, 60 percent of United Methodists said "homosexuality should be accepted by society", and 40 percent supported same-sex marriage.[150]
In 1732, the founder of Methodism, John Wesley was doing prison ministry and he met Thomas Blair, a man incarcerated for homosexuality. While not defending his actions, Wesley spoke up to the Vice Chancellor against the inhumane treatment of Thomas Blair in prison. Blair also faced the possibility of the death penalty. Wesley also defended Blair in court, and while he was found guilty, his life was spared and John Wesley raised funds to pay his fine so he could be released.[151][152][153]
The United Methodist Church previously prohibited same-sex unions.[154] Jimmy Creech was defrocked after a highly publicized church trial in 1999 on account of his participation in same-sex union ceremonies.[155] Other ministers have been defrocked for officiating at same-sex weddings and several trials of others are scheduled.[156] Frank Schaefer, who was defrocked and penalized because he had officiated his son's same-sex wedding, was in 2014, re-instated as "the denomination's top court upheld a June decision by a regional appeals committee to reinstate Schaefer's ministerial credentials."[157] Other clergy, who officiated at same-sex marriages, had avoided trials.[158][159] In 2016, it was announced that Val Rosenquist "will avoid a church trial and keep her job after she co-officiated with retired Bishop Melvin Talbert at the April same-gender wedding of two church members."[160] In 1971, Gene Leggett was defrocked for being homosexual in southern Texas.[161] In 1987, a United Methodist church court in New Hampshire defrocked Methodist minister Rose Mary Denman for openly living with a same-sex partner.[162] In 2005, clergy credentials were removed from Irene Elizabeth Stroud after she was convicted in a church trial of violating church law by engaging in a lesbian relationship; this conviction was later upheld by the Judicial Council, the highest court in the denomination.[163] The Judicial Council also affirmed that a Virginia pastor had the right to deny local church membership to a man in an openly gay relationship. This affirmation, however, was based upon a senior pastor's right to judge the readiness of a congregant to join as a full member of the church.[164]
On the other hand, hundreds of United Methodist ministers had openly defied the official position of the United Methodist Church and have publicly revealed their "lesbian, gay or bisexual" sexual orientation, an action that could result in their suspension.[165] The New York body also ordained the first openly gay and lesbian clergy.[166] In addition, the Baltimore-Washington Conference of the UMC approved the appointment of an openly partnered lesbian to the diaconate.[167] In 2016, the Western Jurisdiction elected the denomination's first openly and partnered lesbian bishop.[168] While not elected, the UMC reported that the North Central Jurisdiction considered the nomination of an openly gay pastor for bishop.[169]
Although there is no official policy, the Judicial Council of the UMC ruled, in 2008, that ordained transgender pastors could serve in congregations within the denomination.[170] In particular, the first openly transgender pastor within the UMC received overwhelming support from his congregation.[171] In 2016, the South Carolina Annual Conference passed a resolution urging support for non-discrimination protections for transgender people.[172] In 2017, the Northern Illinois Conference commissioned M Barclay as a Deacon and they became the first openly non-binary trans person commissioned in the denomination.[173]
On April 28, 2017, the Judicial Council ruled that consecrating a bishop in a same-sex marriage or partnership is a violation of church law at the time and that public marriage records could be considered as evidence of self-avowed homosexuality. In regards to the specific case of Bishop Karen Oliveto, the denomination's first openly gay bishop, the Judicial Council ruled that she "remains in good standing" pending the outcome of any administrative or judicial processes initiated within the Western Jurisdiction, since the Judicial Council itself does not have jurisdiction to review Bishop Oliveto's status.[174][175] The Judicial Council also ruled that Boards of Ordained Ministry must evaluate all candidates regarding issues of sexuality.[176]
On May 7, 2018, the Council of Bishops in the United Methodist Church proposed allowing individual pastors and regional church bodies to decide whether to ordain LGBT clergy and perform same-sex weddings.[177] However, on February 26, 2019, a special session of the General Conference rejected this proposal, and voted to strengthen its official opposition to same-sex marriages and ordaining openly LGBT clergy.[178] The vote was 53 percent in favor of the Traditional Plan, the plan maintaining and strengthening the official position, to 47 percent opposed.[179] The Judicial Council had already ruled some parts of the Traditional Plan to be unconstitutional.[180][181] The delegates also voted to send the plan for further review by the Judicial Council.[182][183] In March 2019, the German Central Conference announced that it would not be imposing the Traditional Plan.[184] Before the denomination restructured in 2025 through Worldwide Regionalization, the US jurisdictions and Annual Conferences (local governing bodies) were unable to adapt the Book of Discipline like the (formerly-named) Central Conferences (outside the United States). Despite this, the Western Jurisdiction declared their disagreement with the 2019 Traditional Plan and vowed to maintain LGBTQ inclusive policies.[185] In April 2019, the Judicial Council ruled on the 17 petitions of the Traditional Plan, upholding 10 as valid and rejecting 7 as unconstitutional.[186][187]
On January 3, 2020, some denominational leaders along with various advocacy groups submitted a plan called, "Protocol of Reconciliation and Grace through Separation," to split the church over what it described as "fundamental differences" over issues pertaining to sexual orientation and gender identity, particularly same-sex marriage. The "Protocol of Reconciliation and Grace through Separation" plan would create a new traditionalist Methodist denomination (which came to be the Global Methodist Church), with the existing church moving to more acceptance of non-heterosexual and gender-nonconforming identities. The church's General Conference was expected to vote on the plan in May 2020.[18][19][20] The plan would have needed to be approved in May 2020 by the General Conference. It would grant the new denomination $25 million and would allow local churches to vote to affiliate with the new denomination and keep their assets if they leave.[18][19][needs update] The vote was later postponed to 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[188] Progressives, too, announced the creation of a new denomination in November 2020, the Liberation Methodist Connexion.[49][50] In 2022, the Western Jurisdiction elected a second openly gay bishop, Cedrick Bridgeforth, who also is the denomination's first Black gay Bishop.[189][190]
During the 2024 General Conference, on April 25, 2024, the delegates passed a proposal to restructure the UMC, establishing regionalization that would allow each region to determine its own standards for same-sex marriage and the ordination of partnered LGBTQ clergy.[191][192] Due to the proposal being a constitutional change, the proposal will need to be ratified by a two-thirds majority of votes cast during the local Annual Conferences.[193][194] In November 2025, Worldwide Regionalization was ratified, renaming former Central Conferences to Regional Conferences and creating a US Regional Conference granting equal autonomy between Regions around the world, decolonizing the United Methodist Church.[30][31] Multiple petitions were brought to amend statutory language regarding sexuality during General Conference. On April 30, 2024, the UMC removed penalties for clergy performing same-sex marriages, removed the ban on funding for LGBTQ-affirming organizations, and removed the prohibition on considering openly LGBTQ candidates for ordained ministry.[195] On May 1, 2024, the General Conference of the UMC voted to repeal the prior prohibitions against clergy performing same-sex marriages and the ordination of openly partnered LGBTQ clergy.[196][197][198] On May 2, the General Conference voted to approve more petitions, which amended the UMC Social Principles to remove language stating that "the practice of homosexuality ... is incompatible with Christian teaching"; revises the language on marriage to state that it is "a sacred lifelong covenant that brings two people of faith [adult man and woman of consenting age or two adult persons of consenting age] into union with one another and into deeper relationship with God and the religious community"; states opposition to both child marriage and polygamy; and affirms support for consent in sexual relations.[199][200] On May 3, during the final day of business, the General Conference removed language from church law imposing potential penalties for officiating at same-sex weddings, penalties for being in a same-sex relationship themselves, prohibitions against clergy from officiating or churches hosting same-sex weddings, and mandates that clergy practice celibacy in singleness. In addition, General Conference added language allowing clergy to abstain from officiating any weddings. The Conference maintained the chargeable offense of "immorality" but voted against defining the offense to include infidelity or non-celibacy.[201]
At the 2024 General Conference, a Constitutional Amendment was passed adding gender and ability to the membership nondiscrimination statement and was ratified in 2025 by the worldwide church, reading “All persons, without regard to race, gender, ability, color, national origin, status, or economic condition, shall be eligible to attend its worship services, participate in its programs, receive the sacraments, upon baptism be admitted as baptized members, and upon taking vows declaring the Christian faith, become professing members in any local church in the connection.” [135][135]
Military service
[edit]According to The Book of Resolutions of The United Methodist Church, "The United Methodist Church calls upon all who choose to take up arms or who order others to do so to evaluate their actions in accordance with historic church teaching limiting resort to war, including questions of proportionality, legal authority, discrimination between combatants and noncombatants, just cause, and probability of success...."[202]
The United Methodist Church opposes conscription as incompatible with the teaching of Scripture.[203] Therefore, the Church supports and extends its ministry to those persons who conscientiously oppose all war, or any particular war, and who therefore refuse to serve in the armed forces or to cooperate with systems of military conscription. However, the United Methodist Church also supports and extends its ministry to those persons who conscientiously choose to serve in the armed forces or to accept alternative service. The church also states that "as Christians they are aware that neither the way of military action, nor the way of inaction is always righteous before God."[203]
The United Methodist Church maintains that war is incompatible with Christ's message and teachings. Therefore, the Church rejects war as an instrument of national foreign policy, to be employed only as a last resort in the prevention of such evils as genocide, brutal suppression of human rights, and unprovoked international aggression.[204] It insists that the first moral duty of all nations is to resolve by peaceful means every dispute that arises between or among them; that human values must outweigh military claims as governments determine their priorities; that the militarization of society must be challenged and stopped; that the manufacture, sale, and deployment of armaments must be reduced and controlled; and that the production, possession, or use of nuclear weapons be condemned. Consequently, the United Methodist Church endorses general and complete disarmament under strict and effective international control.[204]
The United Methodist Church, like many Mainline Protestant denominations in the U.S., has a long tradition of providing ordained military chaplains who serve in all branches of the U.S. Armed Forces.[205]
Pornography
[edit]The United Methodist Church teaches that pornography is "not only about sex; it is often about violence, degradation, exploitation, and coercion," and their website states that the Church "oppose[s] all forms of pornography."[206] The Sexual Ethics Task Force of The United Methodist Church states that "Research shows it [pornography] is not an 'innocent activity'. It is harmful and is generally addictive. Persons who are addicted to pornography are physiologically altered, as is their perspective, relationships with parishioners and family, and their perceptions of girls and women."[207]
Stem cell research
[edit]The UMC supports federal funding for research on embryos created for in vitro fertilization that remain after the procreative efforts have ceased, if the embryos were provided for research instead of being destroyed, were not obtained by sale, and those donating had given prior informed consent for the research purposes.[208] The UMC stands in "opposition to the creation of embryos for the sake of research" as "a human embryo, even at its earliest stages, commands our reverence."[208] It supports research on stem cells retrieved from umbilical cords and adult stem cells, stating that there are "few moral questions" raised by this issue.[208]
Worship and liturgy
[edit]
The United Methodist Church includes a variety of approaches to public worship. The common pattern of worship is found in the official liturgies of the church, while the practices of congregations across the denomination are quite diverse.
The common pattern comes from John Wesley, who wrote that "there is no Liturgy in the world, either in ancient or modern language, which breathes more of a solid, scriptural, rational piety, than the Common Prayer of the Church of England."[209] When the Methodists in America were separated from the Church of England, John Wesley himself provided a revised version of The Book of Common Prayer called The Sunday Service of the Methodists; With Other Occasional Services. Wesley's Sunday Service has shaped the official liturgies of the Methodists ever since.
Like other historic Christian churches,[dubious – discuss] the United Methodist Church has official liturgies for services of Holy Communion, baptism, weddings, funerals, ordination, anointing of the sick and daily office prayer services. Some clergy offer healing services, while exorcism is an occasional practice by some clergy in The United Methodist Church in Africa.[210][211][212][213] These services involve the laying on of hands and anointing with oil.[214] Along with these, there are also special services for holy days such as All Saints Day, Ash Wednesday, Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, and Easter Vigil. These services are contained in The United Methodist Hymnal and The United Methodist Book of Worship (1992).[215] Many of these liturgies are derived from the Anglican tradition's Book of Common Prayer. In most cases, congregations also use other elements of liturgical worship, such as candles, optional use of incense at evening prayer, vestments, paraments, banners, and liturgical art.
Typical worship services in United Methodism will include:
- Singing. Since the days of Charles Wesley, the hymn-writer and early Methodist leader, lively singing has been, and remains, an important aspect of United Methodist worship. The church publishes an official hymnal, The United Methodist Hymnal, for use in churches, and allows for music ranging from hymns to contemporary worship music to be played as part of the service.
- A Biblical Message. Listening to the reading of Scripture and a sermon based upon the Biblical text is virtually always included in United Methodist worship. Many United Methodist churches follow the Revised Common Lectionary for their Sunday Bible readings.
- Prayer. Many churches include a time of response or a prayer time in which people may share concerns or pray with ministers. This time of response may include celebrations of baptism, confirmation, or profession of faith.[216]
- Holy Communion. Some congregations celebrate communion on the first Sunday of the month and a few celebrate it only quarterly. A growing number of congregations celebrate the sacrament of Holy Communion on a weekly basis, as John Wesley himself encouraged his followers to practice.[217] In adopting the statement on Holy Communion, entitled This Holy Mystery, in 2004, the General Conference of the Church urged congregations to move toward weekly celebration of communion and to use the official liturgies of the church when doing so.[218]
- Lovefeast. Many congregations celebrate the Lovefeast (also known as the Agape Feast) on a quarterly basis, which is accompanied by the partaking of bread and water, as well as the sharing of testimonies, Scripture readings and hymn singing.[219]
- Giving. Almost every service has an opportunity for those gathered to give of their "tithes and offerings" to support the ministry of that particular congregation. Through apportionments, a portion of those gifts go to Christian ministries that have a national or global impact.
Many larger United Methodist congregations have incorporated more contemporary styles of music and audio-visual technology into some of their worship services, though these churches generally also offer more traditional services.
As John Wesley advocated outdoor evangelism, revival services are a traditional worship practice of Methodism that are often held in United Methodist churches, as well as at outdoor camp meetings and at tent revivals.[15][220][221]
The chancel of United Methodist churches usually features a lectern and baptismal font on one side of the altar table and a pulpit on the other side.[222] The chancel also features the Christian Flag and sometimes, a processional cross.[223][224] The chancel is often delimited by chancel rails, sometimes with a mourner's bench in front of it.[225]
Order of worship
[edit]A typical United Methodist order of worship may include the following elements:[226]

Gathering
[edit]- Prelude
- Chiming of the Hour
- The Procession
- Lighting of the Candles
- Voluntary
- Introit (choral)
- Call to Worship
- Opening Prayer
- Invocation
- Announcements
- Welcoming/Greeting
- Passing the Peace
- Hymn of Praise
- Act of Praise
- Responsive Reading
- Gloria Patri
Prayers
[edit]- Joys and Concerns
- Prayer of Confession
- Absolution
- The Lord's Prayer
- Pastoral Prayer
- Collect
- Prayer of Intercession
- Bidding Prayer
- Prayer of the People
Proclamation
[edit]- Choral Anthem
- Choral Worship
- Drama Presentation
- The Lessons
(Old Testament/Psalm/Epistle/Gospel) - Prayer of Illumination
- Hymn of Preparation
- Time of Personal Witness / Testimony
- Children's Sermon / Moments
- Introduction of the Preacher
- Sermon
Response
[edit]- Affirmation of Faith
- Litany of Response
- Altar Call and Conversion
- Invitation to Discipleship
- Offertory
- Doxology
- Hymn of Response
Going forth
[edit]- Benediction
- Closing Prayer
- Extinguishing of the Candles
- Choral Response
- The Recessional
- Postlude
Saints
[edit]The United Methodist Church's understanding of a "saint" is not unique among Protestants, yet differs significantly from the Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, Anglican, and Lutheran views. Methodists do not have a process for electing people to sainthood. They do not pray to saints, nor do they believe that saints serve as mediators to God. The denomination considers all faithful Christians to be saints.
Methodist institutions may be named after a biblical figure (e.g., "St. James UMC"). Methodists also honor notable heroes and heroines of the Christian faith and look to these prominent saints as providing examples of holy living and commitment to Christ that are worthy of imitation.[227] Such exemplary saints include martyrs, confessors of the Faith, evangelists, or important biblical figures such as Saint Matthew. Lutheran theologian and anti-Nazi martyr Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Salvation Army founder William Booth, African missionary David Livingstone and Methodism's revered founder John Wesley are among many cited as Protestant saints.[228]
Article XIV of The United Methodist Articles of Religion explicitly rejects "invocation of saints" (praying to saints). The text reads "—Of Purgatory—The Romish doctrine concerning purgatory, pardon, worshiping, and adoration, as well of images as of relics, and also invocation of saints, is a fond thing, vainly invented, and grounded upon no warrant of Scripture, but repugnant to the Word of God."[229]
Organization
[edit]

Governance
[edit]The church is decentralized with the General Conference being the official governing body. However, administratively the church has a governing structure that is similar to that of the United States government:
- General Conference—The legislative branch that makes all decisions as to doctrine and polity.
- Council of Bishops—When taken into consideration along with the various general agencies of the church, takes on a role similar to an executive branch. The Council of Bishops consists of all active and retired bishops and meets twice a year. According to the Book of Discipline 2000, "The Church expects the Council of Bishops to speak to the Church and from the Church to the world, and to give leadership in the quest for Christian unity and interreligious relationships."[230] The council is presided over by a President who serves a two-year term. The President has no official authority beyond presiding. Administrative work is handled by the secretary of the council.[231]
- Judicial Council—The judicial branch consisting of nine persons elected by the General Conference to rule on questions of constitutionality in church law and practice.[232]

General Conference
[edit]The United Methodist Church is organized into conferences. The highest level is called the General Conference and is the only organization which may speak officially for the church. The General Conference meets every four years (quadrennium). Legislative changes are recorded in The Book of Discipline which is revised after each General Conference. Non-legislative resolutions are recorded in the Book of Resolutions, which is published after each General Conference, and expire after eight years unless passed again by a subsequent session of General Conference. The most recent General Conferences were held in Portland, Oregon in 2016,[234] and St. Louis, Missouri, in 2019.[235] The event is currently rotated between the US jurisdictions of the church. Bishops, councils, committees, boards, elders, etc., are not permitted to speak on behalf of the United Methodist Church as this authority is reserved solely for the General Conference in accordance with the Book of Discipline.
The plenary session is presided over by an active bishop who has been selected by a committee of delegates to the conference. It is not uncommon for different bishops to preside on different days. The presiding officer is usually accompanied by parliamentarians.[236]
The church had planned for a conference outside of the United States for the first time in history in 2024. These plans were established in 2015 for the first meeting. However, these plans were cancelled because organizers were unable to find a convention space that would be available for two weeks to host the global gathering. Sara Hotchkiss, business manager for the Commission on General Conference stated:
"No one has done anything wrong, or there's no reason not to go. It's just simply when we did a bid process, the facilities needed for the length of our conference were not available,"[237]
Jurisdictional and central conferences
[edit]Subordinate to the General Conference are the jurisdictional and central conferences which also meet every four years. The United States is divided into five jurisdictions: Northeastern, Southeastern, North Central, South Central and Western. Outside the United States the church is divided into seven central conferences: Africa, Congo, West Africa, Central & Southern Europe, Germany, Northern Europe and Eurasia, and the Philippines. The main purpose of the jurisdictional and central conferences is to elect and appoint bishops, the chief administrators of the church. Additionally, central conferences may limitedly adapt the church law to the needs of their areas.[238] Bishops thus elected serve episcopal areas, which consist of one or more annual conferences.
In the US, decisions in-between the four-year meetings are made by the Mission Council (usually consisting of church bishops). One of the most high-profile decisions in recent years by one of the councils was a decision by the Mission Council of the South Central Jurisdiction which in March 2007 approved a 99-year lease of 36 acres (150,000 m2) at Southern Methodist University for the George W. Bush Presidential Library. The decision generated controversy in light of Bush's support of the Iraq War which the church bishops have criticized.[239] A debate over whether the decision should or could be submitted for approval by the Southern Jurisdictional Conference at its July 2008 meeting in Dallas, Texas, remains unresolved.[240]
Judicial Council
[edit]The Judicial Council is the highest court in the denomination.[241] It consists of nine members, who are elected by the General Conference for an eight-year term. Its membership consists of both laity and clergy: the ratio of laity to clergy alternates every eight years.[242] The Judicial Council interprets the Book of Discipline between sessions of General Conference, and during General Conference, the Judicial Council rules on the constitutionality of laws passed by General Conference. The Council also determines whether actions of local churches, annual conferences, church agencies, and bishops are in accordance with church law. The Council reviews all decisions of law made by bishops.[243] The Judicial Council cannot create any legislation; it can only interpret existing legislation. The Council meets twice a year at various locations throughout the world. The Judicial Council also hears appeals from those who have been accused of chargeable offenses that can result in defrocking or revocation of membership.
Annual conference
[edit]The annual conference, roughly the equivalent of a diocese in the Anglican Communion and the Roman Catholic Church or a synod in some Lutheran denominations such as the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, is the basic unit of organization within the UMC. The term annual conference is often used to refer to the geographical area it covers as well as the frequency of meeting. Clergy are members of their annual conference rather than of any local congregation, and are appointed to a local church or other charge annually by the conference's resident bishop at the meeting of the annual conference. In many ways, the United Methodist Church operates in a connectional organization of the annual conferences, and actions taken by one conference are not binding upon another.
Districts
[edit]Annual conferences are further divided into districts, each served by a district superintendent. The district superintendents are also appointed annually from the ordained elders of the annual conference by the bishop. District superintendents, upon completion of their service as superintendent, routinely return to serving local congregations. The annual conference cabinet is composed of the bishop and the district superintendents.
