by Cynthia B. Astle, February 13, 2023 (Used by permission)

Adapted from Baptist News Global

Disaffiliation tops concerns for many clergy and laity these days as about 1,800 congregations out of 30,000 U.S. churches have left since 2019. However, not all the votes for disaffiliation have succeeded, and when that happens, there’s often a trail of damaged spirits and depleted resources left behind.

The United Methodist Church is organized with what’s known as a “connectional” model. The Book of Discipline terms the annual conference, not the local church, as the “basic unit” of the denomination. Local churches receive their pastors through appointment by a bishop and pay annual contributions known as “apportionments” for denomination-wide mission and ministry.

Most important, local churches don’t own their property; it is held “in trust” for the annual conference, which provides the resources to start the church. Thus, leaving the denomination isn’t as simple as changing the name on the sign. The exit process places a heavy burden on church members to declare their affiliation if leaving the UMC is proposed.

Two examples from North Texas

For example, Lake Highlands UMC — one of the more prominent congregations in the Dallas-based North Texas Annual Conference — voted on disaffiliation Jan. 29. Members voted 157 to 145 to stay in the UMC, according to the Lake Highlands Advocate magazine. Three telephone messages and an email to the congregation’s senior pastor, Jill Jackson-Sears, asking what happens next for the church elicited a curt response: “I make it a personal policy not to talk to media.” So Lake Highlands’ fate publicly remains unclear.

Another North Texas church, First UMC in Frisco, a far northern suburb of Dallas, saw its disaffiliation vote fail by about 1%. United Methodist rules require a supermajority approval of 66% for disaffiliation. Nonetheless, First-Frisco’s senior pastor, Mark Vowell, said after the vote that he was taking the congregation out of the UMC anyway in defiance of church rules. Legally, First UMC-Frisco’s property still belongs to the denomination, but like Elvis, its spirit has left the building.