I have been dismayed by the recent “unanimous support” claims for our Call to Action report — since I have had personal conversations with people directly involved who are anything but fully on board.  Oh, I understand the act of solidarity and presenting a unified public face and the potential promotional value.  What troubles me is the level of dishonesty and surrender involved — people I respect telling me that disagreeing won’t do any good anyway because we’re “in too deep.”  I heard that same logic in one place I worked when I discovered that a major research project was flawed, inaccurate, and just plain bad, but was told that we’d invested too much in it not to go ahead and use it.  Integrity be damned, we’ve got to keep moving — even if it’s in the wrong direction.

Let me repeat — I don’t disagree with the findings of the Call to Action report.  It says exactly what we’ve discovered at least three times before over the past thirty years.  Confirmation is a good thing.  However, as in each prior instance, we are claiming that this time we’re serious about changing, but all we are doing is identify a number of symptoms to treat instead of root causes to change.  The identity and purpose questions are ignored — we assume that we know who we are and that we know why we exist.  These, my friends, are the very questions that we cannot take for granted, and they are the questions that must be faced before we decide what tactical changes to make.  We are not a “united” Methodist Church at the moment and focusing on program and structure when the relationships are damaged and the connection is broken promises nothing but disaster.  The problem is, were we to use our General Conference time to clarify what it means to be United Methodist in the 21st century, to reframe and clarify our theological task in contemporary culture, to codify and commit to our Social Principles, and to recover the missional/evangelical foundation that defined our heritage, it would draw a line in the sand and every living, breathing United Methodist would be forced to answer the key question: do I want to be a United Methodist or not.  And, being perfectly honest, we would probably lose a third to a half of our membership no matter which way we turn.

Our ambiguity, wishy-washiness, lack of conviction, and inability to take clear stands leave us in a nice, comfy, mushy place.  We can appease everyone, even when we can’t please them.  We can claim that everyone can find a place in our family — as long as they don’t rub up too close to those who disagree with or dislike them.  We can do just about anything and justify that it is worth doing, for somebody.  We can offer 10,000 doors, as if each threshold is equal and will lead us all to the same place.  We create this illusion of tranquility when what we actually have is comfort disguised as tolerance and love.  Baloney (or bologna, should you prefer)!  The absence of discord is not the same as harmony and unity — and by the way, we don’t even have an absence of discord.

We need open, honest dialogue about who “we” are.  The “united” in United Methodist needs severe scrutiny.  It is a witness to the world that beggars our credibility.  We are not “one in Christ, one with each other, and one in ministry to all the world.”  We are a poster child of dysfunction and we tolerate egregious bad behavior.  We communicate poorly — both in content and style — and use information as a weapon more often than as a tool. 

A favorite metaphor of mine is to compare the congregational system to a wood-chipper.  Wood-chippers grind things up.  They don’t build things or create things or fix things.  They make wood chips.  If you wish to get a different output, you can’t use the wood-chipper to get it.  Putting something else in the wood-chipper won’t change the wood-chipper; the wood-chipper will destroy whatever is put through it.  Putting fine china in the chipper won’t raise the quality of the chipper; it just destroys the china.  If you want different results, you change the system.  We have been a service-provider church for so long that the concept of becoming a disciple-making church is overwhelming.  We think that if we dump disciple-focused resources in our service provider system, it will change the system.  It’s not working out that way.  Our system provider church is simply chewing up and spitting out our best disciple-making efforts.  Rethink church?  It will take a little more than thinking.

At the very least, our system will not even be willing to change as long as we find ourselves in the political situation where our leaders privately despair our best efforts then publicly applaud them.  A house divided against itself cannot stand — even when it pretends it isn’t divided.  We need desperately to decide what it means to be “United” Methodists, and we need to decide soon.

41 responses to “DMC – Divided Methodist Church”

  1. Becky Coleman Avatar
    Becky Coleman

    Boy oh boy. I’m Becky Coleman, also a boomer, but I don’t believe I have “old, tired” thinking (well maybe a bit old, but definitely not tired). I’m not looking for a comfortable place, but rather a church that challenges me to look at the world through the eyes of Jesus and follow a God of justice and compassion. Faith acting through love draws me to the United Methodist Church. If we follow the teachings of Jesus, only a little leaven/yeast can cause a much larger measure of flour to become bread. Keep challenging us, Dan, to be that yeast.