Local churches
[edit]The Book of Discipline is the guidebook for local churches and pastors and describes in considerable detail the organizational structure of local United Methodist churches. All UM churches must have a board of trustees with at least three members and no more than nine members and it is recommended that no gender should hold more than a 2/3 majority. All churches must also have a nominations committee, a finance committee and a church council or administrative council. Other committees are suggested but not required such as a missions committee, or evangelism or worship committee. Term limits are set for some committees but not for all. The church conference is an annual meeting of all the officers of the church and any interested members. This committee has the exclusive power to set pastors' salaries (compensation packages for tax purposes) and to elect officers to the committees.
Administrative offices
[edit]
There is no official headquarters of the UMC although many of its biggest administrative offices are in Nashville, Tennessee, and are physically located near Vanderbilt University (which has historic Methodist ties but is no longer associated with the church).
While the General Conference is the only organization that can officially speak for the United Methodist Church as a whole, there are 13 agencies, boards and commissions of the general church. These organizations address specific topic areas of denomination-wide concern with administrative offices throughout the United States.[244]
- Discipleship Ministries (Nashville, Tennessee)
- Wespath Benefits and Investments (Glenview, Illinois)
- General Board of Church and Society (Washington, D.C.)
- General Board of Global Ministries (Atlanta, Georgia) (GBGM)
- United Methodist Committee on Relief (Atlanta, GA)
- General Board of Higher Education and Ministry (GBHEM) (Nashville, TN) (GBHEM)
- General Commission on Archives and History (Madison, New Jersey) (GCAH)
- General Commission on Religion and Race (Washington, DC) (GCORR)
- General Commission on the Status and Role of Women (Chicago) (GCSRW)
- General Commission on United Methodist Men (Nashville, Tennessee) (GCUMM)
- General Council on Finance and Administration (Nashville, Tennessee) (GCFA)
- United Methodist Communications (Nashville, Tennessee) (UMCom)
- United Methodist Publishing House (Nashville, Tennessee)
- United Methodist Women (New York City, New York) (UMW)
United Methodist Volunteers in Mission
[edit]United Methodist Volunteers in Mission (UMVIM) is the short-term mission arm of the United Methodist Church. UMVIM coordinates mission projects for over 100,000 United Methodist volunteers every year.[245] UMVIM coordinates over 400 international development projects.[246]
Education
[edit]
There are two separate pages describing this in more detail: United Methodist Church higher education and International Association of Methodist-related Schools, Colleges, and Universities.
Throughout its history, the United Methodist Church has placed great emphasis on the importance of education. As such, the United Methodist Church established and is affiliated with around one hundred colleges and universities in the United States, including American University, Syracuse University,[250] Boston University,[251] Emory University, Duke University,[252] Drew University,[253] Otterbein University, University of Denver, University of Evansville, and Southern Methodist University.[254] Most are members of the International Association of Methodist-related Schools, Colleges, and Universities. The church operates three hundred sixty schools and institutions overseas, notably Africa University in Zimbabwe.[255]
There are 13 United Methodist seminaries.[256] The United Methodist Church among Christian churches has a highly educated membership, with 37% of members holding graduate or post-graduate degrees.[257][258] The church also claims a disproportionate share of high-income earners.[259]
Clergy
[edit]United Methodist clergy consist of elders, local pastors, associate members and deacons. They hold membership in the annual conference and not in the local church. Additionally provisional clergy hold membership in the annual conference while they are under appointment to a local church or extension ministry. There are several offices of ministry within the United Methodist Church.
Certified lay ministers may also be appointed to serve a church but under the supervision and direction of an elder.
History
[edit]The first Methodist clergy were ordained by John Wesley, a priest of the Church of England, because of the crisis caused by the American Revolution which isolated the Methodists in the States from the Church of England and its sacraments. Today, the clergy includes men and women who are ordained by bishops as elders and deacons and are appointed to various ministries. Elders in the United Methodist Church itinerate and are subject to the authority and appointment of their bishops. They generally serve as pastors in local congregations. Deacons are in service ministry and may serve as musicians, liturgists, educators, business administrators, and a number of other areas. Elders and deacons are required to obtain a master's degree (generally an M.Div.), or another equivalent degree, before commissioning and then ultimately ordination. Elders in full connection are each a member of their Annual Conference Order of Elders. Likewise each deacon in full connection is a member of their Annual Conference Order of Deacons.[260]
Ordination of women
[edit]The Methodist Church has allowed ordination of women with full rights of clergy since 1956, when Maud K. Jensen was ordained and admitted into full connection in the Central Pennsylvania Annual Conference.[261] This action was based upon its understanding of biblical principles.[262][263] The United Methodist Church, along with some other Protestant churches, holds that when the historical contexts involved are understood, a coherent Biblical argument can be made in favor of women's ordination.[264] In 1972, Jeanne Audrey Powers became the first woman to be nominated for the office of a bishop in The United Methodist Church.
Early Methodism
[edit]In 1761, John Wesley, the founder of Methodism allowed a woman to preach, Sarah Crosby.[265]In 1771, when Crosby and Mary Bosanquet faced criticism for preaching, Mary Bosanquet wrote a letter to Wesley, which persuaded Wesley to approve women preaching in public, signing letters of endorsement, recognizing the “extraordinary call” some women had.[266]
After John Wesley died in 1791, the church went through splits and was less favorable towards women preaching[267]
The Methodist Church and its predecessors
[edit]Helenor M. Davisson was the first woman to be ordained as a Deacon in 1866 in the Methodist Protestant Church, the first woman to be ordained in any Methodist tradition.[268] In the Methodist Episcopal Church, Margaret Newton Van Cottwas the first woman to receive a local preacher’s license in 1869.[269] In 1875, Pauline Williams Martindale was ordained as an Elder in the Methodist Protestant Church.[270] In 1880, Anna Howard Shaw and Anna Oliver sought ordination from the Methodist Episcopal Church, but were denied, so they transferred to the Methodist Protestant Church where they were ordained. However, the Methodist Protestant Church ruled Anna Howard Shaw’s ordination was out of order in 1884.[271] In 1920, the Methodist Episcopal Church granted women the right to be licensed as local preachers and in 1924, limited clergy rights as Elders and Deacons, but not conference members.[272] The Methodist Episcopal Church, South, which split from the Methodist Episcopal Church over slavery, did not accept women’s ordination.[270] In 1939, the Methodist Episcopal Church, the Methodist Protestant Church, and the Methodist Episcopal Church, South merged and formed the Methodist Church, one of the predecessors of the United Methodist Church.[273] The Methodist Church granted full clergy rights to women in 1956.[274]
The Evangelical United Brethren Church and its predecessors
[edit]One of the predecessors of the United Methodist Church, the Evangelical Church (not to be confused with modern Evangelicalism), discouraged women’s ordination.[275] Another predecessor, the Church of the United Brethren in Christ (New Constitution), granted a preaching license to Charity Opheral in 1849, but later passed a resolution against women preaching in 1857. [270] The United Brethren Church began ordaining women in 1889. Ella Niswonger was the first woman ordained in the United Brethren Church.[276] In 1904, Minnie Jackson Goins became the first African American woman ordained as an elder in the United Brethren Church.[277] However, when the Evangelical Church and the United Brethren Church united in 1946 as the Evangelical United Brethren Church, women were denied ordination.[270]
The United Methodist Church
[edit]In 1968, the Methodist Church and the Evangelical United Brethren Church merged, forming the United Methodist Church.[278] The United Methodist Church has affirmed full clergy rights for women since its creation.[279]
Milestones for women’s ordination in the United Methodist Church include but are not limited to[270][280][281][282][283][284]
- 1956 Maud Keister Jensen, first to receive full clergy rights
- 1956 Emma P. Hill, first African American woman ordained
- 1958 Antonia Wladar, first woman ordained as an Elder in Europe
- 1961 Julia Torres Fernandez becomes the first Hispanic woman ordained as an Elder in the Methodist Church
- 1971 Cornelia Mauyao becomes the first woman ordained as an elder in the Philippines
- 1976 Rev. Tomila Louise transitions to female and her ordination papers are changed to reflect her new name shortly before retiring
- 1979 Mutombo Illunga Kimba (of Congo) becomes the first African woman ordained as an elder
- 1980 Marjorie Matthews becomes the first woman elected Bishop in the United Methodist Church
- 1982 Mamie Ming Yan Ko and Mochie Lam become the first Chinese American women ordained as elders in the UMC
- 1983 Colleen Kyung Seen Chun becomes the first Korean American woman ordained as an elder
- 1984 Leontine T.C. Kelly becomes the first African American woman elected Bishop
- 1989 Lois V. Glory-Neal (Cherokee Nation) becomes the first Native American woman ordained as an Elder.
- 1992 Ana Moala Tiueti becomes the first native Tongan woman to be ordained as an Elder in the US and world
- 2002 Bishop Sharon Brown Christopher becomes the first woman to serve as the President of the Council of Bishops
- 2003 Linita Uluave Moa becomes the first Tongan woman ordained as an Elder
- 2004 Minerva G. Carcaño is elected the first Latina Bishop
- 2005 Rosemarie J. Wenner is elected the first European woman Bishop
- 2008 Joaquina Filipe Nhanala is the first African woman elected Bishop
- 2016 Mao Her becomes the first Hmong woman ordained as an Elder in the UMC (later switched to the GMC)
- 2016 Karen Oliveto is elected the first Lesbian Bishop in the United Methodist Church
- 2020 Bishop Cynthia Fierro-Harvey becomes President of the Council of Bishops, the first Latina in the position
- 2024 Bishop Tracy Smith Malone becomes President of the Council of Bishops, the first Black woman in the position
Bishop
[edit]All clergy appointments are made and fixed annually by the resident bishop on the advice of the Annual Conference Cabinet, which is composed of the Area Provost/Dean (if one is appointed) and the several district superintendents of the districts of the Annual Conference. Until the bishop has read the appointments at the session of the Annual Conference, no appointments are officially fixed. Many Annual Conferences try to avoid making appointment changes between sessions of Annual Conference. While an appointment is made one year at a time, it is most common for an appointment to be continued for multiple years. Appointment tenures in extension ministries, such as military chaplaincy, campus ministry, missions, higher education and other ministries beyond the local church are often even longer.
Elder
[edit]Elders are called by God, affirmed by the church, and ordained by a bishop to a ministry of Word, Sacrament, Order and Service within the church. They may be appointed to the local church, or to other valid extension ministries of the church. Elders are given the authority to preach the Word of God, administer the sacraments of the church, to provide care and counseling, and to order the life of the church for ministry and mission. Elders may also be appointed to extension ministry to serve as district superintendents, and they are eligible for election to the episcopacy. Elders serve a term of two–three years as provisional elders prior to their ordination.
Deacon
[edit]Deacons are called by God, affirmed by the church, and ordained by a bishop to servant leadership within the church.They are ordained to ministries of word, service, compassion, and justice. They may be appointed to ministry within the local church or to an extension ministry that supports the mission of the church. Deacons give leadership, preach the Word, contribute in worship, conduct marriages, bury the dead, and aid the church in embodying its mission within the world. Deacons assist elders in the sacraments of Holy Communion and Baptism, and may be granted sacramental authority if they are appointed as the pastor in a local church or as their extension ministry requires, upon approval of the bishop. Deacons serve a term of 2–3 years as provisional deacons prior to their ordination.
Provisional clergy
[edit]At the 1996 General Conference, the ordination order of transitional deacon was abolished. This created new orders known as "provisional elder" or "provisional deacon" for those who seek to be ordained in the respective orders. The provisional elder/deacon is a seminary graduate who serves at least two years in full-time appointments after being commissioned. During this period, the provisional elder may be granted sacramental ministry in their local appointment. For the first time in its history non-ordained pastors became a normal expectation, rather than an extraordinary provision for ministry.
Local pastors
[edit]Local pastors in the United Methodist Church are individuals who are affirmed by the church and appointed by a bishop to serve in a ministry of Word, Sacrament, Order, and Service within the church. The official title for these individuals is "licensed local pastor."[285] Although they are not ordained, they are granted the authority to preach the Word of God, administer the sacraments, provide pastoral care and counseling, and lead the congregation in its ministry and mission.
A bishop may appoint a licensed local pastor to serve a church when an ordained elder is unavailable, either because of a shortage of clergy or due to the financial hardship of a pastoral charge. Local pastors often serve in bi-vocational roles, fulfilling their ministerial calling both within the church and in their secular employment.
Licensed local pastors, whether appointed full-time or part-time, are considered clergy. They hold membership in the annual conference rather than in the local church. Their authority to serve as pastors is limited to the specific church to which they are appointed and is valid only for the duration of that appointment. This authority does not extend beyond the assigned context or continue after the appointment ends.[286] In their appointed church, they preach, conduct worship, and carry out the regular responsibilities of a pastor, but only under certain conditions and times agreed upon. While they are not required to hold advanced theological degrees, they must complete a licensing school and continue their education. This may be accomplished by completing an approved Course of Study at a United Methodist seminary or Course of Study school, or by enrolling in a Master of Divinity program at an approved United Methodist seminary.
Licensed local pastors who wish to continue toward associate membership in the annual conference must successfully complete written and oral examinations, appear before the District Committee on Ministry and the Conference Board of Ordained Ministry, and meet certain age and service requirements as defined by their conference. They may also pursue ordination if they complete a bachelor's degree and fulfill additional requirements set by their Conference Board of Ordained Ministry. These typically include completing an advanced Course of Study or the required seminary coursework at an approved institution.[citation needed]
When a licensed local pastor retires or is no longer appointed to a local church, they return to lay membership in a charge conference.
Laity
[edit]There are two classes of lay membership in the UMC: Baptized Members and Professing Members.
The United Methodist Church (UMC) practices infant and adult baptism. Baptized Members are those who have been baptized as an infant or child, but who have not subsequently professed their own faith. These Baptized Members become Professing Members through confirmation and sometimes the profession of faith. Individuals who were not previously baptized are baptized as part of their profession of faith and thus become Professing Members in this manner. Individuals may also become a Professing Member through transfer from another Christian denomination.[287]
Unlike confirmation and profession of faith, Baptism is a sacrament in the UMC. The Book of Discipline of the United Methodist Church directs the local church to offer membership preparation or confirmation classes to all people, including adults.[288] The term confirmation is generally reserved for youth, while some variation on membership class is generally used for adults wishing to join the church. The Book of Discipline normally allows any youth at least completing sixth grade to participate, although the pastor has discretionary authority to allow a younger person to participate. In confirmation and membership preparation classes, students learn about Church and the Methodist-Christian theological tradition in order to profess their ultimate faith in Christ.
Lay members are extremely important in the UMC. The Professing Members are part of all major decisions in the church. General, Jurisdictional, Central, and Annual Conferences are all required to have an equal number of laity and clergy.
In a local church, many decisions are made by an administrative board or council. This council is made up of laity representing various other organizations within the local church. The elder or local pastor sits on the council as a voting member.[289]
Additionally, Laity may serve the church in several distinct roles including:
Lay servant
[edit]Another position in the United Methodist Church is that of the lay servant. Although not considered clergy, lay servants often preach during services of worship when an ordained elder, Local Pastor, Associate Member or deacon is unavailable.[290][291] There are two categories of lay servants: local church lay servant,[292] who serve in and through their local churches, and certified lay servants, who serve in their own churches, in other churches, and through district or conference projects and programs.[292] To be recognized as local church lay servant, they must be recommended by their pastor and Church Council or Charge Conference, and complete the basic course for lay servant. Each year they must reapply, reporting how they have served and continued to learn during that year.[292] To be recognized as certified lay servant, they must be recommended by their pastor and Church Council or Charge Conference, complete the basic course and one advanced lay servant course, and be interviewed by the District or Conference Committee on Lay Speaking. They must report and reapply annually; and they must complete at least one advanced course every three years.[292]
Certified lay ministers
[edit]The 2004 General Conference created another class of ministry, the certified lay minister (CLM). CLMs are not considered clergy but instead remain lay members of the United Methodist Church. A Certified Lay Minister (CLM) is a qualified United Methodist layperson called to congregational leadership as part of a ministry team under the supervision an ordained minister. Paragraph 271 in the 2012 Book of Discipline explains Certified Lay Ministry, requirements, and service distinction.
A person wishing to become a CLM enters the certification process, which includes training, support, supervision, and accountability to the District Committee on Ordained Ministry. CLMs are laypeople serving out their call as disciples of Jesus Christ.[293]
Deaconesses and Home Missioners
[edit]Deaconesses and Home Missioners are an order of laity “called by God to a lifetime relationship in The United Methodist Church for engagement with a full-time vocation in ministries of love, justice and service.” Deaconesses and Home Missioners form a “covenant community that is rooted in Scripture, informed by history, driven by mission, ecumenical in scope and global in outreach.” The Book of Discipline says that Deaconesses and Home Missioners strive to “alleviate suffering; eradicate causes of injustice and all that robs life of dignity and worth; facilitate the development of full human potential; and share in building global community through the church universal.” In the United Methodist Church, Deaconesses are not female Deacons but are a separate order from Deacons (both of which are inclusive of all genders) (Deacons are also a clergy order). Deaconesses and Home Missioners are the same order but Home Missioner is a non-gendered title sometimes taken by men and others in the office. Deaconesses and Home Missioners are laity and many professions and occupations are represented in the Order.[294][295][296]
Ecumenical relations
[edit]Methodism is one tradition within the Christian Church.[297] The United Methodist Church is active in ecumenical relations with other Christian groups and denominations. It is a member of the National Council of Churches, the World Council of Churches, Churches Uniting in Christ, and Christian Churches Together. In addition, it voted to seek observer status in the National Association of Evangelicals and in the World Evangelical Fellowship.[298] However, there are some[who?] in the United Methodist Church who feel that false ecumenism might result in the "blurring of theological and confessional differences in the interests of unity."[299]
In April 2005, the United Methodist Council of Bishops approved "A Proposal for Interim Eucharistic Sharing." This document was the first step toward full communion with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA). The ELCA approved this same document in August 2005.[300] At the 2008 General Conference, the United Methodist Church approved full communion with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.[301] The ELCA approved this document on August 20, 2009, at its annual churchwide assembly.[302][303][304]
The United Methodist Church has since 1985 been exploring a possible merger with three historically African-American Methodist denominations: the African Methodist Episcopal Church, the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church, and the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church.[305] A Commission on Pan Methodist Cooperation and Union formed in 2000 to carry out work on such a merger.[306] In May 2012, The United Methodist Church entered into full communion with the African Methodist Episcopal Church, African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church, African Union Methodist Protestant Church, Christian Methodist Episcopal Church, and Union American Methodist Episcopal Church, in which these Churches agreed to "recognize each other's churches, share sacraments, and affirm their clergy and ministries."[307]
There are also a number of churches such as the Evangelical Methodist Church in Argentina, Evangelical Church of Uruguay, and Methodist Church in India (MCI), that are "autonomous affiliated" churches in relation to the United Methodist Church.[308][309][310]
The UMC is a member of the Wesleyan Holiness Consortium, which seeks to reconceive and promote Biblical holiness in today's Church, and many United Methodist congregations are members of the Christian Holiness Partnership, with ten percent of local church membership in the Christian Holiness Partnership being from the United Methodist connection.[311][312] It is also active in the World Methodist Council, an interdenominational group composed of various churches in the tradition of John Wesley to promote the Gospel throughout the world. On July 18, 2006, delegates to the World Methodist Council voted unanimously to adopt the "Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification", which was approved in 1999 by the Vatican and the Lutheran World Federation.[313][314]
Full Communion
[edit]The United Methodist Church is in full communion with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America; the Moravian Church in North America (Northern and Southern Provinces); Pan-Methodist Churches which include The African Methodist Episcopal Church, The African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church, The African Union Methodist Protestant Church, The Christian Methodist Episcopal Church, The Union American Methodist Episcopal Church; and the Uniting Church in Sweden.[315] The United Methodist Church also has a large number of churches in partnerships in "formal, ecumenical relationships approved by the General Conference"[316] which are categorized as Concordat Churches, Affiliated Autonomous Churches, Affiliated United Churches, and Known Ecumenical Partner Churches Specific to European Central Conferences.[317] While not using the exact wording, these relationships are closely akin to full communion, and include the Methodist Church of Great Britain and the United Church of Canada.
