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UMC passes historic changes for our LGBTQ+ family

An op-ed from Pacific School of Religion faculty Rev. Dr. Kristin Stoneking

This week, the United Methodist Church (UMC) excised the discriminatory policies against LGBTQ+ persons that have been a part of its rules since 1972. While this is a celebration for those inside the denomination, it’s also a victory for champions of dignity and human rights everywhere. The UMC is the second-largest Protestant denomination in the U.S., with a global membership of 10 million. With this change, it becomes the only worldwide Protestant body without anti-LGBTQ positions.  

The impact of this change for the rights and protection of all people and the new discourse now possible is significant. As a denomination with consultative status in the U.N., United Methodists are now uniquely positioned to speak on behalf of LGBTQ+ persons in a transnational body through the language of faith.   

While algorithms create smaller and more niche echo chambers, large, non-governmental institutions that cross boundaries of nationality, but carry unifying identities like common faith or denominational identity have the power to be conduits of both complexity and community. 

This change in UMC policy has long been labored for by many, some whom contributed decades of work but didn’t live to see this day. For me this journey began in the mid 1990s with a refusal to answer anti-LGBTQ+ questions during the ordination process. In 2016 I worked with a team to organize a mass coming out of queer United Methodist clergy which led to the founding of the Queer Clergy Caucus. Now that our work and prayers have been answered, I give thanks and celebrate all who have made this change possible. 

Pacific School of Religion (PSR), where I teach, has also been at the forefront of this work. Their Center for LGBTQ and Gender Studies in Religion (CLGS), founded in 2000, is the country’s first seminary-based LGBTQ+ center. Since then, it’s been working to advance the well-being of LGBTQ+ people and transform faith communities and society through a new public discourse on religion, gender and sexuality through education, research, community building and advocacy. Karen Oliveto, the first openly queer bishop in the UMC, is a PSR alumnx, along with many other groundbreaking theologians and leaders in the fight for social justice. 

At PSR, our vision is to create a world where all can thrive and we are grateful to be partners with the UMC at this historic moment. We invite all into furthering transnational communities that champion spirituality, compassion, and dignity for all persons. 

Rev. Dr. Kristin Stoneking is Associate Professor of United Methodist Studies and Leadership at PSR, a progressive Christian seminary, graduate school, and center for social justice committed to a radically inclusive Gospel. Rev. Stoneking is also an ordained elder in the California-Nevada annual conference of the UMC and has served as a local church pastor, district superintendent, and campus minister with a ministry focused on the intersection of social justice, revitalized faith communities and organizations, faith formation, and interreligious engagement. 

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Contact:
hallie fryd
Pacific School of Religion
5108498239
hfryd@psr.edu

Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of the Religion News Association.