    1. Todd Anderson Avatar
      Todd Anderson

      Becky — I am a boomer too — and am with you on NOT believing I have “old tired” thinking.
      I was sad to read about the 29-y,o, “washout” (no disrespect intended…just a good visual word…….) and can’t help but think perhaps this person didn’t wait long enough before jumping ship?
      Change takes time. Sometimes it’s on GOD’S timeline — not ours. But, I do respect each individual’s right to ‘march to the beat of a different drummer’ and for this person can only offer Prayer that their journey is safe as they live after the example of our Lord Christ — in whatever church community/denomination they find themselves.

  2. Don Avatar
    Don

    To all who are choosing to champion Dick’s cause: please don’t be sucked into his conspiracy mentality. It is easy to stand on the sidelines and criticize other people. He is bitter because his brilliant insights have been ignored by people who know what they are doing. He served the Board of Discipleship for over a decade. Was he invited to participate in these important projects for the future of our church? No, he wasn’t. And it doesn’t take a genius to figure out why. He has nothing of real value to contribute to the conversation. Wiser heads made the decision to keep him out of the processes so that his negativity would not undermine the vital and valuable work of the denomination. Had Dick’s insights or opinions held value, he would have been invited to the table. So, take what he says with a grain of salt. He may not be as wise as you all think he is.

    1. Matt Kuzma Avatar
      Matt Kuzma

      Wow is that a rude, cynical thing to say, Don.

    2. Dan R. Dick Avatar
      Dan R. Dick

      Don, I really don’t think I am smarter than others, but I do feel I have the right to disagree, and since this is a blog, share my opinion. No one has to accept anything I write, but it won’t hurt people to at least think about the questions I raise. You are correct. I was not asked to serve on any of these groups exploring the future of our denomination. I do not accept the conclusion that it is because I don’t know what I am talking about. I lean toward the answer that I ask tough questions that people would rather not have to deal with. We will never know for sure.

      I am glad you feel the Call to Action report is accurate and helpful. I pray you are right.

    3. Matthew Johnson Avatar

      Isn’t it great that Jesus loves trolls too, Don? Again, you shoot as a sniper and hide. And this is not just — as you say — “Dick’s cause.” We are many and the revolution of love is forming.

    4. eric pone Avatar
      eric pone

      Don

      If the people you refer to knew better then the decline would have reversed a long time ago. And I think you prove many of our points when you say folks like Dan were kept out of the discussion. Yes that was the case.

      Alternative views have routinely been ignored. Many of us have not sat on the sidelines however. Over the years I have served as a local pastor, youth leader, conference council on youth ministry, National Youth Ministry, and multiple times as a delegate to Annual Conference and I confirm to you that those ‘wise people’ aren’t as open and wise as you think.

      There are clear conservative and liberal agendas. Wake up and understand that the Denomination sits at the precipice of decline and that a smaller more diverse group focused on true reform is needed.

    5. Todd Anderson Avatar
      Todd Anderson

      Don……
      Some thoughts
      1/ It is easy to put fingers on keys and type
      Most primates are capable of learning to
      do that.
      2/ Old saying -perhaps Chinese Proverb ? – “first engage brain, second engage tongue” — suggest you take this advice, and strongly suggest you research what you say/type as to not present yourself as a fool (or lower order primate);
      3/ Also easy to not disclose who you are…..”Don” (if that’s even your real first name)………”Grow A Set” and use your name
      4/ As to credibility — here’s a mirror — take a look.
      5) Your position is uninformed and out of line. Dan is a big boy and I am sure can take constructive criticism and deal with harsh words, but, “Don” he’s SPOT ON in terms of our Wesleyan Theology, fundamentals, and grasp of that concept. You, “Don” need a refresher in those basics.
      6) Should you “grow that set” that I suggest, and can identify yourself — I encourage further — informed, constructive dialogue about how WE can make the Methodist Church more effective — THAT’s the entire summation of the changes and modifications Dan is working for.
      I for one prefer, and value dialogue with people with front and back names — that are real.