The United Methodist Church approved full communion with the Episcopal Church at its Annual Conference on April 30, 2024. The agreement is awaiting approval by the Episcopal Church, which is not expected until 2027.[318] Both churches are already in full communion with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and the Moravian Church in North America (Northern and Southern Provinces).[319]
Membership trends
[edit]This article needs to be updated. (April 2025) |

Like many other mainline Protestant denominations in the United States, the United Methodist Church has experienced significant membership losses in recent decades. At the time of its formation, the UMC had about 11 million members in nearly 42,000 congregations.[320] In 1975, membership dropped below 10 million for the first time.[320] In 2005, there were about 8 million members in over 34,000 congregations.[320] Membership is concentrated primarily in the Midwest and in the South. Texas has the largest number of members, with about 1 million.[321] The states with the highest membership rates are Oklahoma, Iowa, Mississippi, West Virginia, and North Carolina.[321]
By the opening of the 2008 General Conference, total UMC membership was estimated at 11.4 million, with about 7.9 million in the US and 3.5 million overseas. Significantly, about 20 percent of the conference delegates were from Africa, with Filipinos and Europeans making up another 10 percent.[322] During the conference, the delegates voted to finalize the induction of the Methodist Church of the Ivory Coast and its 700,000 members into the denomination.[322] Given current trends in the UMC—with overseas churches growing, especially in Africa, and US churches collectively losing about 1,000 members a week[323]—it was estimated that Africans would make up at least 30 percent of the delegates at the 2012 General Conference,[322] and was also possible that 40 percent of the delegates will be from outside the US.[323] One Congolese bishop has estimated that typical Sunday attendance of the UMC is higher in his country than in the entire United States.[323]
In 2018, outside of the United States, it had 6,464,127 members and 12,866 churches.[324]
In 2020, it had 6,268,310 members and 30,543 churches in the United States.[325]
In 2024, the number decreased to 3,988,810 professing members (members who are baptized and have made a profession of faith), 2257,502 baptized members (non-professing), and 794,307 constituent members (members who are not baptized) in the United States,[326] as divisions grew over church policy regarding homosexuality and the Global Methodist Church was formed in the prior year.[327] The drop to 4.2million members in 2023 represented a loss of approximately 1.2 million members, or about 22% of the previous years' total - the biggest loss that any denomination has ever lost in a single year in American religious history.[328] Much of this decrease (but not all) was because of exiting congregation, wishing to leave the UMC with their property. In 2023, 5,595 UMC congregations chose to disaffiliate.[328] In total, from 2019 to 2023, approximately 25% of the American UMC churches disaffiliated, 7,673 in total.[328]
Churchwide giving
[edit]Contributions to the local church not only benefit the local congregation, but also have regional, national, and international impact through the United Methodist Church's connectional giving system. The power of this collective giving enables the church to educate clergy, encourage cooperation with other faith communions, fund General Conference, nurture historically black colleges and Africa University, and support bishops.[229]
Individuals may also choose to give to the church by naming the Permanent Fund for the United Methodist Church as beneficiary in their estate plans. The Permanent Fund provides a permanent source of funding for the ministries of the United Methodist Church.[229]
See also
[edit]- List of the largest Protestant bodies
- Conferences of the United Methodist Church
- Confessing Movement
- Holiness Movement
- Reconciling Ministries Network
- List of local Methodist churches
- Christianity in the United States
- Category:Methodism
- Category:Methodist church buildings
- Category:Methodist organizations
- Category:Universities and colleges affiliated with the United Methodist Church
References
[edit]- ^ Wilson, Robert L.; Harper, Steve (March 1988). Faith and form: a unity of theology & polity in the United Methodist tradition. Zondervan. ISBN 9780310515210. Retrieved March 27, 2010.
Thus the superintendency has been a key part of the Methodist connectional system.
- ^ Delgado, Aileen (March 1, 2024). "Bishop Tracy S. Malone set for historic election as COB president". Who We Are. United Methodist Communications. Retrieved May 1, 2024.
- ^ "Bishop L. Jonathan Holston". unitedmethodistbishops.org. COB Office. April 29, 2022. Archived from the original on May 18, 2020. Retrieved October 6, 2023.
- ^ Mullee, Meghan (2000). "The United Methodist Church". University of Virginia. Archived from the original on August 4, 2007. Retrieved August 3, 2007.
- ^ a b "What We Believe—Founder of the United Methodist Church". United Methodist Church of Whitefish Bay. Archived from the original on March 25, 2008. Retrieved August 1, 2007.
- ^ a b c d "United Methodists At-A-Glance". United Methodist Communications. Retrieved April 20, 2024.
- ^ a b "Statistics for 2022". General Council on Finance and Administration – The United Methodist Church. Retrieved April 20, 2024.
- ^ "Mainline Denominations". The Association of Religion Data Archives. Archived from the original on October 21, 2014. Retrieved August 1, 2007.
- ^ "Central Conferences | UMC.org". www.umc.org. Retrieved September 29, 2025.
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- ^ "Is the concept "saved, born-again" unique to evangelicals?". The United Methodist Church. Archived from the original on August 10, 2007. Retrieved August 1, 2007.
- ^ Noll, Mark A. "Understanding American Evangelicals". Ethics and Public Policy Center. Archived from the original on August 14, 2007. Retrieved August 2, 2007.
- ^ Oden, Thomas C. (April 5, 2016). The Rebirth of African Orthodoxy. Abingdon Press. p. 21. ISBN 9781501819100.
The growth of United Methodism abroad, especially in Africa, is already coming to exercise increasing influence in the American church. ... In Africa UMC churches are full. People walk for miles to hear their preaching. At the current rates, United Methodists in Africa may outnumber church members in the U.S. within a decade or so. ... It is likely that early African Christian wisdom will increasingly influence the curriculum of African seminaries, which currently are biblically evangelical, morally earnest, and service oriented.
- ^ a b c Winn, Christian T. Collins (2007). From the Margins: A Celebration of the Theological Work of Donald W. Dayton. Wipf and Stock Publishers. p. 115. ISBN 9781630878320.
In addition to these separate denominational groupings, one needs to give attention to the large pockets of the Holiness movement that have remained within the United Methodist Church. The most influential of these were the circles dominated by Asbury College and Asbury Theological Seminary (both in Wilmore, KY), but one could speak of other colleges, innumerable local campmeetings, the vestiges of various local Holiness associations, independent Holiness oriented missionary societies and the like that have had great impact within United Methodism. A similar pattern existed in England with the role of Cliff College within Methodism in that context.
- ^ "Mission statement of The United Methodist Church | UMC.org". The United Methodist Church.
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- ^ a b Johnston, Jeff (May 24, 2023). "Thousands of Congregations Leave United Methodist Church Over Biblical Concerns". Daily Citizen. Retrieved May 3, 2024.
Others are joining more conservative Methodist groups, such as the Congregational Methodist Church, the Free Methodist Church, or the Global Methodist Church, an international denomination that launched just over a year ago.
- ^ a b "A Guide for Disaffiliating Churches". Wesley Biblical Seminary. 2023. Retrieved May 3, 2024.
Other churches have chosen to join Wesleyan-Methodist denominations like the Independent Methodist Church and the Congregational Methodist Church.
- ^ a b Shellnutt, Kate; Silliman, Daniel (December 18, 2023). "United Methodists Down 7,659 Churches As Exit Window Ends". Christianity Today. USA.
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- ^ 1968 General Conference Daily Christian Advocate[full citation needed]
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- ^ 2008 Book of Discipline para. 101, page 42
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Today the World Methodist Council represents twenty-nine million members of some sixty churches that trace their heritage to Wesley and his brother Charles.
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Wesley had believed that bishops and presbyters constituted but one order, with the same right to ordain.
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- ^ The British Methodist Church in 2001 adopted a more complex seven-way choice of what the Bible means. See Methodist Church of Great Britain#The Bible and Forsaith, Peter (2016). The Ashgate Research Companion to World Methodism. Routledge. pp. 345–46. ISBN 978-1-317-04098-9.
- ^ a b 2008 Book of Discipline, paragraph 101, page 43.
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Jesus Christ, who "is the reflection of God's glory and the exact imprint of God's very being" (Hebrews 1:3), is truly present in Holy Communion. Through Jesus Christ and in the power of the Holy Spirit, God meets believers at the Table. God, who has given the sacraments to the church, acts in and through Holy Communion. Christ is present through the community gathered in Jesus' name (Matthew 18:20), through the Word proclaimed and enacted, and through the elements of bread and wine shared (1 Corinthians 10:16). The divine presence is a living reality and can be experienced by participants; it is not a remembrance of the Last Supper and the Crucifixion only.
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Wesley taught that a man who has experienced a second blessing or entire sanctification can be absolutely sure he will reach heaven. Such a man can lose all inclination to evil and can gain perfection in this life. Wesley never claimed this state of perfection for himself but instead insisted the attainment of perfection was possible for all Christians. Here the English Reformer parted company with both Luther and Calvin, who denied that a man would ever reach a state in this life in which he could not fall into sin.
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salvation can be lost methodist.
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The Church and its local congregations and campus ministries should be in the forefront of supporting existing ministries and developing new ministries that help such women in their communities. They should also support those crisis pregnancy centers and pregnancy resource centers that compassionately help women explore all options related to unplanned pregnancy. We particularly encourage the Church, the government, and social service agencies to support and facilitate the option of adoption. (See ¶ 161L.) We affirm and encourage the Church to assist the ministry of crisis pregnancy centers and pregnancy resource centers that compassionately help women find feasible alternatives to abortion.
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- ^ The rebirth of orthodoxy: signs of new life in Christianity. HarperCollins. 2003. ISBN 9780060097851. Retrieved January 4, 2009.
Here are other evidences of active renewal and confessing movements within United Methodism: The Taskforce of United Methodists on Abortion and Sexuality is the prolife witness among the Methodists. They publish Lifewatch.
- ^ "Statement on Reproductive Rights" (PDF). mfsaweb.org. Methodist Federation for Social Action. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 11, 2016. Retrieved May 20, 2016.
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- ^ "Lent: United Methodist Church Calls for 'Alcohol Free' Season". The Christian Post. Retrieved March 17, 2012.
The United Methodist Church's Board of Church and Society has asked its members to participate in an "Alcohol Free Lent," which means that Methodists who choose to participate would give up the habit of drinking alcohol for the season.
- ^ "Alcohol Free Lent". General Board of Church and Society. February 22, 2012. Retrieved March 17, 2012.
During Lent, United Methodists have been called to be Alcohol Free. This is a prime opportunity to discuss and learn how effective regulation can curtail alcohol problems.
- ^ Fleet, Josh (March 21, 2011). "Methodists Shun The Bottle During Alcohol-Free Lent". The Huffington Post. Retrieved March 17, 2012.
Now, the denomination's General Board of Church and Society is following Howell's lead and is pushing a churchwide Alcohol Free Lent campaign.
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- ^ Moran, Dan (November 7, 2018). "Methodists and Catholics Unite against Euthanasia".
- ^ Mark 12:29–30
- ^ a b c d "Gambling". The United Methodist Church. Archived from the original on July 5, 2007. Retrieved June 24, 2007.
- ^ 1 Tim. 6:9–10a
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- ^ Book of Discipline of the United Methodist Church-2012
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- ^ "Jan./Feb. response: Submit to be More Vile". January 16, 2025.
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- ^ "Pastor Defrocked for Holding Gay Marriage". New York Times. Associated Press. November 18, 1999. Retrieved January 22, 2014.
- ^ Goodstein, Laurie (December 19, 2013). "Defrocking of Minister Widens Split Over Gays". New York Times. Retrieved January 22, 2014.
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- ^ "Val Rosenquist, Methodist pastor, to keep job despite performing same-sex wedding". The Washington Times. Retrieved September 18, 2016.
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- ^ "Homosexual Minister Is Ousted By Southwest Texas Methodists". The New York Times. June 3, 1971. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved April 7, 2020.
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- ^ Burke, Daniel (May 9, 2016). "Dozens of gay and lesbian Methodist clergy come out". CNN. Retrieved May 20, 2016.
Dozens of United Methodist clergy members came out as lesbian, gay or bisexual on Monday, defying their church's ban on "self-avowed practicing homosexuals" serving in ministry and essentially daring their supervisors to discipline them. ...The United Methodists' Book of Discipline states that all people are of "sacred worth" but denounces the "practice of homosexuality" as "incompatible with Christian teaching." Openly gay and lesbian clergy members can be removed from ministry. A Kansas minister who came out to her congregation in January, for example, faced a church trial. Such trials could be hard to prosecute, however. In 2011, a church court declined to discipline a lesbian pastor because she refused to answer personal questions about her sexuality.
- ^ Utley, Joanne S. (June 11, 2016). "27 Ordained, Commissioned in "Historic" Service". New York Annual Conference. Retrieved June 13, 2016.
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- ^ Brodie, Jessica (June 14, 2016). "From education to nondiscrimination: Six resolutions pass Annual Conference". South Carolina United Methodist Advocate. South Carolina Conference of the United Methodist Church. Retrieved June 20, 2016.
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- ^ Bloom, Linda (April 28, 2017). "Consecration of gay bishop against church law". UM News. The United Methodist Church. Archived from the original on May 2, 2017. Retrieved April 29, 2017.
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- ^ Bloom, Linda (February 26, 2019). "Court to GC2019: Legislation needs more work". United Methodist News Service. Retrieved March 3, 2019.
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- ^ Tabachnik, Sam (March 1, 2019). "Gay Methodist clergy in Colorado vow to remain "out and loud" after church strengthens LGBTQ restrictions". The Denver Post. Retrieved March 3, 2019.
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- ^ Bloom, Linda (April 26, 2019). "Court OKs part of Traditional Plan, exit plan". United Methodist News Service. Archived from the original on August 6, 2019. Retrieved April 27, 2019.
- ^ McFarlan Miller, Emily (April 26, 2019). "United Methodist court upholds Traditional Plan's ban on LGBTQ clergy, same sex marriage". Religion News Service. Retrieved April 27, 2019.
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- ^ Gryboski, Michael (November 8, 2022). "UMC body elects openly gay bishop in defiance of denomination's rules". The Christian Post. Retrieved November 8, 2022.
- ^ Hahn, Heather; Chikwanah, Eveline; Hodges, Sam (April 25, 2024). "General Conference gives regionalization green light". United Methodist News Service. Retrieved April 29, 2024.
- ^ "United Methodist Church moves closer to enabling regional decisions, paving the way for LGBTQ rights within church". The Associated Press. April 26, 2024. Retrieved April 29, 2024 – via CBS News.
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- ^ Smith, Peter (April 30, 2024). "United Methodists begin to reverse longstanding anti-LGBTQ policies". AP News. Retrieved April 30, 2024.
- ^ Graham, Ruth (May 1, 2024). "United Methodist Church Reverses Ban on Practicing Gay Clergy". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved May 1, 2024.
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- ^ Irwin, Lauren (May 1, 2024). "United Methodists repeal ban on LGBTQ clergy". The Hill. Retrieved May 1, 2024.
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- ^ Works of John Wesley, vol. XVI, page 304
- ^ Tucker, Karen B. Westerfield (March 8, 2001). American Methodist worship. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198029267. Retrieved December 31, 2007.
The authorization of healing services by the United Methodist Church in 1992 for its Book of Worship thus appeared to perpetuate the tendency to accentuate the restorative and consolatory over the confrontative.
- ^ American Methodist worship. Abingdon Press. Retrieved December 31, 2007.
The United Methodist Book of Worship includes the following services and prayers: A Service of Healing IA, Service of Healing II, A Service of Hope After Loss...
- ^ World Almanac & Book of Facts. World Almanac Books. 1995. ISBN 9780886877804. Retrieved December 31, 2007.
Conference and superintendent system; in United Methodist Church, general superintendents ... healing and sometimes exorcism; adult baptism; Lord's Supper
- ^ Ranger, Terence O., ed. (April 22, 2008). Evangelical Christianity and Democracy in Africa. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199721238. Retrieved November 21, 2012.
Indeed, anyone who has participated in the revivals and prayer-meetings and consultations and exorcisms of the United Methodist churches in Zimbabwe and Mozambique, which are addressed in the chapters by Mukonyora and Cruz e Silva, will know how very evangelical they are.
- ^ Tucker, Karen B. Westerfield (March 8, 2001). American Methodist worship. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198029267. Retrieved December 31, 2007.
The intentional return to the early Christian praxis also resulted in the first official Methodist instruction to lay hands on the sick and anoint them with oil, though some pastors throughout the Methodist family had, even in the nineteenth century, already made use of the scriptural custom found in the Gospels and in James 5:14–15, and the practice of laying on of hands had been commended in literature accompanying the 1965 Book of Worship.
- ^ 2008 Book of Discipline paragraph 1114.3
- ^ The United Methodist Hymnal. p. 7.[full citation needed]
- ^ Wesley, John. "The Duty of Constant Communion". Northwest Nazarene University. Archived from the original (Sermon) on July 27, 2009. Retrieved January 21, 2009 – via Wesley Center Online.
- ^ "This Holy Mystery". Archived from the original on March 27, 2011. Retrieved January 21, 2009.
- ^ General Board Of Discipleship of The United Methodist Church (November 15, 2016). Guidelines Small Group Ministries. Cokesbury. p. 31. ISBN 9781501829918.
- ^ Dresser, Thomas (May 4, 2015). Martha's Vineyard: A History. Arcadia Publishing Incorporated. p. 57. ISBN 9781625849045.
- ^ Chilcote, Paul W.; Warner, Laceye C. (February 13, 2008). The Study of Evangelism: Exploring a Missional Practice of the Church. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. p. 206. ISBN 9780802803917.
- ^ Hickman, Hoyt Leon (1984). United Methodist altars: a guide for the local church. Nashville, Tennessee: Abingdon Press. ISBN 0687429854.
The pulpit is on one side of the chancel, and a lectern or baptismal font is usually on the other side.
- ^ Lawrence, William Benjamin; Campbell, Dennis M.; Richey, Russell E., eds. (1998). The People(s)called Methodist: forms and reforms of their life. Abingdon Press. ISBN 9780687021994. Retrieved August 6, 2011.
The processional cross is placed to the far left, next to the Christian flag.
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He believes it is inappropriate to display the U.S. flag alone in worship services. "If a national flag is used in worship, I believe it should be used in tandem with the Christian flag. And the Christian flag, not the national flag, should be placed on the right hand of the speaker in the place of highest honor."
- ^ Miller, Bonita (June 9, 2011). Little Clifty United Methodist Church: Its History Through Its People. Little Clifty United Methodist Church. pp. 36–. ISBN 9781456867812.
- ^ "Nuts and Bolts II: The Theory, Practice, and Components of United Methodist Worship" (PDF). South Carolina Conference of The United Methodist Church (South Carolina Annual Conference. Retrieved March 18, 2014.
- ^ 1 Corinthians 11:1
- ^ "Saints Among Us". Time. December 29, 1975. Archived from the original on May 13, 2007.
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"Introduction to the Council of Bishops". Bishops.umc.org. February 8, 2008. Archived from the original on April 5, 2007. Retrieved July 25, 2012. - ^ "Glossary: Judicial Council". The people of The United Methodist Church. United Methodist Church. Archived from the original on July 15, 2019. Retrieved July 14, 2019.
"Judicial Council". Archives.umc.org. November 6, 2006. Retrieved July 25, 2012. - ^ "Philmethodist.com". Archived from the original on February 10, 2009. Retrieved September 29, 2025.
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- ^ Peck, J. Richard (July 6, 2007). "General Conference 101: All you ever wanted to know". The people of The United Methodist Church. United Methodist Church. Archived from the original on June 2, 2012. Retrieved July 25, 2012.
- ^ McFarlan Miller, Emily (August 13, 2019). "United Methodist Church scraps plans to host General Conference in the Philippines". Religion News Service. Archived from the original on December 4, 2024.
- ^ "Art. 101". Book of Discipline 2016 of the United Methodist Church.
- ^ "Council of Bishops". The people of The United Methodist Church. United Methodist Church. Archived from the original on July 14, 2019. Retrieved July 14, 2019.
"Bishop criticizes press, White House on Iraq". Bishops.umc.org. February 8, 2008. Archived from the original on July 7, 2012. Retrieved July 25, 2012. - ^ Peck, J. Richard (February 1, 2008). "Bush library opponents question process for approval". Worldwide Faith News. Archived from the original on January 12, 2012. Retrieved July 25, 2012.
- ^ United Methodist Church, Judicial Council, accessed 21 March 2023
- ^ United Methodist Communications. "About the Judicial Council". The United Methodist Church. Archived from the original on September 25, 2019. Retrieved December 2, 2019.
- ^ "Rules of Practice and Procedure". Archives.umc.org. November 6, 2006. Archived from the original on July 9, 2012. Retrieved July 25, 2012.
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- ^ Since its founding, Syracuse University has maintained a relationship with the United Methodist Church:
- "Syracuse University Bylaws, Scope: Trustees/University Governance". Syracuse University. May 14, 2011. Archived from the original on January 30, 2012. Retrieved December 16, 2011.
Three Trustees shall be elected by the Board to represent the North Central New York, Western New York and Wyoming Conferences of the United Methodist Church. The Syracuse University Board of Trustees and the named conferences may recommend persons for election as Trustees in this capacity. The representatives need not reside in the areas they represent.
- A Brief Report of Church Relatedness: Syracuse University – INCORPORATION AND THE METHODIST CHURCH. Syracuse University. June 15, 2010.
The current bylaws authorize the Board to elect three Organization Trustees: one Trustee each to represent the North Central New York, Western New York, and Wyoming conferences of the United Methodist Church. Both the conferences and the Board may recommend persons for election as Organization Trustees. Today Syracuse University is considered a Methodist-related institution. Syracuse University's affiliation is expressed in the tradition, though not regulation, of having a United Methodist minister serve as dean of Hendricks Chapel and in the University's participation in the annual University Teacher/Scholar Award sponsored by the Methodist Church. In addition, the University administers a number of Methodist-funded scholarships and houses the Bishop Ledden Endowed Professorship in the Department of Religion.
- Whalen, William Joseph (2002). Separated brethren: a review of Protestant, Anglican, Eastern Orthodox & other religions in the United States. Our Sunday Visitor. ISBN 9781931709057. Retrieved March 27, 2010.
Among Protestant denominations, Methodists take first place in hospitals and colleges. Some of their one hundred colleges and universities have all but severed ties with the denominations, but others remain definitely Methodist: Syracuse, Boston, Emory, Duke, Drew, Denver, and Southern Methodist. The church operates three hundred sixty schools and institutions overseas.
- "Syracuse University". International Association of Methodist Schools, Colleges, and Universities (IAMSCU). Archived from the original on July 23, 2011. Retrieved June 30, 2007.
- "United Methodist schools score high in rankings". The United Methodist Church. August 31, 2004. Archived from the original on July 1, 2012. Retrieved June 30, 2007.
Other United Methodist schools on the top national list are Syracuse (N.Y.) University (tied for 52nd); Boston University (tied for 56th); Southern Methodist University, Dallas (tied for 71st); and American University, Washington (tied for 86th).
