Analyses Begin of Future Plans

by Cynthia B. Astle
November 7, 2019 (Used by permission of United Methodist Insight.)

Policy wonks, this was your week in the journey toward The United Methodist Church’s future, as analyses of the various submitted plans began to emerge.

The Wesleyan Covenant Association kicked off the analysis parade with the Rev. Walter Fenton’s overview of four of the six plans submitted to the 2020 General Conference. Rev. Fenton serves as the WCA’s vice president for strategic engagement. He also is an elder in the Greater New Jersey Annual Conference, which recently passed a resolution that would allow local congregations to decide how to include LGBTQ+ people in ministry and mission in opposition to increased restrictions going into effect Jan. 1.

Calling the four designs he reviewed the ones most likely to be considered at the 2020 General Conference, Rev. Fenton does a good job with a Joe-Friday-just-the-facts approach to the plans:

  • The Indianapolis Plan for Amicable Separation in which the WCA was a major participant and has endorsed;
  • The New Expressions of Worldwide Methodism created by UM-Forward from the “liberation” document created at its Our Way Forward gathering last May;
  • The New Form of Unity Plan, formerly called the “Bard-Jones” plan for the two bishops, David A. Bard and Scott J. Jones, who drafted it; and
  • The Next Generation UMC Plan, a design prepared by the ad hoc group of centrists and progressives known as UMC Next.

Not to be outdone by the “dark horse” status of his Plain Grace Plan, layman Frank Holbrook started a series of analyses with Next Generation UMC. Unlike Rev. Fenton, Mr. Holbrook offers comments on Next Generation’s Petition 1, its enabling legislation. With his attorney’s background and current standing as a GC2020 delegate from the Memphis Annual Conference, Mr. Holbrook dissects Petition 1’s finest points. For example, he notes the narrow scope of the proposed “Commission for a 21st Century Church,” the group that’s supposed to oversee division of the denomination into three branches: