Day 9 of General Conference is currently underway.
Day 8 of General Conference saw a full day of voting as delegates fast-tracked a large number of items via the consent calendar. The morning consent calendar was passed by a vote of 667-54.
Because consent calendars often contain dozens of items voted upon at once, sometimes it is hard to keep track of what was actually approved. Some items within the consent calendar included logistical committees and processes to support worldwide regionalization, structures and processes related to the appointments, retirements, and oversight of bishops, and other administrative committee structures, memberships, and organizations. Today’s consent agenda also included some items that eliminated parts of the Traditional Plan that was passed by a vote of 438-384 during the 2019 Special Called General Conference. This removed punitive language that added restrictions on same-sex marriage and “self-avowed practicing” gay clergy.
One other item of note was the approval to enter into full communion with the Episcopal Church. If the Episcopalian Church affirms the agreement, which might not happen until meetings scheduled for 2027, it will mean that the two denominations recognize each other as “one, holy, catholic and apostolic church in which the Gospel is rightly preached and taught.” One practical benefit of full communion would be that pastors could serve in the churches of the other denomination. In a time when some rural and even urban communities have no Christian churches, there would be an opportunity for a joining of forces as a remedy
Delegates voted to reduce a key component of calculating apportionments — the portion of church giving requested to fund the general-church budget. During an afternoon session on April 30, delegates passed the new base rate for The United Methodist Church’s apportionment formula in the most contested plenary vote so far at this year’s General Conference. As a result, conferences will shift from their current base rate of 3.29% to a base rate of 2.6% for 2025 and 2026. Then, if the apportionment collection rate is 90% or higher in those years, the base rate will jump to 2.9% for 2027 and 2028.
Bottom line: U.S. annual conferences will be asked to pay lower apportionments compared to what delegates passed at the 2016 General Conference. Also, denomination-wide ministries that rely on those apportionments — including general agencies and episcopal leadership — will need to be budgeted with those cuts in mind. General Conference will vote on the full denomination-wide budget on its final day, May 3.
The United Methodist Church has now approved almost a whole new set of Social Principles. During the morning plenary, delegates passed on the consent calendar by a vote of 667-54 three more sections of the revised Social Principles. These included a new Preamble as well as new sections on the Community of All Creation and the Economic Community. They revise Paragraphs 160 and 163 in the Book of Discipline. Social Principles are not church law, but are “a prayerful and thoughtful effort” to speak with a biblical foundation to issues in the contemporary world.
Day 7 of General Conference opened with worship and the commissioning of 26 laypersons from across the denomination to a lifetime of service as deaconesses and home missioners. Additional reports were given by the United Women in Faith, Wespath, Africa University, and United Methodist Men among others.
During the morning plenary session, delegates approved more than 100 wide-ranging items in the consent calendar pertaining to the United Methodist Book of Resolutions. Some petitions included amendments, while others were to simply retain or readopt existing resolutions. Because of the four-year delay of General Conference, the entire Book of Resolutions needs to be readopted, and any resolution not acted upon at this General Conference will expire. Some of the approved items include several regarding climate change, calls for faithful lending practices and electoral campaign finance reform, the rights of farm workers in the U.S., caring for Native people, opposition to racial profiling and an endorsement of the observance of Children’s Sabbath.
Most of the day was centered around work in the Central Conferences, specifically Africa. Time was spent approving a plan to add two more bishops and adjusting the UMC’s map in Africa, where the denomination is growing. During the 2016 General Conference, five new bishops had been sought, but the postponement and financial concerns ultimately reduced that to the approved two. This discussion took most of the morning and afternoon plenary sessions.
The General Council took Sabbath and did not perform any work on this day.
Day 5 of General Conference brought the end of the first week of General Conference. During the plenary sessions, the General Conference passed several proposed revisions to the United Methodist Social Principles, a book of non-binding resolutions and aspirational goals for the denomination around social issues. Changes to the Social Principles occur during each General Conference session.
General Conference delegates approved the restructuring of the Connectional Table so the United Methodist leadership body has a more international membership. The Connectional Table coordinates the denomination’s mission, ministry and resources, including the work of the denomination’s general agencies. The leadership body also has a hand in developing the denomination-wide budget that goes before General Conference for a final vote.
Additionally, the delegates met in their legislative committees to complete their work before the end of the first week so all petitions would receive action before the second week of the plenary sessions began.
Day 4 began with opening worship and hearing from Bishop Sharma Lewis who challenged delegates to put their trust in God and allow the Holy Spirit to move in and through each delegate as they continued to do the work of the United Methodist Church. Reports were given by the Connectional Table, the Commission on Credentials, and discussions and decisions around electing delegates to jurisdictional and central conferences.