- "Syracuse University Bylaws, Scope: Trustees/University Governance". Syracuse University. May 14, 2011. Archived from the original on January 30, 2012. Retrieved December 16, 2011.
- ^ "Prospectus 2021-2022" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on February 21, 2024.
- ^ "California-Nevada Conference of The UMC | Africa University: The school of hope in the valley of dreams". www.cnumc.org. Retrieved September 29, 2025.
- ^ Morrow, Kevin (March 20, 2015). "University Signs on to 'Justice and Dignity' Resolution". Syracuse University. Retrieved January 24, 2022.
"Syracuse University is proud to endorse this prophetic resolution for it represents the best of who we are and who we strive to be," Steinwert says. "As a United Methodist-related institution we are committed to creating a diverse and inclusive learning environment that nurtures a new generation of leaders ready to engage the world's most difficult challenges. ... While the University has maintained a strong relationship with the United Methodist Church, SU has identified itself as nonsectarian since 1920. While the University identifies itself as nonsectarian, it holds membership in NASCUMC and receives funding from the United Methodist Church.
- ^ "Boston University Names University Professor Herbert Mason United Methodist Scholar/Teacher of the Year" (Press release). Boston University. March 28, 2001. Archived from the original on December 26, 2010. Retrieved October 20, 2011.
Boston University has been historically affiliated with the United Methodist Church since 1839 when the Newbury Biblical Institute, the first Methodist seminary in the United States, was established in Newbury, Vermont.
- ^ "Duke University's Relation to the Methodist Church: the basics". Duke University. 2002. Archived from the original on June 12, 2010. Retrieved March 27, 2010.
Duke University has historical, formal, on-going, and symbolic ties with Methodism, but is an independent and non-sectarian institution ... Duke would not be the institution it is today without its ties to the Methodist Church. However, the Methodist Church does not own or direct the University. Duke is and has developed as a private nonprofit corporation which is owned and governed by an autonomous and self-perpetuating Board of Trustees
- ^ United Methodist Church – General Board of Higher Education and Ministry. United Methodist Church Affiliated Institutions Archived December 30, 2013, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved October 12, 2013.
- ^ Whalen, William Joseph (2002). Separated brethren: a review of Protestant, Anglican, Eastern Orthodox & other religions in the United States. Our Sunday Visitor. ISBN 9781931709057.
Among Protestant denominations, Methodists take first place in hospitals and colleges. Some of their one hundred colleges and universities have all but severed ties with the denominations, but others remain definitely Methodist: Syracuse, Boston, Emory, Duke, Drew, Denver, and Southern Methodist.
[permanent dead link] - ^ Chikwanah, Eveline (April 30, 2024). "Delegates celebrate success, growth of Africa University". UM News. United Methodist Church.
- ^ "United Methodist Theological Schools". General Board of Higher Education and Ministry of the United Methodist Church. Archived from the original on November 25, 2012. Retrieved November 23, 2012.
- ^ "America's Changing Religious Landscape". Pew Research Center: Religion & Public Life. May 12, 2015.
- ^ Murphy, Caryle (October 16, 2016). "The most and least educated U.S. religious group". Pew Research Center.
- ^ Leonhardt, David (May 13, 2011). "Faith, Education and Income". The New York Times. Retrieved May 13, 2011.
- ^ The United Methodist Book of Discipline, 2008
- ^ "Maud Jensen, 1904–1998". Archived from the original on March 25, 2012. Retrieved August 15, 2012.
- ^ Gal. 3:28
- ^ "Why Do United Methodists Ordain Women When the Bible Specifically Prohibits it?". The United Methodist Church. Retrieved March 19, 2007.
- ^ "Women's Service in the Church: The Biblical Basis". St. John's College. Archived from the original on September 13, 2016. Retrieved July 8, 2009.
- ^ "unsung-heroes-of-methodism-sarah-crosby | UMC.org". The United Methodist Church.
- ^ "Mary Bosanquet | UMC.org". The United Methodist Church.
- ^ "The role of women within Methodism (The University of Manchester Library)". www.library.manchester.ac.uk.
- ^ "Jasper Co. Historical Society - Helenor Archives". www.jcinhistory.org.
- ^ "Margaret Newton Van Cott". April 20, 2023.
- ^ a b c d e "Timeline of Women in Methodism | UMC.org". The United Methodist Church.
- ^ "Entry | Timelines | US Religion". The Association of Religion Data Archives (the ARDA).
- ^ "Women in the Methodist Clergy". June 13, 2024.
- ^ "50 years on, Central Jurisdiction's shadow looms". www.nyac.com.
- ^ "Why does the UMC ordain women? | UMC.org". The United Methodist Church.
- ^ https://www.bu.edu/shaw/publications/the-clergy-womens-retention-study/united-methodist-clergywomen-retention-study/#:~:text=The%20United%20Brethren%20Church%20approved%20the%20ordination,opposed%20to%20the%20ordination%20of%20women%2C%20however.
- ^ https://www.umc.org/en/content/ask-the-umc-when-did-the-church-first-ordain-women#:~:text=Mary%20Bosanquet%20Fletcher%20(1739%2D1815,United%20Brethren%20Church%20in%201889.
- ^ "Baltimore-Washington Conference UMC". www.bwcumc.org.
- ^ "Methodist History: The Uniting Conference of 1968 | UMC.org". The United Methodist Church.
- ^ https://www.umnews.org/en/news/amid-tumult-of-1968-a-church-came-together#:~:text=In%20a%20reversal%20of%20what,which%20was%20only%20part%2Dtime.
- ^ "Bishop Malone becomes first Black female President of COB | UMC.org". The United Methodist Church.
- ^ Paige, Mx Chris (September 12, 2019). "United Methodist Transgender Timeline".
- ^ http://s3.amazonaws.com/Website_Properties/general-conference/2016/dca/gc2016-daily-christian-advocate-051816-2369-2480.pdf
- ^ Dill, Amanda. "All Women, First Hmong Ordained; Bishop Cho Delivers Sermon at Ordination and Commissioning Service". www.wisconsinumc.org.
- ^ https://www.unitedmethodistbishops.org/newsdetail/bishop-harvey-makes-history-13984089#:~:text=WASHINGTON%2C%20D.C.%20%2D%20Bishop%20Cynthia%20Fierro,of%20The%20United%20Methodist%20Church.
- ^ The United Methodist Book of Discipline, 2008, ¶¶ 602, 315.
- ^ "Local Pastor". General Board of Higher Education & Ministry (UMC). Archived from the original on July 14, 2009. Retrieved July 8, 2009.
- ^ The United Methodist Book of Discipline, 2004 para. 225.
- ^ The United Methodist Book of Discipline, 2004 para. 216a&b.
- ^ The United Methodist Book of Discipline, 2004, para. 252k.
- ^ "Lay Speaking Ministries and The Book of Discipline". The United Methodist Church LSM. Archived from the original on July 5, 2007. Retrieved August 1, 2007.
- ^ "A History of the Office of Lay Speaker in United Methodism" (PDF). The United Methodist Church GBOD. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 9, 2007. Retrieved August 1, 2007.
- ^ a b c d "Lay Speaking Ministry in the United Methodist Church" (PDF). The United Methodist Church GBOD. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 9, 2007. Retrieved August 1, 2007.
- ^ "Certified Lay Minister". The United Methodist Church GBOD. Archived from the original on October 10, 2014. Retrieved October 6, 2014.
- ^ "Ministries of love, justice and service". ResourceUMC.
- ^ "Office of Deaconess & Home Missioner". United Women in Faith.
- ^ "United Methodist Office of Deaconess and Home Missioner – DOTAC".
- ^ ""Wesleyan Essentials of Christian Faith" August 18, 2009". Archived from the original on February 15, 2009. Retrieved August 18, 2009.
- ^ The rebirth of orthodoxy: signs of new life in Christianity. HarperCollins. 2003. ISBN 9780060097851. Retrieved June 8, 2007.
For the first time, the United Methodist Church voted to seek observer status in the National Association of Evangelicals and the World Evangelical Fellowship.
- ^ Balmer, Randall (1998). "The Future of American Protestantism". Catalyst Online: Contemporary Evangelical Perspectives for United Methodist Seminarians. Archived from the original on April 15, 2012. Retrieved November 11, 2012.
- ^ "Lutheran—United Methodist Dialogue". Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. Archived from the original on June 12, 2007. Retrieved June 8, 2007.
- ^ "Methodists yes to full communion with Lutherans; no on gay change". Ecumenical News International. Archived from the original on January 9, 2009. Retrieved May 16, 2007.
- ^ "Actions: 2009 ELCA Churchwide Assembly • Aug. 17–23, 2009 • Minneapolis, Minn". The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. Retrieved August 23, 2009.
- ^ "ELCA Assembly Adopts Full Communion with the United Methodist Church". The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. Retrieved August 23, 2009.
- ^ "UMC, ELCA conclude dialogue, look toward votes". The United Methodist Church. Archived from the original on June 7, 2011. Retrieved May 16, 2007.
- ^ "Quick Facts". UM News. The United Methodist Church. Archived from the original on February 12, 2018. Retrieved January 30, 2018.
- ^ "Mission". Commission on Pan-Methodist Cooperation & Union. Archived from the original on September 28, 2007. Retrieved August 1, 2007.
- ^ Banks, Adelle M. (May 7, 2012). "Methodists Reach Across Historic Racial Boundaries with Communion Pact". Christianity Today. Retrieved November 11, 2012. (access url updated June 16, 2016)
- ^ "The Methodist Church in India: Bangalore Episcopal Area". The United Methodist Church GBGM. Archived from the original on May 24, 2012. Retrieved October 18, 2007.
- ^ "India Methodists celebrate 150 years of ministry". The United Methodist Church. Archived from the original on December 6, 2006. Retrieved October 18, 2007.
- ^ Communications, United Methodist. "Affiliated Churches: South America – The United Methodist Church". The United Methodist Church. Archived from the original on May 28, 2016. Retrieved May 26, 2016.
- ^ "Participating Denominations". Retrieved December 31, 2007.
Brethren in Christ Church, Christian & Missionary Alliance, Christian & Missionary Alliance – Canada, Church of God – Anderson, Church of God – Cleveland, Church of the Nazarene, Free Methodist Church, Shield of Faith, The Evangelical Church, The Foursquare Church, The Salvation Army, The Wesleyan Church, United Methodist Church
- ^ Melton, J. Gordon (2005). Encyclopedia of Protestantism. Infobase Publishing. p. 145. ISBN 978-0-8160-6983-5.
- ^ LaBarr, Joan G. (July 20, 2006). "World Methodists approve further ecumenical dialogue". The United Methodist Church. Archived from the original on July 21, 2006. Retrieved June 8, 2007.
- ^ Wooden, Cindy (July 24, 2006). "Methodists adopt Catholic-Lutheran declaration on justification". Catholic News Service (CNS). Archived from the original on July 25, 2006. Retrieved June 8, 2007.
- ^ "Full Communion Relationships". Council of Bishops of the United Methodist Church. Retrieved March 7, 2025.
- ^ "List of UMC partnerships". Council of Bishops of the United Methodist Church. Retrieved March 7, 2025.
- ^ "Ecumenical Partnerships and Organizations". Council of Bishops of the United Methodist Church. Retrieved March 7, 2025.
- ^ Patterson, Jim (May 2024). "Full communion between Methodists, Episcopalians gets closer". Episcopal News Service. Retrieved March 7, 2025.
- ^ LeBlanc, Douglas; Michael, Mark (May 2024). "Methodists Approve Full Communion". The Living Church. Retrieved March 7, 2025.
- ^ a b c "Historic Archive CD and Yearbook of American & Canadian Churches". The National Council of Churches. Archived from the original on May 31, 2012. Retrieved December 8, 2009.
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- ^ a b c Tooley, Mark (November 2008). "African Power". Touchstone. Retrieved December 22, 2010.
- ^ a b c Tooley, Mark (May 21, 2010). "Resenting African Christianity". The American Spectator. Archived from the original on November 28, 2010. Retrieved December 22, 2010.
- ^ "United Methodists Around the World". umc.org. US: United Methodist Church. Archived from the original on November 21, 2022. Retrieved November 5, 2022.
- ^ "2020 annual conference membership and attendance (US)". General Council on Finance and Administration – The United Methodist Church. Archived from the original on November 25, 2020. Retrieved January 1, 2022.
- ^ "UMData | Statistics". www.umdata.org. Retrieved October 24, 2025.
- ^ Bullard, Laura (May 14, 2024). "What the Methodist split tells us about America". Vox. Archived from the original on April 21, 2025. Retrieved April 26, 2025.
- ^ a b c Tooley, Mark (November 25, 2024). "United Methodist Collapse?". Juicy Ecumenism. Retrieved October 19, 2025.
Further reading
[edit]- Cameron, Richard M. ed. Methodism and Society in Historical Perspective, (4 vol., New York: Abingdon Press, 1961)
- Hatch, Nathan O. The Democratization of American Christianity (1989) credits the Methodists and Baptists for making Americans more equalitarian
- Hallam, David J. A. (2003). Eliza Asbury: her cottage and her son. Brewin Books. ISBN 1-85858-235-0. Archived from the original on March 29, 2019. Retrieved March 29, 2019. Tells the human story behind Asbury's decision to come to America
- Lyerly, Cynthia Lynn Methodism and the Southern Mind, 1770–1810, (1998)
- Mathews, Donald G. Slavery and Methodism: A Chapter in American Morality, 1780–1845 (1965)
- Mathews-Gardner, A. Lanethea. "From Ladies Aid to NGO: Transformations in Methodist Women's Organizing in Postwar America", in Laughlin, Kathleen A., and Jacqueline L. Castledine, eds., Breaking the Wave: Women, Their Organizations, and Feminism, 1945–1985 (2011) pp. 99–112
- McDowell, John Patrick. The Social Gospel in the South: The Woman's Home Mission Movement in the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, 1886–1939 (1982)
- Meyer, Donald The Protestant Search for Political Realism, 1919–1941, (1988) ISBN 0-8195-5203-8
- Norwood, John Nelson. The Schism in the Methodist Episcopal Church 1844: A Study of Slavery and Ecclesiastical Politics (Porcupine Press, 1976)
- Posey, Walter Brownlow. Frontier Mission: A History of Religion West of the Southern Appalachians to 1861 (1966)
- Richey, Russell E. Early American Methodism (1991)
- Richey, Russell E. and Kenneth E. Rowe, eds. Rethinking Methodist History: A Bicentennial Historical Consultation (1985), historiographical essays by scholars
- Robert, Dana L., and David W. Scott. "World Growth of the United Methodist Church in Comparative Perspective: A Brief Statistical Analysis." Methodist Review 3 (2011): 37–54.
- Schmidt, Jean Miller Grace Sufficient: A History of Women in American Methodism, 1760–1939, (1999)
- Schneider, A. Gregory. The Way of the Cross Leads Home: The Domestication of American Methodism (1993)
- Stevens, Abel. History of the Methodist Episcopal Church in the United States of America (1884) online
- Sweet, William Warren Methodism in American History, (1954) 472pp.
- Teasdale, Mark R. Methodist Evangelism, American Salvation: The Home Missions of the Methodist Episcopal Church, 1860–1920 (Wipf and Stock Publishers, 2014)
- Tucker, Karen B. Westerfield. American Methodist Worship (2001)
- Vickers, Jason E., ed. The Cambridge companion to American Methodism (2013), 18 wide-ranging essays by scholars; online review
- Wigger, John H. Taking Heaven by Storm: Methodism and the Rise of Popular Christianity in America, (1998) 269pp; focus on 1770–1910
- Wigger, John H.. and Nathan O. Hatch, eds. Methodism and the Shaping of American Culture (2001)
Primary sources
[edit]- De Puy, William Harrison, ed. (1921). The Methodist Year-book: 1921.