  3. Terry K. Avatar
    Terry K.

    I am 29 years old, thought my life was going to be serving the United Methodist Church, and now I have no church. I left seminary in May and left the church shortly after annual conference. These decisions tore me apart. But the truth is I can no longer support an organization that has sold out, and the United Methodist Church is a total sell-out, and you named it very clearly in your post: the people who know better – the people who call themselves leaders — are lying to us and telling us things they think we want to hear, but that they know are wrong. Among people my age, the United Methodist Church has almost no credibility. Do you want to know why it is so hard to attract young people to the United Methodist Church? Because a lot of old men and women smile and say they want us and then do everything in their power to make the church unwelcoming, unloving, and unaccepting. We will put up with a lot, but lying and intentional hypocrisy is too much.

    I have no idea how old you are – you look much older than I would expect from your thinking and writing – but Baby Boomers don’t know everything, and when they make the church over in their own image they can expect just one result: the rest of the world will look elsewhere for a church. The Call to Action is old thinking, by old people, seeking to preserve an old church to keep themselves happy. Yet, when the church dies, they will blame it on young people who weren’t faithful.

    You say that the real questions to answer are identity and purpose. You are right on. And right now I would say the identity of the United Methodist Church is a tired, old group of people and the prupose is to have a nice, comfortable place that makes them feel good. I hoped I could work to change that, but the system beat it out of me. There are simply too many older people with the power to keep things stuck right where they are while pretending that they are interested in change. And all the websites and bumpersticker slogans in the world won’t make true what we younger people see clearly is a lie.

  4. eric pone Avatar
    eric pone

    I think Dan nails it on the head. The only thing that bugs me is that Dan is willing to lose members for the sake of rebuilding. At the same time though conservatives on the otherside would love to see people like Dan leave even if it means losing half.

    I don’t see the problem as being complex so much as the priorities of the General Church being cluttered and unfocused through this massive ‘group think’that is the General Conference, Common Table blah blah. I differ from Dan in that I don’t think that you can hold people to higher accountability in today’s world. Particularly, folks who don’t understand the Church and her traditions and don’t understand the Bible or basic Church dogma. And folks aren’t willing to learn because there are other things pulling them away. Just like the miners who the circuit riders ministered to.

    What we can and should do though is keep things simple. Keep worship focused on praising and teaching. Yes this isn’t as challenging or mindbending for a pastor or those who are into theology, but it is what most of congregants need.

    Secondly, every church should have a simple outside ministry to the public. Providing a critical service that is based around a core biblical teaching.
    We could engage a lot more folks if we could get to this simple point. There is a church in south Minneapolis that serves a Wednesday night supper and Breakfast on Sunday. People from the community come out for it. The folks view this as their church even though they don’t participate in the full life. But feeding people is a huge way to preach mercy, justice, God providing, and the mission of the Church.
    Just some thoughts.

  5. Karen Heyburn Avatar
    Karen Heyburn

    There is no way for me to say AMEN loudly enough on the internet. Kudos to you for such holy boldness. Once again we are being asked to believe that changing our ordination practices will solve the problems that have nothing to do with ordination. Isn’t it time to recognize that we still have an enormously egregious top heavy structure that is killing discipleship and ministry?

  6. Vance P. Ross Avatar
    Vance P. Ross

    Dan, I so appreciate the honesty of this discussion. I do hope your love of the church will be what is apparent to those who read this rather than wanting to disparage and harangue you for offering your observations, considerations and feelings.

    This is a system issue-not structure. That is directly related to theology, spirituality, ecclesiology and missiology. This notions must be addressed. As you well know, a system is designed for the results it gets. Disciples of jesus do not come from just anywhere or just any change. I applaud your affirmation of CTA and your invitation to move to deep systemic change

  7. Sherry Krol Avatar
    Sherry Krol

    That’s my real name. Don. I’m going on record in appreciation for the tone, quality and soul-searching nature of the discussions launched by Methodeviation. It would seem you are the thing you hate.

    1. Dave Whitman Avatar
      Dave Whitman

      Another real name here going on record. Thanks for another spot-on article, Dan. I am so very appreciative of the fact that your gifts of experience, education and position help give voice to these concerns. The best I can offer you is my prayers. So I pray that God will empower you for the sake of building up the church.

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