The plenary session adjourned at lunchtime and delegates continued to do legislative committee work throughout the afternoon and evening.
Day 3 of General Conference was quite active with important legislation being discussed and ultimately approved – the passage of a constitutional amendment that aims to put The United Methodist Church’s different geographic regions on equal footing (Regionalization) and the approval of four Eurasia conferences’ official departure from the denomination. Delegates spent the afternoon in legislative committee meetings continuing to examine resolutions and petitions that may be moved to the General Conference floor in the coming days.
General Conference passed almost all of the legislation that hopes to give The United Methodist Church’s different geographic regions equal standing in decision-making. Under the legislation, the U.S. and each central conference — church regions in Africa, Europe and the Philippines — would become regional conferences with the same authority to adapt the Book of Discipline, the denomination’s policy book, for more missional effectiveness. This does not include adapting the theological task our our core theologies in the primary sections of the Book of Discipline. At present, only central conferences have that authority under the denomination’s constitution to adapt the Discipline as missional needs and different legal contexts require.
A constitutional amendment like those passed during the regionalization vote requires at least a two-thirds vote at General Conference; the regionalization amendment received 78% of the vote. To be ratified, the amendment also will need at least a two-thirds total vote of annual conference lay and clergy voters. This process will take more than a year before any changes are officially recognized and implemented, assuming they are ratified by the required number of annual conferences, like the North Alabama Annual Conference to which Asbury belongs.
The General Conference also approved the departure of four Eurasian annual conferences — which encompasses churches in Russia, Belarus, Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan. Together, the four plan to form the autonomous Christian Methodist Church. These four annual conferences combined represent 66 churches with approximately 1,123 members. The process by which these annual conferences will leave the United Methodist Church will take about a year to complete before it is final.
Day 2 of General Conference began with opening worship and delegates hearing an Episcopal address from Bishop Holston as well as the Young People’s Address from two young people within the United Methodist Church. Delegates also heard reports from the General Conference on Finance and Administration, Connectional Table regarding regionalization, and Church and Society regarding potential changes to the Social Principles and Book of Discipline. The day was primarily spent with delegates in legislative committee meetings.
The General Council on Finance and Administration presented information regarding the financial state of the church and proposed budget. The proposed 2025-2028 denominational budget coming before delegates is $353.1 million — a 42% reduction from the budget delegates approved at the 2016 General Conference, the assembly’s last regular session. Under that budget proposal, about $347 million would come from the U.S. and $6.1 million from the central conferences — church regions in Africa, Europe and the Philippines.
GCFA emphasized that the budget includes cutting the number of bishops in the U.S. and adding only two bishops in Africa, rather than the initially planned five. The budget would reduce the number of bishops from a total of 66 funded in 2016 to a total of 54.
The Connectional Table and Council of Bishops, urged delegates to envision what The United Methodist Church will become. Acknowledging the need to refashion the church going forward and adapt to reductions in resources, the presenters encouraged a renewed commitment to discerning how to carry out the mission and ministry of the church. The presentation included information regarding proposed legislation regarding regionalization and what that means for the future of the UMC.
Delegates first heard from the standing committee overseeing proposed changes to parts of the Book of Discipline’s Part VI that apply to all regions and what they can adapt. Part VI, the Discipline’s largest section, deals with organization and administration.
The presentation outlined the goal to have a shorter, more globally relevant Book of Discipline. Should regionalization be approved, certain sections may be applied regionally instead of focused globally.
Day 1 of General Conference consisted of orientation for all delegates, Opening Worship, practice voting, and opening business primarily focused on adopting the rules for the General Conference. Delegates were actively engaged with the work of General Conference from 9:30am – 6:30pm.
Opening worship was presided over by Bishop Thomas Bickerton, outgoing President of the Council of Bishops who offered a sermon around casting a vision for the future and “urged a spirit of hope” for the future of the denomination and work before the General Conference. The worship service concluded with Holy Communion.
As with all Annual and General Conference sessions, adopting the rules and procedures for the business sessions. The published rules from which delegates began their work consisted of 42 specific rules spanning more than 140 pages.
During this session, the Commission on General Conference made a presentation outlining changes they’ve made to General Conference to better support delegates in their work and provided an update on the census of delegates present. At the time of the presentation, 751 of 862 (87%) delegates were present and seated. 111 were missing (13%) due to named issues like visas not being issued in time, delegates being incorrectly elected, delegates who had passed away or left the denomination since being elected in 2019 and were not replaced, etc. By comparison, during the 2016 General Conference opening session 91% of delegates were present. A request from the Delegates of the Commission on General Conference was made to get very specific information about the 111 missing delegates and for a plan to be formed to prevent this from occurring in the future. That motion passed 669 to 40.