- Norwood, Fredrick A., ed. Sourcebook of American Methodism (1982)
- Richey, Russell E., Rowe, Kenneth E. and Schmidt, Jean Miller (eds.) The Methodist Experience in America: a sourcebook, (2000) ISBN 978-0687246731. 756 p. of original documents
- Sweet, William Warren, ed. Religion on the American Frontier: Vol. 4, The Methodists,1783–1840: A Collection of Source Materials, (1946) 800 pp. of documents regarding the American frontier
External links
[edit]United Methodist Church
View on GrokipediaHistory
Origins in the Methodist Revival
The Methodist Revival arose in mid-18th-century England as an evangelical movement within the Church of England, initiated by Anglican clergyman John Wesley (1703–1791) and his brother Charles Wesley (1707–1788), who composed over 6,000 hymns central to Methodist worship. At Oxford University in the late 1720s, the Wesleys and associates formed the Holy Club, a group dedicated to systematic Bible study, fasting, and charitable works, earning the pejorative label "Methodists" for their disciplined piety. This precursor emphasized personal holiness and scriptural authority amid perceived Anglican formalism.[9][10] John Wesley's pivotal evangelical conversion occurred on May 24, 1738, at a Moravian society meeting on Aldersgate Street in London, where he described his "heart strangely warmed" by assurance of God's pardoning love, shifting his focus from ritual to experiential faith. Influenced by Moravian pietism encountered during a failed 1735–1738 mission to Georgia colony, Wesley began itinerant preaching, including open-air sermons from 1739 alongside George Whitefield, drawing thousands from neglected social classes like miners and laborers in Bristol and Kingswood. These gatherings emphasized repentance, free grace, and Arminian soteriology, rejecting predestination in favor of universal atonement.[11][9] The revival's organizational innovation lay in Methodist societies and classes—small accountability groups meeting weekly for spiritual oversight, debt relief, and moral discipline—fostering rapid growth without immediate schism from Anglicanism. By the 1740s, field preaching and lay preachers expanded the movement, countering opposition from clergy and mobs who viewed it as enthusiastic fanaticism. Wesley's publication of sermons, journals, and the Collection of Hymns for the Use of the People Called Methodists (1780) standardized doctrines of prevenient grace, justification by faith, and Christian perfection.[10][12] This English revival laid the doctrinal and structural foundations for transatlantic Methodism; Wesley dispatched lay preachers Richard Boardman and Joseph Pilmore to the American colonies in 1769, seeding societies that evolved into independent denominations post-Revolution, including precursors to the United Methodist Church. By Wesley's death on March 2, 1791, Methodism claimed around 70,000 adherents in Britain and circuits in America, prioritizing scriptural Christianity, social witness against vices like gin consumption, and missions amid industrialization's dislocations.[13][10]Antecedent Denominations and Early American Methodism
The arrival of Methodism in America predated the Revolutionary War, initiated by lay enthusiasts rather than formal clergy dispatched from Britain. In 1766, Irish immigrant Philip Embury began preaching in New York City, supported by Barbara Heck and influenced by earlier contacts with Wesley's societies; this effort expanded with the aid of British soldier Thomas Webb, who converted a rigging loft into a preaching house.[13] John Wesley responded by sending the first itinerant preachers, Richard Boardman and Joseph Pilmoor, who landed in New York in October 1769, marking the organized introduction of Methodist circuits on the continent.[14] Francis Asbury, a young English preacher, arrived in Philadelphia in 1771 and quickly assumed leadership amid growing circuits, refusing to return to England during the war despite Loyalist sympathies among some Methodists; by 1775, American Methodist adherents numbered around 4,000 across societies from New York to the Carolinas.[13] [15] Post-independence, the need for episcopal oversight and separation from the Church of England prompted Wesley to ordain Thomas Coke as superintendent in 1784 and authorize him to select another for America. Coke convened the Christmas Conference in Baltimore from December 24, 1784, to January 3, 1785, attended by 60 preachers representing about 15,000 members; there, Asbury was elected and ordained as co-superintendent (the title "bishop" adopted later), the Methodist Episcopal Church (MEC) was formally constituted with a disciplined connectional structure, Sunday service liturgy adapted from Anglican rites, and deacons and elders ordained to administer sacraments independently.[16] [17] [15] This organization emphasized itinerancy, class meetings for accountability, and Wesleyan emphases on personal holiness, enabling rapid growth: by 1787, membership exceeded 40,000, and circuits spanned the frontier under Asbury's direction until his death in 1816.[14] Subsequent divisions shaped the antecedent denominations of the United Methodist Church. The MEC split in 1844 over slavery and episcopal authority, forming the Methodist Episcopal Church, South (MECS), which accommodated slaveholding while the northern MEC opposed it; a third body, the Methodist Protestant Church, emerged in 1830 from lay-led protests against clerical hierarchy.[13] These reunited in 1939 as The Methodist Church, with approximately 7.7 million members by the mid-1960s, preserving the MEC's polity of conferences, bishops, and itinerant superintendency.[18] Parallel to the Methodist lineage, the Evangelical United Brethren (EUB) tradition arose from German-language pietist movements among Pennsylvania immigrants. The Church of the United Brethren in Christ originated in 1800 under Philip William Otterbein and Martin Boehm, emphasizing simple gospel preaching and lay equality; similarly, the Evangelical Association formed that year under Jacob Albright, focusing on Arminian theology and outreach to German speakers.[19] After internal schisms, these merged in 1946 as the EUB Church in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, with about 750,000 members, adopting a congregational-episcopal hybrid governance while retaining frontier revivalist roots.[19] [18] These two streams—the Methodist Church and EUB—constituted the direct antecedents, uniting on April 23, 1968, in Dallas to form the United Methodist Church amid broader ecumenical dialogues, though preserving distinct regional and ethnic influences.[20]The 1968 Merger and Initial Consolidation
The United Methodist Church was formed on April 23, 1968, through the merger of The Methodist Church and The Evangelical United Brethren (EUB) Church at the Uniting Conference held in Dallas, Texas.[21] The Methodist Church, tracing its roots to earlier American Methodist bodies, had approximately 10.3 million members at the time, while the EUB Church, itself the product of a 1946 union between the Evangelical Church and the Church of the United Brethren in Christ, numbered around 750,000 members.[22] This merger represented a deliberate effort to consolidate Wesleyan traditions in the United States, building on prior ecumenical dialogues that emphasized shared emphases on personal piety, social holiness, and itinerant ministry.[18] The merger process culminated after years of negotiations, with enabling legislation passed by both denominations' general conferences in 1966.[23] Key provisions included the abolition of The Methodist Church's Central Jurisdiction, a racially segregated administrative structure established in 1939 that had confined most African American congregations to a single oversight body despite integration efforts elsewhere; its dissolution integrated Black members into five geographic jurisdictions, marking a formal end to enforced racial separation within the new denomination.[24] Additionally, the merger granted women full clergy rights, including ordination and eligibility for episcopal election, reversing restrictions in prior Methodist unions and aligning with broader 20th-century shifts toward gender inclusivity in ministry.[25] Initial consolidation efforts focused on unifying governance, doctrine, and resources under a single Book of Discipline, which outlined the church's polity, rituals, and organizational structure.[21] The new denomination adopted a connectional system with five geographic jurisdictions, 73 annual conferences, and a General Conference as the supreme legislative body, meeting quadrennially.[25] Administrative bodies such as the General Council on Ministries and boards for missions, education, and health were established to coordinate programs across the former denominations' assets, which included thousands of churches, schools, and hospitals. The merger occurred against the backdrop of national unrest—including the assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy, urban riots, and Vietnam War protests—yet delegates prioritized unity, with the new church's total membership exceeding 11 million.[25] A revised hymnal and common logo featuring a cross and flame were introduced to symbolize the blended heritage.[26] Early challenges in consolidation involved reconciling differences in liturgical practices and regional strongholds, particularly in the Midwest where EUB influence was pronounced, but the structure facilitated rapid integration of pension systems, publishing houses like Abingdon Press, and missionary enterprises.[18] By 1972, the first General Conference of the United Methodist Church affirmed the merger's framework, enacting initial social resolutions while maintaining core doctrinal standards from the Articles of Religion and Wesley's sermons.[21] This period laid the foundation for expanded global outreach, though latent tensions over theology and authority would emerge later.[23]Expansion and Internal Tensions (1968–2019)
Following the 1968 merger, the United Methodist Church pursued expanded missionary efforts and organizational development, particularly in Africa and Asia, where annual conferences proliferated to support burgeoning congregations. In Africa, the church transitioned from a single central conference in 1968 to multiple episcopal areas by the 1980s, with further subdivisions approved due to rapid growth; for example, a fourth episcopal area was established in the Congo Central Conference in 2012 to accommodate increasing membership.[21] [27] Institutions like Africa University, founded in Zimbabwe in 1988 and opening in 1992 with students from six countries, exemplified educational outreach tied to evangelistic expansion.[21] Globally, the church integrated autonomous affiliates, such as those in Sierra Leone and Nigeria in 1980, and Côte d'Ivoire in 2008, reflecting a shift toward a more international structure.[21] Membership trends during this period showed divergence: U.S. professing members declined from approximately 10.3 million in 1968 to 5.4 million by 2019, amid broader mainline Protestant losses, while international growth—driven largely by Africa—pushed total global membership above 12 million by the late 2010s, with non-U.S. members comprising over half.[28] [29] This expansion included disaster relief initiatives, such as United Methodist Committee on Relief (UMCOR) efforts raising $70 million for Hurricane Katrina recovery in 2005 and $45 million for Haiti earthquake aid in 2010, underscoring institutional outreach.[21] Internal tensions emerged prominently over theological and ethical issues, particularly human sexuality, straining unity between U.S.-centric progressive factions and conservative international delegates who emphasized scriptural authority. The 1972 General Conference introduced the church's Social Principles, including a statement deeming "the practice of homosexuality...incompatible with Christian teaching," alongside calls for pastoral care without condemnation of persons.[30] This marked the first major public debate on the topic, setting a pattern of contention that dominated subsequent quadrennial sessions.[31] Debates intensified in the 1980s and 1990s, with the 1980 General Conference rejecting a ban on ordaining homosexuals but later sessions reinforcing restrictions; by 1996, the Book of Discipline explicitly prohibited "self-avowing practicing homosexuals" from clergy candidacy and barred ministers from conducting same-sex union ceremonies.[21] [32] Progressive advocacy groups, such as the United Methodist Gay Caucus formed in 1975, pressed for inclusion, leading to protests and judicial challenges, while global growth amplified conservative voices opposing doctrinal liberalization.[21] These conflicts highlighted deeper divides over biblical interpretation, with every General Conference from 1972 onward addressing sexuality, often resulting in upheld traditional prohibitions amid vocal dissent.[31] By the 2010s, tensions peaked, culminating in the 2016 General Conference protests for LGBTQ+ clergy ordination and the 2019 special session in St. Louis, where delegates narrowly adopted the Traditional Plan—affirming bans on same-sex marriages and gay clergy ordination—while introducing a disaffiliation pathway allowing congregations to exit with assets under set conditions.[21] This outcome, supported by a majority including African delegates, underscored the church's global conservative tilt but failed to resolve underlying fractures, foreshadowing further realignments.[33]Schisms, Disaffiliations, and Doctrinal Realignment (2020–Present)
The United Methodist Church (UMC) underwent a major schism starting in 2020, driven primarily by irreconcilable differences over the interpretation of biblical teachings on human sexuality, including the ordination of clergy who openly practice homosexuality and the performance of same-sex marriages. These tensions, simmering since the 1970s, escalated after the 2019 special General Conference upheld traditional prohibitions in the Book of Discipline but adopted Paragraph 2553, which permitted local churches to disaffiliate by paying two years of apportionments, pension liabilities, and other exit costs, with the process extended through annual conference votes until December 31, 2023.[34] Disaffiliations accelerated amid the COVID-19 pandemic's postponement of the 2020 General Conference, as conservative congregations cited progressive defiance of denominational rules—such as unauthorized ordinations and ceremonies—as evidence of eroding scriptural authority.[35] By the end of 2023, 7,631 U.S. congregations had disaffiliated, comprising approximately 25% of pre-split churches and 24% of U.S. membership, with disproportionate losses among larger, rural, and Southern congregations that prioritized adherence to traditional Methodist doctrine on marriage as between one man and one woman.[36][6] Many departing churches aligned with the Global Methodist Church (GMC), launched on May 1, 2022, as a new denomination committed to Wesleyan orthodoxy, including affirmation of the Book of Discipline's historic stance on sexuality and a congregational model emphasizing local autonomy and scriptural holiness.[37] The GMC grew to over 1,400 congregations by early 2023, drawing primarily from disaffiliated UMC bodies in the U.S. and provisional support from some international Methodists.[38] The delayed 2024 General Conference in Charlotte, North Carolina, marked a doctrinal pivot for the remaining UMC, as delegates—dominated by U.S. progressives—removed bans on ordaining "self-avowed practicing homosexuals" as clergy, eliminated penalties for conducting same-sex marriages, and deleted the 52-year-old declaration that "the practice of homosexuality is incompatible with Christian teaching."[39][40] These changes, opposed by a majority of African and Eurasian delegates who emphasized fidelity to biblical texts like Leviticus 18:22 and Romans 1:26-27, redefined marriage in the Social Principles as a union of "two people of consenting age" and introduced regional paragraphs allowing conferences to adapt policies on sexuality.[41] Post-conference, the UMC's U.S. membership continued declining, with ongoing exits in some areas despite the closed disaffiliation window, while international divisions persisted; several African bishops publicly rejected the revisions as culturally imposed and biblically unfaithful, signaling potential further fragmentation.[29] This realignment has consolidated progressive theological emphases within the UMC, such as contextual ethics over absolute scriptural norms, contrasting with the departing groups' commitment to traditional doctrines of sin, repentance, and assurance of pardon rooted in John Wesley's teachings.[42]Theology and Doctrine
Foundational Wesleyan Principles
The United Methodist Church's theology is fundamentally shaped by the teachings of John Wesley, founder of Methodism, who emphasized a holistic understanding of salvation encompassing personal piety and social holiness. Wesley defined holiness as "universal love filling the heart, and governing the life," insisting that true faith manifests in both belief and action within community, as he stated, "The gospel of Christ knows of no religion, but social; no holiness but social holiness."[2] This heritage underscores the UMC's doctrinal standards, including Wesley's Explanatory Notes Upon the New Testament (1755), selected sermons, and the Articles of Religion adapted from the Anglican Thirty-Nine Articles, which affirm core Christian doctrines like the Trinity, Christ's atonement, and justification by faith.[43] Central to Wesleyan principles is the doctrine of grace operating in three dimensions: prevenient, justifying, and sanctifying. Prevenient grace, God's initiating love extended to all humanity through Christ's atonement, restores the capacity for free response to God, countering total depravity by enabling recognition of sin and openness to the gospel prior to conscious faith.[44] Justifying grace effects forgiveness and acceptance as pardon through faith in Christ's redemptive work, as Wesley described it as "another word for pardon" involving release from sin's penalty.[45] Sanctifying grace then empowers ongoing growth toward perfection in love, pursuing "Christian perfection" or entire sanctification, where believers are cleansed from willful sin and filled with love for God and neighbor, though not implying impeccability.[2] This Arminian framework rejects limited atonement and irresistible grace, affirming unlimited provision of salvation for all who respond freely.[43] United Methodists employ the Wesleyan Quadrilateral as a method for theological discernment, balancing Scripture as the primary authority with tradition, reason, and personal experience. Though formalized by theologian Albert Outler, it reflects Wesley's practice of interpreting the Bible through historical Christian consensus, logical analysis, and lived faith, ensuring doctrine aligns with scriptural primacy while engaging human faculties.[3] This approach informs UMC beliefs in the assurance of salvation via the witness of the Spirit and victory over sin through disciplined means of grace like prayer, Scripture study, and communal accountability.[46] Wesley's three General Rules guide practical discipleship: "do no harm" by avoiding evil, "do good" through acts of mercy and justice, and "attend upon all the ordinances of God" including worship, sacraments, and fellowship.[2] These rules, echoed in the UMC Book of Discipline's General Rule of Discipleship—"to witness to Jesus Christ in the world and to follow his teachings through acts of compassion, justice, worship, and devotion"—integrate personal transformation with societal engagement, fostering holiness as a communal pursuit.[2] This emphasis on experiential faith and ethical living distinguishes Wesleyan theology, prioritizing heart renewal and outward fruit as evidence of genuine Christianity.[43]Core Beliefs and Confessions
The doctrinal standards of the United Methodist Church (UMC) consist primarily of the Articles of Religion and the Confession of Faith, which together articulate its foundational Christian beliefs.[47] These documents affirm core orthodox doctrines shared with historic Christianity, including the Trinity, the deity and humanity of Jesus Christ, the authority of Scripture for salvation, original sin, justification by faith, and the sacraments of baptism and Holy Communion.[48] [49] The UMC interprets these standards as complementary, providing a framework for belief that emphasizes God's grace, personal holiness, and accountability to Scripture.[47] The Articles of Religion, numbering 25, were adapted by John Wesley in 1784 from the Church of England's 39 Articles for the newly independent Methodist Episcopal Church in America.[48] They begin with Article I on faith in the Holy Trinity, declaring God as one eternal being in three coequal persons: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.[48] Article II affirms Christ's incarnation, stating that the Word became truly human while remaining fully divine, conceived by the Holy Spirit and born of the Virgin Mary.[48] Subsequent articles uphold the sufficiency of Scripture for salvation (Article V), the resurrection of the body, final judgment, and eternal life for the righteous and punishment for the wicked (Article III).[48] On sin and salvation, Article VII acknowledges original sin inhering in all humanity, rendering people incapable of good without divine grace, while Article IX defines justification as forgiveness through faith alone, not works.[48] The articles endorse two sacraments—baptism (including infant baptism) and the Lord's Supper—as means of grace ordained by Christ (Articles XVI–XVIII), rejecting transubstantiation but affirming Christ's real spiritual presence in Communion.[48] They also prohibit doctrines like purgatory, worship of saints or images, and the invocation of saints (Articles XIV, XXII).[48] The Confession of Faith, comprising 16 articles, originates from the Evangelical United Brethren Church and was incorporated into UMC standards upon the 1968 merger.[49] It echoes the Articles in professing one God as eternal Creator, Sovereign, and Preserver (Article I), Jesus Christ as fully God and fully human, crucified for sins, resurrected, and ascended (Article II), and the Holy Spirit as proceeding from Father and Son to sanctify believers (Article III).[49] Article IV declares the Holy Bible as containing all things necessary for salvation and the true rule of Christian faith and practice.[49] The confession addresses sin as willful disobedience corrupting human nature (Article V), reconciliation through Christ's atonement received by faith (Article VII), and the church as the community of the new covenant, marked by baptism and Communion (Articles VIII–IX).[49] It anticipates Christ's return for judgment, with the righteous entering eternal life and the unrighteous facing eternal separation from God (Article XII).[49] These confessions do not include the early ecumenical creeds (such as the Apostles' or Nicene) as binding standards, following Wesley's omission of the Anglican article endorsing them; however, the creeds are recited in UMC worship to affirm shared historic faith.[50] Doctrinal interpretation in the UMC employs the Wesleyan Quadrilateral—Scripture as primary authority, informed by tradition, reason, and personal experience—as a methodological guideline rather than a confessional equal to the Articles or Confession.[51] This approach privileges Scripture as the ultimate norm while allowing reasoned engagement with other sources, though tensions arise when experiential or progressive interpretations conflict with the explicit orthodox affirmations in the standards.[3]Distinctive Emphases: Grace, Sanctification, and Assurance
The United Methodist Church inherits from John Wesley a theology that emphasizes God's grace as operative in human life through distinct yet interconnected phases: prevenient grace, which awakens the human will prior to conscious faith; justifying grace, which effects forgiveness and reconciliation at conversion; and sanctifying grace, which empowers ongoing growth in holiness.[44] Wesley described prevenient grace as God's initiative restoring free will impaired by original sin, enabling all persons to respond to divine overtures regardless of prior condition.[45] Justifying grace, experienced in the moment of faith, imputes Christ's righteousness, marking the instantaneous transition from estrangement to adoption as children of God.[44] Sanctifying grace then sustains a progressive journey toward maturity, culminating potentially in entire sanctification, a state of perfect love where inward sin is eradicated, though not implying sinless perfection in action or infallible judgment.[49] Sanctification in Methodist doctrine is both gradual and instantaneous, beginning at justification and advancing through means of grace such as prayer, Scripture, sacraments, and Christian community, with Wesley asserting that believers may attain "Christian perfection" or entire sanctification in this life as a second work of grace subsequent to regeneration.[52] This doctrine, central to Wesleyan optimism about salvation, posits that entire sanctification delivers from the dominion of sin, filling the heart with pure love for God and neighbor, yet allows for subsequent backsliding if neglected.[45] United Methodists affirm this as attainable by all regenerated believers, distinguishing it from mere moral improvement by its reliance on divine empowerment rather than human effort alone, though contemporary interpretations vary in emphasis, with some prioritizing progressive growth over crisis experiences.[49] Assurance of salvation, another hallmark, refers to the confident knowledge of pardon and acceptance through the Holy Spirit's witness to the believer's spirit, as Wesley experienced on May 24, 1738, at Aldersgate Street, when his "heart was strangely warmed" with the realization that Christ had taken away his sins.[53] Unlike Calvinist perseverance of the saints, Methodist assurance is not unconditional or eternal security but conditional upon continued faith, subject to loss through willful sin, yet recoverable through repentance.[54] Wesley taught that true assurance manifests in fruits such as peace, joy, and obedience, serving as motivation for holy living rather than presumption, and is normatively available to believers as an empirical confirmation of faith's validity.[55] This emphasis integrates assurance with sanctification, viewing it as dynamic evidence of grace's ongoing work.[52]Theological Divergences and Progressive Interpretations
Within the United Methodist Church, theological divergences have increasingly centered on the application of the Wesleyan Quadrilateral—comprising scripture, tradition, reason, and experience—as a method for doctrinal interpretation. Progressive factions emphasize reason and personal experience as co-equal or even primary lenses, often reinterpreting biblical texts in light of contemporary social sciences, psychological insights, and individual testimonies, which can subordinate the plain reading of scripture and historic Methodist tradition. This approach, formalized in UMC documents like the Book of Discipline, has been critiqued by traditionalists for elevating subjective experience over scriptural primacy, a tension exacerbated by institutional influences in seminaries where progressive hermeneutics predominate.[3][56] A prominent divergence manifests in interpretations of human sexuality, where progressives advocate for affirming same-sex relationships and transgender identities by appealing to evolving understandings of orientation as innate and non-volitional, drawing on empirical data from behavioral sciences rather than biblical prohibitions against homosexual practice. This stance contrasts with the church's longstanding Disciplinary affirmation since 1972 that "the practice of homosexuality is incompatible with Christian teaching," rooted in scriptural passages such as Leviticus 18:22 and Romans 1:26-27, interpreted traditionally as normative for all believers. Progressive scholars, such as James Brownson, argue through the quadrilateral that cultural context and relational ethics supersede literalism, enabling policies like the ordination of self-avowed practicing homosexuals, a shift formalized at the 2024 General Conference where bans on such ordinations and same-sex marriages were removed by margins exceeding 60%.[57][58][59] Broader progressive interpretations extend to soteriology and ecclesiology, reframing Wesleyan emphases on personal sanctification and assurance of salvation toward a collective social gospel, prioritizing systemic justice over individual repentance and holiness. For instance, doctrines of grace are sometimes recast to de-emphasize sin's personal culpability in favor of structural oppression as the primary barrier to salvation, aligning with liberation theology influences that integrate Marxist critiques despite Wesley's own Arminian focus on free will and moral accountability. These views, prevalent in UMC-affiliated academic circles, have contributed to internal schisms, with over 7,600 U.S. congregations disaffiliating by mid-2024 under Paragraph 2553 provisions, citing irreconcilable departures from orthodox authority. Traditionalists contend this progressive trajectory reflects a capitulation to secular culture, undermining the empirical witness of Methodism's historic revivals, which prioritized scriptural fidelity and transformative conversions.[60][61]Social Positions and Ethical Stances
