by Cynthia B. Astle, August 3, 2022 (from UM-Insight, republished by permission)

The messages via social media and email tug at heartstrings:

  • "I'm feeling ... like our beloved church got pushed off a cliff into the unknown."
  • "This separation has caused a rift in decades-old fellowships." 
  • "I feel abandoned by my church that voted to leave the UMC."
  • "My church will leave the UMC in August to join GMC. When or how or will UMC provide those without church wanting to remain in UMC with support of some kind?"

These and other social media messages document how the splintering of The United Methodist Church is wounding souls across the denomination. Fortunately, there's now a way station on the journey toward the UMC's future: a "metaverse movement" called UMsConnected.

UMsConnected is the brainchild of Bishop Ken Carter, who oversees the Florida and Western North Carolina Annual Conferences. Aware that some Florida Conference churches were preparing to leave the denomination, Bishop Carter contacted the Rev. Dr. Steve Harper three weeks before the conference's June 2022 session. A retired seminary professor and author of 31 books, Dr. Harper is known throughout world Methodism as an expert on spiritual formation in the Wesleyan tradition and a frequent guide at spiritual workshops and retreats.

"Bishop Carter asked me to consider heading up a website that could be a gathering place for those who want to stay in The United Methodist Church when their congregations disaffiliate," Dr. Harper told United Methodist Insight in a telephone interview. "After thinking it over, I decided that such a 'metaverse movement' could be valuable to other audiences as well as those feeling spiritually homeless."

The UMsConnected website says it's not a church and doesn't have "members." Instead, its metaverse community has "belongers" who join others for spiritual support.

"As a metaverse movement, UMsConnected expresses words like ‘location’ and ‘interaction’ in new and various ways," says the website's "About" section. "The movement will evolve, meeting needs using a learn-by-doing approach, but it has launched with these basic resources: a website, a group Facebook page, and a podcast."