CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — United Methodist delegates are heading into the homestretch of their first legislative gathering in five years — one that appears on track to make historic changes in lifting their church’s longstanding bans on same-sex marriage and the ordination of LGBTQ clergy.
After a day off on Sunday, delegates to the General Conference of the United Methodist Church resumed their work Monday and will be meeting all this week before wrapping up their 11-day session on Friday
They’ve already begun making historic changes: On Thursday, delegates overwhelmingly endorsed a policy shift that would restructure the worldwide denomination into regional conferences and give the U.S. region, for the first time, the same right as international bodies to modify church rules to fit local situations.
That measure — subject to local ratification votes — is seen as a way the U.S. churches could have LGBTQ ordination and same-sex marriage while the more conservative overseas areas, particularly the large and fast-growing churches of Africa, could maintain those bans.
EDEN CONFIDENTIAL: Princess Beatrice's pal Alice Naylor
Upper reaches of Yangtze River welcome first 10,000
Experts say gun alone doesn't justify deadly force in fatal shooting of Florida airman
Minnesota Uber and Lyft driver pay package beats deadline to win approval in Legislature
Man charged with overturning port
Chinese EV maker Zeekr surges 34 pct in Wall Street debut
Chinese yuan weakens to 7.1028 against USD Thursday
Shooting injures 2 at Missouri high school graduation ceremony
Exports seen rising on upgrades, e
Mystery artist who erected signs comparing pothole
Man City just two wins from another EPL title. Burnley becomes the second team relegated