Traditional Biblical Teachings on Morality
The traditional biblical teachings on morality, as historically interpreted within Methodism and the United Methodist Church (UMC), emphasize alignment with God's revealed will in Scripture, particularly through the lenses of creation order, the Ten Commandments, and New Testament exhortations to holiness.[62] These teachings view human morality as rooted in the divine image (Genesis 1:26-27), calling believers to pursue personal and social sanctification by avoiding sin and cultivating virtues like love, justice, and purity.[63] John Wesley, the founder of Methodism, underscored this in his sermons, such as "The Almost Christian," where he described true Christianity as inward and outward holiness, condemning vices like drunkenness, dishonesty, and unchastity as contrary to scriptural mandates.[64] Central to these teachings is the sanctity of marriage as a lifelong covenant between one man and one woman, reflecting the Creator's design in Genesis 2:24 and affirmed by Jesus in Matthew 19:4-6.[65] The UMC's pre-2020 Book of Discipline explicitly stated that "we support laws in civil society that define marriage as the union of one man and one woman," grounding this in biblical texts that prohibit adultery (Exodus 20:14) and fornication (1 Corinthians 6:18) as violations of covenant fidelity.[66] Adultery, defined as sexual relations outside marriage, was condemned as a grave sin disrupting familial and communal order, with Wesley equating it to idolatry in its betrayal of divine trust.[67] Fornication, encompassing premarital or extramarital sex, similarly contravenes the call to bodily purity in 1 Thessalonians 4:3-5, traditionally enforced through Methodist class meetings for accountability.[68] On human sexuality, traditional Methodist interpretation holds that sexual intimacy is reserved exclusively for heterosexual marriage, deeming homosexual practice incompatible with Christian teaching based on passages like Leviticus 18:22, Romans 1:26-27, and 1 Corinthians 6:9-10.[65] The 2016 Book of Discipline reiterated: "The United Methodist Church does not condone the practice of homosexuality," viewing it as a departure from the binary male-female complementarity established at creation.[66] [69] This stance extended to rejecting other deviations, such as polygamy or bestiality, as distortions of God's ordinance for human flourishing.[70] Broader moral imperatives, including prohibitions against theft, false witness, and covetousness (Exodus 20:15-17), were integrated into Wesleyan "social holiness," promoting ethical conduct in economic and civic life as evidence of regenerating grace.[71] These teachings prioritize scriptural authority within the Wesleyan Quadrilateral—Scripture, tradition, reason, and experience—while subordinating reason and experience to the Bible's plain sense on moral absolutes.[62] Historically, UMC clergy were charged with upholding them, barring ordination or marriage rites for those in unrepentant violation, as seen in Judicial Council rulings prior to 2019.[65] This framework aimed at entire sanctification, where believers, empowered by grace, resist sinful inclinations toward moral perfection in love.[72]Evolution Toward Inclusivity on Sexuality and Marriage
The United Methodist Church's official stance on human sexuality initially aligned with traditional Christian teachings, viewing the practice of homosexuality as incompatible with Scripture and affirming marriage as between one man and one woman. In 1972, the newly formed denomination's Book of Discipline and Social Principles first addressed the issue, declaring that "the practice of homosexuality is incompatible with Christian teaching" and stating, "We do not recommend marriage between two persons of the same sex."[21][73] This position, rooted in Wesleyan emphasis on scriptural authority and personal holiness, was reaffirmed in subsequent General Conferences, including a 1984 prohibition on ordaining "self-avowed practicing homosexuals" as clergy.[74] Tensions emerged in the 1980s and intensified through the 1990s as progressive caucuses, such as the Reconciling Ministries Network (founded in 1991), advocated for revisions, citing inclusivity and evolving societal norms.[75] A 1992 General Conference report on homosexuality recommended maintaining the incompatibility language but urged compassion, reflecting internal divisions.[76] By 2000, delegates added a pastoral note imploring families and churches "not to reject or condemn" lesbian and gay members, softening rhetoric without altering core prohibitions.[32] Defiant acts, like Rev. Karen Oliveto's performance of the first legal same-sex marriage in a UMC in 2004, highlighted growing noncompliance among some clergy, particularly in progressive regions.[75] The 2010s saw escalating debates, with the Book of Discipline repeatedly upholding bans on same-sex unions and LGBTQ+ ordination amid proposals for local opt-outs or full affirmation. The 2016 Commission on a Way Forward, tasked with resolving the impasse, produced reports ranging from maintaining traditional standards to permitting regional variations, but the 2019 General Conference adopted the Traditional Plan by a 53% vote, reinforcing restrictions and adding accountability measures.[77][57] However, judicial rulings partially invalidated it, prompting further polarization. Postponed by the COVID-19 pandemic, the 2020 General Conference reconvened in 2024, where delegates voted overwhelmingly (e.g., 692-51 to lift the clergy ban) to remove all restrictive language, including the "incompatible" declaration and penalties for performing same-sex marriages.[40][78] The revised Book of Discipline now affirms marriage as a sacred covenant but defers decisions on ceremonies to individual clergy and congregations' conscience, without endorsing same-sex unions denominationally.[41][65] This shift, described by some as a "historic" embrace of inclusion, coincided with over 7,600 U.S. congregations disaffiliating by 2023 under Paragraph 2553, which facilitated exits citing irreconcilable doctrinal differences on sexuality, leading to the formation of the more conservative Global Methodist Church.[79][80] The changes reflect the denomination's U.S.-centric progressive tilt, as global delegates (comprising about 40% of voters) often favored retention of traditional views.[57]Positions on Life Issues: Abortion, Euthanasia, and Capital Punishment
The United Methodist Church affirms the sanctity of human life as a foundational principle, influencing its stances on abortion, euthanasia, and capital punishment as outlined in the Social Principles adopted by the 2024 General Conference. These positions emphasize reluctance toward practices that terminate life while acknowledging complex circumstances, though they have faced internal debate amid broader doctrinal realignments.[81][82] On abortion, the church expresses reluctance to condone the procedure, rejecting it unconditionally as a means of birth control, a mechanism for gender selection, or other eugenic purposes. It supports requirements for parental, guardian, or responsible adult notification and consent for abortions on minors, except in cases of alleged incest. The Social Principles oppose late-term or partial-birth abortions, calling for their end except when the mother's life is endangered with no feasible alternative treatments or when severe fetal abnormalities threaten viability. While limiting approval to tragic conflicts—such as threats to the mother's health—the church does not affirm abortion routinely and urges prevention of unplanned pregnancies through education, contraception access, and support for adoption as a life-affirming alternative.[81][82][83] The UMC opposes euthanasia, defined as mercy killing or physician-assisted suicide, where health professionals provide or administer lethal medications to terminally ill patients. This opposition stems from the conviction that life is a sacred gift under God's sovereignty, coupled with concerns over potential abuses, coercion, and the devaluation of vulnerable lives. The church rejects suicide as well, advocating instead for comprehensive mental health care, stigma reduction, pastoral support, and hospice options that prioritize pain relief without hastening death. Ministries of mercy continue for families affected by such acts, affirming that they do not sever God's love.[81][84] Regarding capital punishment, the church's commitment to human dignity compels opposition to the death penalty as a state-imposed execution, viewing it as a compounding of tragedy that denies Christ's capacity to redeem any person. It critiques the practice's disproportionate application to the poor, uneducated, racial and ethnic minorities, and those with mental impairments, as well as risks of wrongful convictions exposed by forensic advancements. The UMC calls for abolition, encourages education on its historic anti-death penalty stance (shared with predecessor bodies like the Evangelical United Brethren), and urges congregations to minister to victims of violent crime without judgment, balancing justice with compassion.[85][84]Views on Economic Justice, Environment, and Other Policies
The United Methodist Church's Social Principles emphasize economic justice as rooted in biblical mandates to care for the poor and promote equitable systems, decrying wealth concentration and pledging to address poverty's structural causes such as war and famine.[86] The church supports universal access to basic resources including food, clean water, health care, and education, viewing these as essential to human dignity and poverty eradication.[86] It advocates for living wages, safe working conditions, the right to unionize, and limits on work hours, while opposing child labor and exploitative practices.[86] Regarding globalization, the UMC criticizes its tendency to undermine wages, environmental standards, and indigenous rights, calling for international institutions like the United Nations and World Trade Organization to prioritize human welfare over profits.[86] Corporate responsibility is urged to favor ethical standards and socially responsible investing, with consumption patterns encouraged to avoid goods produced through exploitation and to support sustainability.[86] On environmental matters, the UMC affirms that all creation belongs to God, requiring responsible stewardship and right relationships with ecosystems, as exemplified in Genesis 1:26–31 and Matthew 6:26–30.[87] It attributes global warming primarily to human-induced greenhouse gas emissions from industrialization and fossil fuel dependence, urging immediate collective action to mitigate effects like rising sea levels and extreme weather.[87] Sustainable practices are promoted, including reduced carbon-intensive agriculture and protection of biodiversity, alongside humane treatment of animals to prevent cruelty in farming and research.[87] Food systems should prioritize equity and local sovereignty, opposing corporate monopolies on seeds and advocating for safe, nutritious access for all.[87] In 2021, UMC agencies committed to net-zero emissions by 2050 across operations and investments, with progress tracked through emissions audits and divestment from fossil fuels.[88] [89] In other policy areas, the UMC's Political Community principles hold governments accountable under divine judgment for protecting freedoms and the vulnerable, rejecting coercion, torture, and corruption.[85] It opposes the death penalty, favoring restorative justice, rehabilitation, and abolition of for-profit prisons.[85] War is deemed incompatible with Christ's teachings, rejected as a tool of foreign policy, with calls for nuclear disarmament, reduced military spending, and support for conscientious objectors; preemptive strikes and proliferation of weapons of mass destruction are deplored.[85] [90] On immigration, the church affirms migrants' and refugees' dignity, opposing policies that criminalize or dehumanize them, family separations, indefinite detention, and mass deportations, while urging humane pathways and aid for displaced persons.[85] [91] These positions, revised and adopted by the 2024 General Conference, reflect the church's global ethical framework but have drawn critique for aligning with progressive advocacy amid post-schism denominational shifts.[92]Worship and Sacraments
Structure of Methodist Services
United Methodist worship services typically follow a structured order derived from the Basic Pattern outlined in the church's official liturgical resources, emphasizing gathering in God's name, proclamation of the Word, response through prayer and offering, thanksgiving (with or without Holy Communion), and sending forth into the world.[93] This pattern, rooted in early Christian practices and adapted through Methodist tradition, allows flexibility for local congregations to incorporate diverse musical, cultural, and contextual elements while maintaining essential components like Scripture reading and preaching.[94] Services generally last 60 to 90 minutes and occur on Sundays, though variations exist for special occasions such as baptisms or funerals. The service begins with the Entrance or Gathering phase, where congregants assemble, often with preliminary music, informal greetings, or announcements to foster community.[94] A formal greeting from the leader invokes the Lord's name, followed by a hymn of praise, which may involve a processional, and opening prayers including confession, pardon, or a prayer of the day.[94] This segment sets a tone of praise and preparation, drawing from scriptural calls to worship such as Psalm 118:24.[94] Next comes Proclamation and Response to the Word, the core instructional element. A prayer for illumination precedes Scripture readings, typically two or three selections from the Old Testament, Psalms, Epistles, and Gospels, each followed by a congregational response like a psalm or anthem.[94] The sermon interprets these texts for contemporary application, aimed at all ages, emphasizing Wesleyan themes of grace and personal holiness.[94] Responses may include hymns, affirmations of faith (such as the Apostles' Creed), or invitations to discipleship, bridging hearing the Word with personal commitment.[94] The Response extends into intercessory prayers, concerns of the church, and the offering of tithes and gifts, often accompanied by a doxology or hymn.[94] If Holy Communion is celebrated—practiced monthly or more frequently in many congregations—this transitions into the Thanksgiving and Communion rite, reenacting Christ's actions of taking, blessing, breaking, and giving the bread and cup through the Great Thanksgiving prayer and distribution.[94] Without Communion, a prayer of thanksgiving and the Lord's Prayer suffice.[94] The service concludes with Sending Forth, featuring a final hymn, benediction, and dismissal commissioning members for mission and service beyond the church walls.[93] This order, detailed in The United Methodist Book of Worship, underscores the church's commitment to both structured liturgy and Spirit-led adaptability, with Communion as an open invitation to all believers regardless of denomination.[94] Local pastors and worship committees tailor elements, such as incorporating contemporary music or multimedia, but core acts of Word and Table remain central, reflecting John Wesley's emphasis on experiential faith expressed in communal worship.[93]Role of Hymns, Preaching, and Communion
![Nineteenth Century Methodist Hymnal in Barratt's Chapel Museum, Frederica, Delaware.jpg][float-right] Hymns hold a prominent place in United Methodist worship, functioning as both devotional practice and doctrinal instruction. This emphasis originates with the Wesleys, particularly Charles Wesley, who authored approximately 9,000 hymns that articulate core Methodist themes such as prevenient grace, justification, and Christian perfection.[95] Congregational singing of these hymns fosters active participation, reinforces theological convictions, and serves as an expression of joy and praise within services.[96] The United Methodist Hymnal integrates hymns with liturgical elements, underscoring their role in shaping worship beyond mere musical accompaniment.[97] Preaching forms the interpretive core of the "Word" portion in typical United Methodist services, such as the Service of Word and Table, where the sermon expounds upon scripture readings to apply biblical truths to contemporary life and ethical conduct. Pastors deliver sermons emphasizing Wesleyan emphases on personal and social holiness, often drawing from the quadrilateral of scripture, tradition, reason, and experience to guide hearers toward sanctification.[98] This element underscores the church's evangelistic heritage, with preaching historically prioritized as a means of conversion and spiritual formation in Methodist gatherings.[99] Holy Communion, designated as the sacrament of the Lord's Supper, represents a pivotal act of grace in United Methodist practice, observed as an open table inviting all persons regardless of denominational affiliation or baptismal status. Adopted in 2004, the document This Holy Mystery outlines its theology as conveying forgiveness, reconciliation, and real spiritual presence of Christ, transcending symbolic remembrance to nourish believers' faith.[100] Many congregations administer it monthly, typically on the first Sunday, integrating it into services to affirm communal unity and divine initiative in salvation.[101][102] Together, these components structure worship to balance proclamation, participation, and sacramental encounter, reflecting the church's commitment to accessible means of grace amid diverse congregational expressions.[96]Observance of Saints and Holy Days
The United Methodist Church structures its worship around a liturgical calendar that emphasizes the seasons of the Christian year, including Advent (four Sundays before Christmas), Christmas (December 25), Epiphany (January 6), Lent (40 days before Easter, excluding Sundays), Easter (variable date commemorating the resurrection), Ascension (40 days after Easter), Pentecost (50 days after Easter), and Trinity Sunday (Sunday after Pentecost).[103] Additional principal holy days include All Saints' Day (November 1) and Christ the King Sunday (last Sunday before Advent).[103] These observances guide lectionary readings, hymns, and sermons, fostering reflection on Christ's incarnation, death, resurrection, and the church's mission, though local congregations vary in liturgical formality.[104] In Methodist tradition, derived from John Wesley's Anglican roots but reformed against perceived excesses, there is no veneration, canonization, or invocation of saints as practiced in Roman Catholicism.[48] The church's Articles of Religion explicitly reject "invocation of saints" as a "fond thing, vainly invented, and grounded upon no warranty of Scripture, but rather repugnant to the Word of God."[48] Saints are understood broadly as all believers sanctified by grace, including biblical figures like the apostles and ordinary faithful departed, rather than an elite class requiring papal declaration.[105] All Saints' Day serves as the primary occasion for remembrance, often observed on November 1 or the first Sunday in November, with services featuring scripture readings (e.g., Revelation 7:9-17, Hebrews 12:1), hymns like "For All the Saints," and prayers thanking God for the "communion of saints" who exemplify Christian witness.[106][107] John Wesley particularly valued this day for honoring church history and the faithful across time, aligning with Methodist emphasis on assurance of salvation and the "cloud of witnesses" in Hebrews 12.[106] Individual saints' days, such as those for apostles or early martyrs, receive minimal formal attention in UMC polity or worship resources, prioritizing direct prayer to God and scriptural focus over commemorative feasts.[105] This approach reflects Protestant sola scriptura principles, avoiding practices seen as distracting from Christ's sole mediation.[48]Organizational Governance
General Conference and Policymaking
The General Conference serves as the supreme legislative authority within The United Methodist Church, convening approximately every four years to enact and amend church doctrine, social principles, administrative policies, and organizational frameworks.[108] It comprises roughly 950 delegates—equally divided between clergy and laity—elected proportionally by annual conferences based on membership size, representing the church's global body of about 11 million members as of 2020.[108] [109] This body holds exclusive power to revise The Book of Discipline, the foundational text governing polity, ministry standards, and procedures, as well as The Book of Resolutions, which articulates positions on ethical and public policy matters.[110] Decisions require simple majorities for most legislation, though constitutional amendments demand two-thirds approval in plenary followed by ratification by two-thirds of annual conferences.[111] Policymaking commences with the submission of petitions—proposals from individuals, agencies, or conferences—submitted up to eight months prior, addressing topics from budget allocations to doctrinal clarifications.[111] These are sorted into 13-15 legislative committees by subject, where subcommittees debate, amend, and prioritize bills for plenary consideration; the plenary session, often spanning 10-12 days, features floor debates, parliamentary motions, and electronic voting.[108] [109] The process emphasizes consensus-building but has historically reflected tensions between progressive U.S. delegates and more traditionalist voices from Africa and Eastern Europe, influencing outcomes on divisive issues. For instance, the 2020 session, postponed twice due to the COVID-19 pandemic and logistical challenges, reconvened as the 2024 General Conference from April 23 to May 6 in Charlotte, North Carolina, with 931 delegates amid reduced U.S. representation following over 7,600 congregational disaffiliations under Paragraph 2553 exit provisions enacted in 2019.[109] [39] At the 2024 session, delegates voted by majorities exceeding 60% to excise longstanding prohibitions, including bans on ordaining "self-avowed practicing homosexuals" as clergy and on performing same-sex union ceremonies in churches, alongside deleting the declaration that "the practice of homosexuality is incompatible with Christian teaching" from the Social Principles.[39] [40] These changes, ratified without the two-thirds threshold for core doctrine, also approved constitutional amendments for "regionalization," enabling central conferences outside the U.S. (primarily in Africa, comprising over 40% of global membership) to customize certain policies while maintaining global unity on essentials like the Apostles' Creed.[58] The revisions reflect a post-schism composition, as conservative congregations—citing irreconcilable differences over biblical interpretations of sexuality—exited en masse, halving U.S. membership to under 5 million by mid-2024 and shifting delegate dynamics toward greater alignment with Western inclusivity stances.[39] [112] Interim policymaking authority resides with the Council of Bishops and general agencies, but substantive changes await the next General Conference, scheduled for 2028, underscoring the body's quadrennial rhythm as a check against unilateral episcopal or administrative overreach.[113] This structure, rooted in Wesleyan connectionalism, prioritizes collective discernment over hierarchical fiat, though critics from departing traditionalist groups argue it has enabled incremental erosion of historic Methodist standards on human sexuality without sufficient theological consensus.[40]Jurisdictional and Annual Conferences
The annual conference constitutes the fundamental organizational unit of The United Methodist Church within the United States, serving as a regional body comprising multiple local churches and clergy members.[114] Each annual conference convenes yearly for a multi-day session to conduct legislative, administrative, and judicial functions affecting its member churches, including the approval of budgets, the reception of reports from districts and congregations, and the ordination or commissioning of clergy.[115] As of 2024, the U.S. portion of the denomination includes approximately 54 annual conferences, varying in size from several hundred churches in larger ones like the California-Pacific Conference to fewer in smaller regional bodies.[116] Membership in an annual conference consists of all ordained elders and deacons in full connection, provisional members, associate members, and local pastors under appointment, alongside an equal number of lay delegates elected by charge conferences (local church governing bodies), plus additional ex-officio lay members such as youth and young adults.[114] Key powers include electing equal numbers of clergy and lay delegates to the General Conference and jurisdictional conferences; adopting a conference budget funded by apportionments to local churches; setting standards for clergy candidacy and character; and cooperating with the resident bishop in appointing pastors to charges, a process rooted in the itinerant system where clergy serve where the conference deems needs exist.[117] Annual conferences also adjudicate complaints against clergy through trial processes outlined in the Book of Discipline and promote mission initiatives tailored to regional contexts, such as disaster response or community outreach.[114] Jurisdictional conferences operate as intermediate governing bodies above the annual conferences but below the General Conference, with five such jurisdictions in the United States: North Central, Northeastern, South Central, Southeastern, and Western, each encompassing multiple annual conferences aligned by geography.[118] These convene quadrennially, immediately following the adjournment of the General Conference, drawing equal clergy and lay delegates from their constituent annual conferences to perform specialized functions, including the election and assignment of bishops to episcopal areas—typically one or more annual conferences per bishop.[119] For instance, the 2024 jurisdictional conferences, held in July, resulted in the election of 37 active bishops across the five bodies, reflecting adjustments due to retirements and episcopal vacancies amid recent congregational disaffiliations.[120] The jurisdictional conferences hold authority to establish administrative rules for church work within their bounds, subject to override by the General Conference; to select members for general church boards and agencies; and to foster regional cooperation on missions, evangelism, and leadership development among annual conferences.[119] Unlike central conferences, which govern international regions with greater autonomy for adapting Discipline provisions to local laws and cultures, U.S. jurisdictions lack such flexibility and primarily coordinate episcopal leadership and resource allocation.[121] This structure embodies the connectional polity of Methodism, ensuring accountability and shared governance while allowing regional adaptation, though tensions have arisen in recent decades over theological divisions, prompting some annual conferences to experience significant membership losses through church exits permitted under temporary Paragraph 2553 of the Discipline from 2019 to 2023.[117]Judicial and Administrative Bodies
The Judicial Council constitutes the supreme judicial authority within the United Methodist Church, functioning as its highest court to interpret the Book of Discipline and adjudicate disputes ensuring compliance with the church's constitution and established rules.[122] Composed of nine members—equally divided between laity and clergy, reflecting racial, ethnic, and geographic diversity—it is elected quadrennially by the General Conference for eight-year terms, with members ineligible for immediate reelection.[123] The council convenes at least twice annually, reviewing cases including appeals from lower church bodies, declaratory decisions on constitutional matters, and bishops' rulings on points of law issued during annual conference sessions.[124] [125] Its jurisdiction encompasses determining the constitutionality of General Conference legislation upon appeal by a majority of the Council of Bishops or one-fifth of General Conference delegates, as well as examining the legality of actions by any church entity.[126] Decisions are binding, with the council empowered to issue injunctions or referrals for noncompliance, though it lacks enforcement mechanisms beyond interpretation and advisory opinions.[124] Judicial procedures emphasize fairness, with cases originating from administrative reviews or formal complaints, culminating in appeals that prioritize scriptural and doctrinal fidelity as outlined in the Book of Discipline.[127] Recent rulings, such as Decision 1472 in March 2023 affirming annual conferences' authority to fill General Conference delegation vacancies, illustrate its role in maintaining operational continuity amid denominational transitions.[128] Administrative bodies in the United Methodist Church operate primarily through 13 general agencies, councils, boards, and commissions established by the General Conference to execute denominational policies and programs across mission, education, finance, and social concerns.[129] These entities, funded via apportionments from annual conferences, provide resources to local churches while advancing churchwide initiatives; for instance, the General Council on Finance and Administration manages budgeting, compliance, and legal guidance, including the Administrative & Judicial Procedures Handbook updated April 1, 2024, which standardizes processes for complaints, trials, and appeals.[127] [129] Key agencies include the General Board of Global Ministries, which coordinates international mission and relief efforts; Discipleship Ministries, focused on lay and clergy formation for evangelism; and the General Board of Church and Society, which formulates positions on public policy issues like poverty and peace.[129] Specialized commissions, such as the General Commission on Religion and Race promoting inclusivity and the Commission on the Status and Role of Women addressing gender equity, monitor and advocate for targeted reforms within church structures.[129] Governance of these bodies involves boards elected by the General Conference, with accountability enforced through periodic audits and alignment with the Book of Discipline, though operational autonomy has sparked debates over alignment with traditional Methodist doctrines amid recent schisms.[130]Local Church Autonomy and Discipline
In the United Methodist Church (UMC), local churches function within a connectional polity that emphasizes interdependence over full congregational autonomy, distinguishing it from independent Baptist or non-denominational models. This structure, rooted in Wesleyan traditions of mutual accountability, grants local churches authority for day-to-day administration while subordinating key decisions to the annual conference and the Book of Discipline, the denomination's governing document revised quadrennially. The Discipline mandates adherence to doctrinal standards, ethical guidelines, and organizational rules, with violations subject to supervisory or judicial review to maintain unity.[131] The charge conference serves as the primary local governing body, typically meeting annually under the presidency of the district superintendent or designee. It elects lay leaders, trustees, and committee members; approves budgets and compensation for non-appointed staff; and assesses the church's mission effectiveness. However, its powers are circumscribed: it cannot enact policies conflicting with the Discipline, alter clergy appointments (which are episcopal prerogatives), or unilaterally dispose of property. For instance, term limits for officers require explicit Discipline authorization, and inclusivity in elections must align with denominational standards.[132] This setup fosters local initiative in areas like worship planning and community outreach but ensures conformity to broader connectional priorities, such as apportionment funding for conferences.[133] Property management further delineates autonomy boundaries through the trust clause in Discipline ¶2503, stipulating that all local church assets—real, personal, or intangible—are held "in trust" for the UMC's use and benefit. Legal title may reside with a local board of trustees, elected by the charge conference and tasked with maintenance and oversight, but encumbrances, sales, or mergers demand annual conference approval to prevent diversion from Methodist purposes. This provision, upheld in Judicial Council rulings like Decision 1512, reinforces connectionalism by prioritizing denominational continuity over local ownership claims, as evidenced in post-2019 disaffiliation disputes where exiting congregations faced exit fees or litigation until the 2023-2024 temporary ¶2553 window expired.[134] [135] Non-compliance, such as unauthorized transfers, can trigger administrative intervention or judicial invalidation.[136] Disciplinary processes enforce compliance via supervisory oversight and, if needed, formal adjudication. District superintendents monitor local adherence to the Discipline's "order and discipline," addressing issues like fiscal mismanagement or doctrinal deviations through complaints filed under ¶2701-2719. Administrative responses may include mediation, reprimand, or suspension of privileges, while severe cases escalate to church trials before a jury of clergy or laity, potentially resulting in church closure, property reversion to the conference, or reorganization. For example, ¶2549 limits property transfers to other denominations absent conference consent, a rule clarified judicially to curb unilateral exits.[137] [138] This framework, while empowering local boards for routine operations, underscores that autonomy is relational and revocable, with the Judicial Council serving as the final arbiter of constitutional fidelity.[124]Clergy and Ordained Ministry
Historical Development of Orders
John Wesley, an ordained priest in the Church of England, initially relied on Anglican clergy for sacraments within the Methodist societies but faced a crisis after the American Revolution when colonial Methodists lacked access to ordained ministers. In 1784, Wesley performed presbyteral ordinations without episcopal laying on of hands: on September 1, he ordained Richard Whatcoat and Thomas Vasey as deacons, and the next day as elders for America; he also ordained Thomas Coke as superintendent with authority to ordain others.[139][140] Coke arrived in America on November 3, 1784, and at the Christmas Conference in Baltimore on December 24-27, he ordained Francis Asbury as co-superintendent after Asbury's election by American preachers, emphasizing consent of the governed over unilateral authority. The title "bishop" was adopted in 1787, establishing an episcopal polity distinct from Anglican apostolic succession, with bishops functioning as traveling superintendents overseeing itinerant elders who were ordained for preaching and sacramental ministry.[141][142] Through the 19th century, the Methodist Episcopal Church expanded orders via annual conferences, ordaining elders after trial periods and probationary service, while deacons served transitional roles toward full elder status. Mergers in 1939 forming The Methodist Church and 1968 creating the United Methodist Church (UMC) preserved this structure, with bishops elected from elders for life terms to provide oversight.[143] The UMC formalized distinct clergy orders in 1996, elevating deacons to a permanent, full-connection order focused on Word, service, compassion, and justice, separate from the elder order's emphasis on sacrament and order, allowing non-itinerant commissioned ministry. This change addressed historical diaconal roles, previously non-ordained or transitional, enabling deacons to lead in specialized servant leadership without progressing to elder.[144][145]Bishops, Elders, and Deacons
The United Methodist Church maintains three distinct orders of ordained ministry—bishops, elders, and deacons—as defined in its Book of Discipline, with each order fulfilling specific roles in leadership, worship, and service. Bishops provide episcopal oversight, while elders and deacons represent the primary ordained classes accountable to annual conferences. These orders emphasize covenantal relationships, with clergy participating in separate or joint gatherings convened by bishops for mutual support and formation.[146][147] Bishops, elected by jurisdictional or central conferences from among elders in full connection, serve a lifetime term until mandatory retirement, typically at age 68, and hold general oversight of the church's spiritual and temporal affairs. They lead in guarding the faith, ordering ministry, and advancing the mission of making disciples, including appointing clergy to charges, ordaining elders and deacons, presiding over conferences, and fostering unity across the connectional system. Unlike in hierarchical episcopal traditions, UMC bishops function collegially through the Council of Bishops, without inherent sacramental superiority over elders, reflecting Methodism's emphasis on shared ordained authority.[148][149] Elders, ordained upon election to full membership in an annual conference, exercise a fourfold ministry of Word, Sacrament, Order, and Service, authorizing them to preach, administer baptism and Holy Communion, lead congregations, and equip laity for mission. They operate under an itinerant appointment system directed by bishops, ensuring mobility and accountability, and must demonstrate competence in theology, spiritual disciplines, and ethical conduct as prerequisites for ordination. Elders form the core of pastoral leadership, with responsibilities extending to counseling, teaching, and superintending local churches.[146][150] Deacons represent an order focused on servant leadership, bridging the church and the world by equipping all baptized members for ministry and leading in works of compassion, justice, and advocacy. Ordained deacons may serve in provisional status toward elder ordination or as permanent deacons in specialized roles, such as education, health, or social service, and are authorized to preach, conduct worship, officiate weddings and funerals, and assist in sacraments under elder or bishop supervision. While traditionally limited in full sacramental authority, deacons expanded their roles following the 2024 General Conference, which granted them authority to baptize and serve communion in contexts aligned with their servant calling.[151][152][153]Ordination Standards and Recent Changes
The United Methodist Church's ordination standards, as outlined in the Book of Discipline, require candidates to demonstrate a divine call, personal faith in Christ, commitment to spiritual disciplines, competence in scripture and theology, and adherence to high moral standards, including fidelity in marriage between one man and one woman or celibacy in singleness.[154] Candidates must also complete educational requirements, such as a Master of Divinity from a University Senate-approved seminary, alongside practical ministry experience and examinations by boards of ordained ministry.[155] These criteria aim to ensure ordained clergy model Christian living and doctrinal fidelity, with annual conferences holding authority to assess fitness.[154] From 1972 until 2024, the Book of Discipline explicitly barred "self-avowed practicing homosexuals" from ordination or appointment as clergy, a provision added amid debates over biblical teachings on sexuality and reinforced in subsequent General Conferences despite growing regional defiance, particularly in progressive U.S. conferences.[73] Enforcement varied, with some bishops and boards ordaining or appointing individuals in violation, contributing to decades of internal conflict and trials that strained church unity.[156] This standard reflected the denomination's historical alignment with Wesleyan emphasis on holiness and scriptural authority, though progressive factions argued it conflicted with inclusivity and grace-oriented theology.[157] At the 2024 General Conference in Charlotte, North Carolina, delegates removed the prohibition on ordaining "self-avowed practicing homosexuals," along with related bans on same-sex marriage and penalties for officiating such ceremonies, passing the measure via consent calendar without debate on May 1, 2024.[73] [157] The revised Book of Discipline retains general ethical expectations for clergy conduct but eliminates sexuality-specific restrictions, shifting authority to annual conferences to set their own standards within broader compatibility clauses.[41] This change followed a mass disaffiliation of over 7,600 U.S. congregations—about one-fifth of the total—between 2019 and 2023, primarily conservatives forming the Global Methodist Church to preserve traditional standards on ordination and marriage.[158] The exodus, enabled by a temporary Paragraph 2553 exit pathway, reduced conservative influence, enabling the progressive-leaning remaining body—disproportionately U.S.-based—to enact the revisions.[159] International delegates, representing growing African and Asian conferences upholding traditional views, comprise about half the global membership but hold limited voting power post-regionalization.[160]Women in Ministry: Progress and Debates
The Methodist Church, predecessor to the United Methodist Church, approved full clergy rights for women on May 4, 1956, during its General Conference in Minneapolis, Minnesota, enabling their ordination as elders and deacons with eligibility for full conference membership and itinerant appointments.[161][162] Prior to this, women had been permitted to receive local preacher licenses starting in 1920 and ordination as local deacons or elders in 1924, but these roles lacked the authority and mobility of full clergy status.[162] Maude Jensen was admitted as the first woman to full membership in the Central Pennsylvania Annual Conference shortly after the 1956 decision, marking the practical onset of expanded female leadership.[161] Subsequent milestones included the election of Marjorie S. Matthews as the first female bishop in 1980, who served the Wisconsin Episcopal Area until retiring in 1984 at age 68 due to mandatory retirement age.[163] By December 2016, the United Methodist Church reported nearly 12,300 clergywomen in active service globally.[162] In the United States, women accounted for approximately 32 percent of full-time clergy as of 2020, despite representing about 58 percent of laity, with slower advancement to senior pastorates and episcopal roles.[164][165] Post-2024 jurisdictional conferences showed women comprising a notable portion of newly elected bishops, though overall ordained ministry remains male-dominated at under 30 percent female.[166][167] Debates on women's ordination have historically invoked scriptural texts such as 1 Timothy 2:11-12, interpreted by opponents as barring women from authoritative teaching roles over men, contrasting with Wesleyan precedents like John Wesley's 18th-century endorsements of female preachers amid revival needs.[168] The United Methodist Book of Discipline affirms women's full inclusion in ministry as consistent with its egalitarian theology and organizational polity, rejecting barriers based on gender.[169] In global contexts, particularly Africa where the church's membership has grown rapidly, cultural norms emphasizing patriarchal structures have slowed practical implementation, with issues like exclusion of polygamous women from fellowships highlighting tensions between doctrinal openness and local traditions.[170] Nonetheless, ordinations proceed, as in Cameroon's 2010 elder class that included one woman among nine pastors.[171] Recent denominational schisms, including departures to the Global Methodist Church, have upheld women's ordination as non-negotiable, underscoring its cross-factional consensus amid disputes over sexuality.[172]Laity and Congregational Life
Lay Leadership Roles
In the United Methodist Church, lay leadership at the local level centers on the lay leader, elected annually by the charge conference to serve as the primary representative of the laity within the congregation. This role, outlined in Paragraph 251 of the Book of Discipline, involves fostering awareness of the laity's responsibilities in ministry, communicating the pastor's and church council's concerns to lay members, and encouraging participation in training programs for lay servants and speakers. The lay leader also serves ex officio on the church council or administrative board, administrative committees, and the pastor-parish relations committee, thereby influencing decisions on personnel, finances, and program implementation without ordained authority.[173][174][175] Associate lay leaders may be elected to assist, particularly in larger congregations, to expand the scope of lay involvement in discipleship and outreach efforts. These leaders collaborate with the pastor to align lay initiatives with the church's mission of making disciples, emphasizing practical engagement over clerical oversight. At this level, lay leaders must be professing members of the church, reflecting the denomination's emphasis on active, non-ordained participation in governance as a counterbalance to episcopal and clerical structures.[176][173] Beyond the local church, lay members to the annual conference—typically numbering one or more per charge, with the lay leader often filling this position—represent congregations in regional decision-making bodies. Elected by the charge conference, these members hold equal voting rights with clergy on matters such as budgets, episcopal elections, and doctrinal petitions, ensuring lay input shapes conference policies. Their responsibilities include attending sessions, reporting actions back to the local church, and building connections to the broader connectional system, with effectiveness tied to informing members about global United Methodist dynamics.[177][178][179] At the annual conference level, a conference lay leader is elected to advocate for laity across districts, serving on the conference council on ministries and promoting lay training initiatives. This position, per Paragraph 607 of the Book of Discipline, extends local roles upward, coordinating with bishops and clergy to integrate lay perspectives into jurisdictional and general conference deliberations. Lay leaders at all levels underscore the UMC's polity of shared governance, where non-ordained members exercise influence through election and committee service rather than hierarchical appointment.[180][176]Education and Discipleship Programs
The United Methodist Church emphasizes education and discipleship as central to its mission of making disciples of Jesus Christ, with programs designed to equip individuals across all age groups for spiritual growth and service. These initiatives are primarily supported by Discipleship Ministries, an official agency that provides contextual resourcing, training, curriculum development, and networking for local churches, districts, and conferences worldwide.[181][182] Local congregations implement these programs through small groups, classes, and worship-integrated studies, focusing on biblical literacy, doctrinal understanding, and practical application of Wesleyan theology.[183] Sunday school and age-graded Christian education form the foundational structure, utilizing approved curricula vetted by the church for doctrinal alignment and pedagogical effectiveness. For children and youth, resources such as Deep Blue and Wesley Curriculum offer lectionary-based lessons that integrate Bible stories, memory verses, and activities promoting social, emotional, and spiritual development, often with take-home materials for family reinforcement.[184][185] Adult programs extend this through small-group studies and confirmation classes, emphasizing personal transformation via scripture, prayer, and community accountability.[186] These curricula are distributed via Cokesbury, the church's publishing arm, ensuring materials reflect United Methodist emphases on grace, social holiness, and scriptural authority.[187] A flagship offering is the Disciple Bible Study series, a rigorous, 34-week program that systematically covers the entire Bible, allocating equal time to Old and New Testaments to cultivate disciplined learners and leaders.[188] Participants engage in daily readings, video commentaries, and group discussions of 8-16 members, with variants like Disciple Fast Track (24 weeks) and digital formats adapting to modern needs, including online access launched in 2023.[189][190] Complementary resources include free eLearning courses from Discipleship Ministries, covering topics like worship planning and lay leadership, some awarding continuing education units.[191] These programs prioritize measurable outcomes, such as increased biblical engagement, though participation rates vary by congregation size and regional context.[181]Volunteer Missions and Service Initiatives
The United Methodist Volunteers in Mission (UMVIM) program represents a primary avenue for lay-led volunteer engagement in short-term mission efforts, emphasizing hands-on service to embody Christian principles of action-oriented love. Originating as a grassroots initiative driven by laity in the Southeast Jurisdiction, UMVIM formalized its structure following the 1996 General Conference, which integrated it into the Mission Volunteers Program Area under the General Board of Global Ministries.[192][193] This program facilitates teams and individuals in domestic and international projects, often self-funded and coordinated through annual conferences or regional coordinators.[194] Participation in UMVIM expanded significantly from approximately 20,000 volunteers in 1992 to over 110,000 by 2006, reflecting peaks in response to global needs such as disaster recovery and community development.[195] Activities encompass construction and repair projects, medical and dental clinics, agricultural training, vacation Bible schools, and environmental cleanups, with teams deploying to sites in the United States, Africa, Asia, and Latin America.[196] For instance, post-disaster responses have included rebuilding efforts after hurricanes, where volunteers assist in home repairs and infrastructure restoration in partnership with United Methodist Committee on Relief (UMCOR).[197] Beyond UMVIM, the denomination supports longer-term volunteer commitments through the Mission Volunteers program, offering self-funded placements for individuals or couples in roles such as education, healthcare, and administrative support at partner sites worldwide.[198] Historical precedents trace to 1948, when early short-term young adult missions targeted reconstruction in war-torn Asia, evolving into structured fellowships like Global Mission Fellows for emerging leaders.[199] These initiatives prioritize practical service over evangelism alone, aligning with Methodist emphases on social holiness, though participation has fluctuated amid broader denominational membership declines.[194] In 2025, UMVIM continues to adapt, with trained teams addressing ongoing needs like camp maintenance and health outreach, underscoring a commitment to scalable, volunteer-driven impact despite institutional challenges.[196] Local churches often integrate these efforts into discipleship, fostering lay mobilization for initiatives that extend Methodist witness through tangible aid rather than doctrinal proselytizing.[200]Education and Intellectual Contributions
Seminaries and Theological Training
The United Methodist Church supports 13 official United States-based seminaries, which function as the principal providers of advanced theological education for clergy candidates and lay leaders. These institutions receive partial funding through the church's Ministerial Education Fund, with 75% of the fund's apportionments directed toward their operations and student support.[201] The seminaries emphasize graduate-level programs grounded in Wesleyan theology, including biblical interpretation, systematic theology, church history, and practical ministry formation, preparing students for roles in ordained ministry, chaplaincy, and academic scholarship.[202] Ordination as an elder in the United Methodist Church requires completion of a Master of Divinity (MDiv) degree—or equivalent—from a school approved by the church's University Senate, with the 13 affiliated seminaries fully meeting this standard and often offering specialized United Methodist studies tracks.[203][204] Deacons pursuing ordination typically complete an MDiv or a Master of Arts in specialized ministry, while provisional elders undergo supervised residency periods integrating seminary learning with field experience.[155] For those not pursuing full ordination, such as local pastors, the church mandates the Course of Study program—a structured sequence of regional classes covering core theological disciplines—as an alternative to seminary, though it does not substitute for the MDiv in elder candidacy.[205] All programs must align with the Book of Discipline's standards, including examinations in doctrine, sacraments, and polity.[206] The official seminaries, approved for distance learning up to two-thirds of MDiv credits, include:| Seminary | Location |
|---|---|
| Boston University School of Theology | Boston, MA |
| Candler School of Theology (Emory University) | Atlanta, GA |
| Claremont School of Theology | Claremont, CA |
| Drew University Theological School | Madison, NJ |
| Duke Divinity School | Durham, NC |
| Gammon Theological Seminary | Atlanta, GA |
| Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary | Evanston, IL |
| Iliff School of Theology | Denver, CO |
| Methodist Theological School in Ohio | Delaware, OH |
| Perkins School of Theology (Southern Methodist University) | Dallas, TX |
| Saint Paul School of Theology | Leawood, KS / Oklahoma City, OK |
| United Theological Seminary | Dayton, OH |
| Wesley Theological Seminary | Washington, DC |
Universities and Historical Impact
The Methodist tradition, foundational to the United Methodist Church (UMC), significantly shaped American higher education by prioritizing accessible learning rooted in John Wesley's vision of educating individuals across social strata.[212] Early efforts included Cokesbury College, established in 1784 as the first Methodist institution of higher learning, though it closed amid financial challenges by 1790.[213] By the Civil War era, Methodists had founded or affiliated with around 200 colleges and academies, outpacing other denominations in establishing institutions on the frontier to serve growing populations.[213] In the modern era, the UMC sustains ties with approximately 104 related educational institutions, including colleges, universities, and seminaries, comprising the largest network among Protestant groups.[214] Prominent examples encompass Emory University (chartered 1836), which advanced medical and legal training in the South; Syracuse University (1870), emphasizing engineering and public affairs; and Duke University (from Methodist Trinity College, 1838), renowned for research in sciences and divinity.[215] These schools historically promoted co-education and practical curricula, with institutions like Wesleyan College (1836) pioneering degree-granting women's education.[216] Methodist-founded universities contributed to social mobility by educating clergy, professionals, and reformers, fostering movements against slavery and for temperance through informed laity.[217] Post-emancipation, the church supported 11 historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs)—more than any other denomination—including Claflin University (1869) and Bennett College (1873), via the Black College Fund, which apportions millions annually for their sustainability.[218] This emphasis on inclusive education aligned with Wesleyan ideals of holistic development, influencing broader American academia by integrating moral philosophy with liberal arts.[219] While many affiliated institutions have secularized over time, retaining nominal UMC links through boards or funding, their historical legacy endures in producing leaders and advancing knowledge dissemination.[220] The General Board of Higher Education and Ministry continues oversight via the University Senate, approving standards and grants to uphold quality and church alignment.[221]Contributions to Scholarship and Social Reform
The Methodist movement, from which the United Methodist Church (UMC) descends, contributed significantly to 19th-century social reforms rooted in evangelical zeal, including opposition to slavery and advocacy for temperance. John Wesley, Methodism's founder, explicitly condemned the slave trade in his 1774 pamphlet Thoughts Upon Slavery, urging British Methodists to abstain from involvement and influencing early American Methodist conferences to bar slaveholders from membership unless they freed their slaves by 1800. This stance positioned Methodists as pioneers in abolitionism, with figures like Orange Scott leading the Wesleyan Methodist Connection's 1843 split from the Methodist Episcopal Church over slavery's persistence despite official prohibitions.[222] Similarly, Wesley's teachings against distilled spirits fueled the temperance movement, with Methodists forming key societies like the American Temperance Society in 1826 and achieving widespread church bans on alcohol by the mid-19th century, contributing to Prohibition's eventual passage in 1919. These efforts were driven by a causal link between personal holiness and societal transformation, emphasizing empirical moral improvement over abstract theory. In theological scholarship, the UMC has sustained Methodist intellectual traditions through dedicated publications and institutional support, advancing studies on Wesleyan doctrines such as prevenient grace and Christian perfection. The Methodist Review, an open-access peer-reviewed journal, publishes scholarly articles on Wesleyan and Methodist history, theology, and ethics, fostering rigorous analysis since its relaunch in the digital era.[223] The General Board of Higher Education and Ministry's publishing arm has produced works like updated editions on Wesley's doctrine of justification, providing evidence-based reinterpretations grounded in primary sources to clarify Methodism's Arminian distinctives against Calvinist predestination.[224] Prominent UMC-affiliated scholars, including Randy L. Maddox, have authored influential texts on Wesleyan theology, such as examinations of sanctification's practical implications, drawing on archival research to demonstrate Methodism's emphasis on experiential faith over speculative dogma.[225] These contributions prioritize first-hand scriptural exegesis and historical causality, countering biases in broader academia toward secular interpretations of religious experience. The UMC's engagement with 20th-century social reform via the Social Gospel movement sought to apply Christian ethics to industrialization's ills, influencing labor rights and urban poverty alleviation, though outcomes varied due to internal divisions. Methodist leaders like Walter Rauschenbusch, though Baptist, drew on Methodist precedents to advocate for systemic change, with UMC predecessors establishing settlement houses and advocating child labor laws by the 1912 Federal Children's Bureau creation.[226] In civil rights, the UMC's 1956 Statement on Race repudiated segregation as incompatible with Christian doctrine, leading to desegregated conferences by 1968, yet empirical data reveals resistance in Southern jurisdictions, where only 11% of white Methodist clergy supported Martin Luther King Jr.'s methods in 1963 surveys, contributing to schisms like the 1968 merger's tensions.[227] Official Social Principles affirm human rights and oppose racism as sin, but causal realism highlights how progressive stances on issues like economic redistribution have correlated with membership declines, as conservative conferences prioritized doctrinal fidelity over reformist activism.[85] This record underscores Methodism's reform legacy tempered by empirical challenges in unifying diverse theological commitments.Global Reach and Ecumenism
International Membership and Growth Patterns
The United Methodist Church organizes its international operations through eight central conferences spanning Africa (five conferences), Europe, and the Philippines, where membership constitutes a growing share of the denomination's global total. As of 2024 estimates, African conferences alone encompass around 6 million members, surpassing U.S. figures amid ongoing domestic declines.[228] This international segment, reported at approximately 4.56 million members across Africa, Asia, and Europe in 2022 data from official sources, reflects a trajectory of expansion driven by regional evangelization and demographic factors.[28] Growth patterns in Africa have been robust, with sub-Saharan regions like the Democratic Republic of Congo and West Africa showing sustained increases through local church planting and high retention rates. The West Africa Central Conference, for instance, reported 1,508,696 members in recent World Methodist Council statistics, underscoring concentration in high-fertility areas where Methodist outreach aligns with community needs.[229] In contrast, European conferences exhibit stagnation or modest declines tied to secularization trends, while Asian membership, primarily in the Philippines (around 145,642 to 189,335 members), remains stable but limited in scale.[229] Overall, from 2011 to 2019, international membership growth trailed host-country population increases by roughly 6%, indicating expansion but not exponential proliferation.[230] These patterns highlight a shift toward the Global South, where central conferences now represent over half of active churches (approximately 9,714 organized churches plus 18,402 preaching places as of earlier aggregates) and clergy (14,624 members).[28] Recent data from UMData aggregates total church membership at 7,304,686, with central conferences contributing significantly to professions of faith and average worship attendance averaging 3,222,452 globally.[231] This international vitality has partially buffered U.S.-centric losses, such as the 21.9% domestic membership drop in 2023, though aggregate global figures hover around 10-12 million amid schism-related adjustments.[232][233]Relations with African and Asian Conferences
The United Methodist Church's African conferences represent the denomination's largest and fastest-growing segment, comprising approximately 6 million members as of 2024, which accounts for roughly half of the global UMC membership of over 12 million.[228][234] This growth, driven by missionary expansion and local evangelism since the mid-20th century, has positioned Africa as a demographic counterweight to declining U.S. membership, with annual conferences spanning countries like the Democratic Republic of Congo, Nigeria, and Zimbabwe.[27][235] Relations have been marked by increasing African influence in global decision-making, including proposals to expand the episcopal leadership from 13 to 18 bishops to reflect this numerical reality.[236] Theological tensions have strained these relations, particularly over human sexuality. African bishops and delegates have consistently opposed revisions to the UMC Book of Discipline permitting same-sex marriage and ordination of practicing LGBTQ+ clergy, viewing such changes as incompatible with scriptural teachings on marriage as a union between one man and one woman.[237][238] At the 2024 General Conference, African representatives expressed devastation over the removal of bans on these practices, protesting that the decisions ignored their cultural and biblical convictions, which align with traditional Methodist doctrine rooted in Wesleyan theology.[239] Despite this, most African conferences affirmed unity with the UMC post-conference, endorsing worldwide regionalization to enable contextual adaptations—allowing Africa to retain stricter standards on sexuality while permitting variations elsewhere.[240][235] Isolated departures occurred, such as the Ivory Coast Annual Conference's exit in May 2024, but broader African leadership emphasized growth and scriptural fidelity over schism.[241] In Asia, UMC relations center on the Philippines Central Conference, which oversees about 200,000 professing members across three episcopal areas and 26 annual conferences, serving a community nearing 1 million amid the archipelago's 7,700 islands.[242] The denomination's Asian footprint remains limited primarily to the Philippines, with smaller missions in Southeast Asia and Mongolia, reflecting historical missionary efforts rather than the explosive growth seen in Africa.[243] Ties have been cooperative, with Philippine leaders advocating for denominational unity during schism debates and benefiting from U.S.-supported initiatives in education and disaster relief.[244] Unlike Africa, Asian conferences have not mounted significant opposition to 2024 reforms, though conservative cultural norms in the Philippines align with traditional stances on marriage and ordination; regionalization is viewed as a framework for localized governance without major discord.[245] Korean-language ministries in the U.S. and partnerships, such as missionary support commitments, further bolster relational stability, though Eurasian conferences (including Russia) disaffiliated in 2024 to form an autonomous body amid geopolitical and doctrinal strains.[246][247]Full Communion Agreements and Interdenominational Ties
The United Methodist Church (UMC) defines full communion as a relationship in which partner denominations mutually recognize each other's ordained ministries, sacraments—particularly baptism and Eucharist—and members as integral to the one holy catholic and apostolic church, facilitating clergy interchange and joint mission efforts.[248] This framework stems from dialogues approved by the UMC Council of Bishops and ratified by General Conference, emphasizing shared confessional commitments while preserving doctrinal distinctives.[249] The UMC's earliest full communion ties are with fellow historically Black Methodist denominations via the Pan-Methodist Commission, including the African Methodist Episcopal Church (established 1816), African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church (established 1821), Christian Methodist Episcopal Church (established 1870), and African Union Methodist Protestant Church (established 1866); these agreements, formalized progressively from the 1980s onward, underscore racial reconciliation and shared Wesleyan heritage amid historical schisms over slavery and segregation.[28] In 2009, the UMC achieved full communion with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA), marking its first such pact with a non-Methodist body and enabling reciprocal pulpit and altar fellowship based on aligned views of justification by grace through faith.[248] Full communion with the Moravian Church in North America—encompassing Northern and Southern Provinces—was ratified by the Moravians in 2018 following UMC approval, rooted in 18th-century Moravian influences on John Wesley's theology.[250] Pursuits of further agreements continue, notably with the Episcopal Church; the UMC General Conference approved a full communion proposal on April 30, 2024, by a 95% majority, affirming mutual recognition despite differences in episcopal ordination and Eucharistic practices, but Episcopal ratification remains pending as of mid-2025, with dialogues focusing on implementation steps.[251][252] Complementing full communion, the UMC sustains concordat relationships—formal pacts for dialogue, limited clergy exchange, and cooperation without full sacramental reciprocity—with entities like the United Church of Christ and Presbyterian Church (USA, fostering joint social witness on issues such as poverty alleviation.[248] Broader interdenominational ties include active participation in the National Council of Churches (since 1950) and World Council of Churches (since 1948), where the UMC contributes to global Christian unity initiatives, and leadership within the World Methodist Council, uniting over 80 Methodist and Wesleyan bodies representing 80 million members worldwide for theological dialogue and mission coordination.[253] The Interdenominational Cooperation Fund, apportioned annually from UMC budgets, allocates approximately $1.5 million (as of 2023 figures) to support these ecumenical endeavors, including shared advocacy and disaster response.[254] Recent denominational schisms, including the 2022-2024 exits forming the Global Methodist Church, have prompted reviews of these ties to ensure alignment with remaining UMC polity, though no formal ruptures with ecumenical partners have occurred.[255]Membership Dynamics and Institutional Health
Historical Trends and Peak Membership
The United Methodist Church (UMC) traces its origins to the Methodist movement founded by John Wesley in the 18th century, which experienced rapid growth in the United States during the 19th and early 20th centuries through revivals, circuit riders, and institutional expansion. By the mid-20th century, the antecedent Methodist Church had become one of the largest Protestant denominations in America, with membership surpassing 10 million by the 1950s amid post-World War II cultural shifts favoring organized religion.[256] The 1968 merger with the Evangelical United Brethren Church formed the UMC, combining approximately 10.3 million Methodist members with about 750,000 EUB members, yielding a total U.S. membership of roughly 11 million at inception.[23] This merger marked the denomination's peak U.S. membership, recorded at 11,026,976 in 1967 (pre-merger data) and stabilizing near 11 million in 1968, before an immediate post-merger dip to 10.99 million.[257] Historical data indicate steady growth from the early 1900s, driven by urbanization, immigration, and social gospel initiatives, but stagnation set in by the late 1950s as broader societal secularization began eroding mainline Protestant adherence. Globally, the UMC's membership expanded beyond U.S. borders through missions, reaching ancillary peaks in total numbers around the 2010s at over 12 million, though U.S. figures—historically comprising the core—never recovered their 1960s zenith.[234] Key membership milestones reflect this trajectory:| Year | U.S. Membership | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 1967 | 11,026,976 | Pre-merger peak for Methodist Church[257] |
| 1968 | 10,990,720 | Post-merger UMC formation[257] |
| 1970 | 10,668,042 | Onset of consistent annual declines[257] |
| 1990 | 8,859,946 | Continued erosion amid cultural shifts[257] |
| 2000 | 8,340,954 | Approaching 8 million threshold[257] |
Recent Declines: Empirical Data and Causal Factors
The United Methodist Church (UMC) has undergone sharp membership declines, especially in the United States, with official statistics indicating a 21.9% drop in U.S. professing members in 2023 alone.[258] Cumulative losses from 2020 to 2023 included an 8.8% decline between 2020 and 2021, followed by 5.1% from 2021 to 2022, and 9.1% from 2022 to 2023, reflecting both disaffiliations and natural attrition.[42] Weekly worship attendance, including online, fell from 3,141,242 in prior years to 2,184,245 by 2024, with most of the reduction attributable to departing congregations rather than solely post-pandemic effects.[29] These figures, tracked by the UMC's General Council on Finance and Administration (GCFA), show U.S. membership dipping below half of the denomination's global total by 2019, a trend accelerating thereafter.[259] A key empirical indicator of decline is the mass disaffiliation of U.S. congregations under Paragraph 2553 of the Book of Discipline, which provided a temporary exit pathway ending in 2023. Between 2019 and 2023, approximately 25% of U.S. churches—over 7,600 congregations—disaffiliated, accounting for about 24% of the denomination's domestic membership.[260][261] In 2020, the UMC reported 29,598 U.S. congregations; by mid-2023, disaffiliations had reduced this by thousands, with many joining the Global Methodist Church (GMC).[34] Post-2024, after the UMC General Conference removed disaffiliation provisions and lifted restrictions on same-sex marriage and LGBTQ+ clergy ordination, membership continued to erode without structured exits, exacerbating net losses estimated at 22% over the prior six years.[262] The principal causal factor in these declines is a decades-long theological schism centered on human sexuality, biblical authority, and doctrinal enforcement, culminating in conservative congregations' exodus. Disputes intensified after repeated General Conference failures to uphold traditional prohibitions on homosexual practice, leading to perceptions of institutional capitulation to progressive pressures.[35][263] Disaffiliating churches cited the UMC's liberalization— including ordinations of openly LGBTQ+ clergy in violation of prior covenants—as incompatible with Wesleyan orthodoxy and scriptural standards on marriage and sexuality.[159][264] This mirrors historical Methodist splits, such as over slavery, where doctrinal compromise eroded unity, though the current divide reflects asymmetric enforcement favoring revisionist views.[265] Broader societal secularization contributed marginally, but data show the schism's targeted departures explain the disproportionate U.S. losses compared to growth in African conferences, which retain traditional stances.[263]Post-Schism Reconfiguration and Future Prospects
Following the culmination of widespread disaffiliations enabled by Paragraph 2553 of the United Methodist Book of Discipline, which allowed congregations to exit with pension liabilities and apportioned shares paid through 2023, approximately 7,600 U.S. churches—representing about 25% of pre-schism congregations and 24% of U.S. membership—departed the denomination by the end of 2023.[260][266] These exits were disproportionately concentrated in the South, where conservative-leaning annual conferences saw rates exceeding 50% in some regions, reflecting long-standing tensions over the denomination's inconsistent enforcement of prohibitions on same-sex marriage and ordination of practicing homosexuals.[266] The United Methodist Church (UMC) subsequently terminated the disaffiliation window after 2024, amid projections that continued outflows could have halved its U.S. presence, while introducing limited reaffiliation policies at the discretion of annual conferences to encourage select returning congregations.[267] In reconfiguration efforts, the UMC's 2024 General Conference removed language from the Book of Discipline barring "self-avowed practicing homosexuals" from clergy roles and prohibiting ceremonial same-sex unions, aligning the denomination more closely with progressive stances predominant in remaining U.S. leadership and institutions.[268] This shift prompted structural proposals, including regionalization to grant central conferences (particularly in Africa and the Philippines) greater doctrinal autonomy, though implementation remains pending and faces resistance from African delegates who view it as diluting global unity on traditional sexual ethics.[269] Domestically, remaining conferences have pivoted metrics from weekly attendance—down sharply post-split—to qualitative measures like community engagement, signaling adaptation to sustained numerical erosion amid a pre-schism U.S. membership decline from 7.7 million in 2013 to 6.4 million by 2023, exacerbated by the schism.[270][35] Parallel to UMC adjustments, disaffiliating congregations have coalesced primarily into the Global Methodist Church (GMC), launched in May 2022 as a theologically conservative alternative emphasizing Wesleyan orthodoxy, which reported over 6,000 congregations worldwide by October 2025, including steady influxes from ongoing U.S. exits and international affiliates.[271] Some former UMC churches in the GMC have experienced attendance gains of 15-20% in initial post-split years, attributed to renewed doctrinal clarity and evangelistic focus, contrasting with broader mainline Protestant stagnation.[272] Prospects for the UMC hinge on resolving transatlantic divides, as African conferences—comprising over 40% of global membership and growing—have voiced threats of further separation or withholding remittances unless core doctrines are reaffirmed, potentially fragmenting the denomination's international framework.[273] Without revitalized evangelism, U.S. projections indicate continued decline toward 4 million domestic members by 2030, mirroring historical patterns of institutional liberalization correlating with membership loss in other mainline bodies.[274] Conversely, the GMC's trajectory suggests viability for orthodox Methodism, with potential to eclipse UMC U.S. size if disaffiliation barriers loosen, though both entities face secularization pressures in the West and competition from independent evangelical networks.[275]Achievements and Criticisms
Mission Accomplishments and Social Impact
The United Methodist Church's mission efforts, coordinated primarily through the General Board of Global Ministries and the United Methodist Committee on Relief (UMCOR), emphasize disaster response, health promotion, education, and poverty alleviation worldwide. UMCOR, operational since 1940, focuses on emergency aid and recovery without proselytizing as a condition for assistance. In 2024, it responded to 137 humanitarian crises—encompassing natural disasters, migration events, and public health emergencies—distributing aid such as food, water, shelter materials, and recovery grants to approximately 454,163 individuals via 187 grants totaling $37.6 million.[277] These interventions have facilitated debris removal, medical support, and community rebuilding in regions like Ukraine for war recovery and the Middle East for conflict relief, with 2023 seeing responses to 111 global disasters.[278] Health initiatives represent a core social impact area, with UMC-related ministries delivering over $2 billion in annual charity care and serving more than 32 million people across 1,555 U.S. facilities, alongside global programs combating diseases like malaria and HIV/AIDS through education, advocacy, and infrastructure.[28] The Abundant Health campaign, launched to enhance child health in vulnerable communities, exceeded its 2020 target by providing services—including vaccinations, nutrition, and hygiene training—to 1,075,732 children, yielding measurable reductions in preventable illnesses and improved survival rates in partnered regions of Africa and Asia.[279] In education, the church sustains 106 affiliated colleges and universities, 13 theological seminaries, and 7 pre-collegiate schools in the U.S., while supporting hundreds more globally through historical Methodist foundations that have established over 1,500 academies, colleges, and universities since the 18th century.[28][280] These institutions have advanced literacy, professional training, and leadership development, particularly in developing countries, with scholarships and grants enabling access for underserved populations. Additional impacts include agricultural programs like the Yambasu Initiative, which in 2024 supported sustainable farming for about 1,446 people, fostering food security and economic resilience.[277] Overall, these efforts have distributed tens of millions in aid annually, though efficacy varies by local partnerships and external factors like political instability.[281]Theological and Cultural Influences
The theology of the United Methodist Church derives primarily from the 18th-century Anglican priest John Wesley, who emphasized Arminian soteriology over Calvinist predestination, including the doctrines of prevenient grace enabling human response to God, justification by faith, and sanctification as a process toward Christian perfection or entire holiness of heart and life.[2] This framework, articulated in Wesley's sermons and notes on the New Testament, prioritizes scriptural authority interpreted through tradition, reason, and personal experience—the so-called Wesleyan Quadrilateral—which guides doctrinal reflection without elevating any single element above Scripture.[282] United Methodists affirm core Christian tenets such as the Trinity, the deity and atoning work of Jesus Christ, and the authority of the Bible as containing all things necessary for salvation, as outlined in the church's Articles of Religion and Confession of Faith.[283] Culturally, Wesleyan theology has promoted "social holiness," asserting that faith manifests in communal action, influencing early Methodists to lead efforts against slavery—Wesley himself denounced the slave trade as contrary to Christian principles in his 1774 tract Thoughts Upon Slavery—and to advocate for prison reform, education, and temperance movements in 19th-century America.[139] The denomination founded numerous institutions, including over a dozen universities such as Emory (1836) and Duke (1838), embedding Methodist values of inquiry and service into American higher education.[284] This practical divinity combined personal piety with societal engagement, contributing to the Second Great Awakening's revivalism and shaping Protestant emphases on experiential faith and ethical living. Critics, particularly from within conservative Methodist circles, argue that post-1968 mergers and subsequent theological shifts have eroded these foundations, with progressive influences in U.S. leadership prioritizing cultural accommodation over biblical norms, especially regarding human sexuality.[263] The 2024 General Conference's removal of prohibitions on ordaining "self-avowed practicing homosexuals" and performing same-sex marriages—replacing them with permissive regional guidelines—has been cited as evidence of doctrinal drift, contradicting explicit scriptural condemnations of homosexual acts (e.g., Romans 1:26-27, 1 Corinthians 6:9-10) and Wesley's own views on sexual morality aligned with traditional Anglican ethics.[264] [285] This change prompted over 7,600 U.S. congregations to disaffiliate by mid-2024 under Paragraph 2553 of the Book of Discipline, representing about one-quarter of pre-schism membership, as conservatives formed bodies like the Global Methodist Church to preserve orthodox Wesleyan standards.[286] Such developments highlight tensions between the church's experiential quadrant and immutable scriptural teachings, with detractors attributing institutional decline to concessions to secular cultural pressures rather than fidelity to first-principles biblical realism.[72]Critiques of Doctrinal Drift and Institutional Failures
Critics, particularly from within conservative Methodist circles, contend that the United Methodist Church (UMC) has undergone significant doctrinal drift, departing from historic Wesleyan orthodoxy and biblical standards on human sexuality and marriage. This shift intensified after the 2019 General Conference, where delegates upheld traditional teachings prohibiting the ordination of self-avowed practicing homosexuals and the performance of same-sex unions, yet progressive clergy and bishops continued to defy these provisions, leading to widespread perceptions of institutional non-enforcement.[287] By the 2024 General Conference, the UMC removed these restrictions entirely, allowing for the affirmation of LGBTQ+ clergy and same-sex marriages, a move decried by traditionalists as capitulation to secular cultural pressures rather than fidelity to Scripture's portrayal of sexual ethics.[288] Such changes, according to analysts like those at Firebrand Magazine, exemplify a broader trivialization of doctrine under theological liberalism, where core beliefs are subordinated to inclusivity narratives, eroding the church's confessional integrity.[210] This doctrinal evolution has been linked empirically to accelerated membership losses, with over 7,660 U.S. congregations—representing about one-quarter of the denomination—disaffiliating between 2019 and 2023, primarily conservative churches citing the UMC's failure to uphold bans on LGBTQ+ practices as incompatible with biblical authority.[288][289] Critics argue that progressive affiliations, such as with the Reconciling Ministries Network (RMN), correlate with congregational decline, as orthodox members drift away when local churches adopt revisionist stances on sexuality, contrasting with stable or growing evangelical alternatives.[290] Broader critiques extend to theological spectrum imbalances, where liberal dominance in seminaries and leadership has marginalized confessional voices, fostering a "Unitarian Methodist" confederacy that dilutes Trinitarian and Christocentric emphases in favor of social activism.[291] Institutionally, the UMC has faced accusations of leadership failures in maintaining covenantal discipline, exemplified by bishops' tolerance of "practicing" violations despite the Book of Discipline's mandates, which undermined trust and precipitated the 2020-2024 schism protocol's collapse.[292] Post-2024, the abrupt halt of disaffiliation windows—despite major doctrinal revisions—has been viewed as a retention tactic to mask ongoing exodus trends, exacerbating financial strains from a bloated bureaucracy that expanded even as U.S. membership plummeted from 10.7 million in 1965 to under 6 million by 2020.[267][293] Conservative observers, including those from the Institute on Religion and Democracy, highlight this as symptomatic of self-destructive governance, where ideological agendas prioritize progressive causes over evangelistic renewal, wounding clergy and laity alike while failing to reverse denominational decline.[294][295] These institutional shortcomings, rooted in unresolved theological tensions, have prompted formations like the Global Methodist Church in 2022, signaling a reconfiguration away from perceived UMC intransigence on orthodoxy.[35]References
- https://www.[facebook](/page/Facebook).com/groups/globalmethodistchurch/posts/1516677965998251/
