2014-02-20

SAN FRANCISCO (CBS SF) – Methodist congregations across California and much of the west say they will no longer bar same-sex weddings on church grounds, according to a newly-discovered church declaration.

A document being called the “Declaration of Inclusion” has begun circulating among the governing bodies of several Bay Area churches. As of February 18th, 30 churches had declared their intent to allow the unions; about half of those in the Bay Area.

The movement formed in Sacramento area churches, where organizers said the idea was long overdue.

“We must unshackle ourselves from rules reflecting the cultures where same sex marriages are forbidden. We can no longer, in good conscience, deny use of our property to our members and friends,” reads a website created by the authors of the declaration.

Click here to read the full Declaration of Inclusion

The subject of gay marriage has been particularly divisive for the Methodist church. Last December church leadership defrocked a Pennsylvania pastor over his decision to perform his son’s same-sex marriage. As the Declaration of Inclusion notes, such unions are at odds with the Book of Discipline – the set of governing regulations for the faith.

“Current United Methodist Church (UMC) policy, as outlined in the Book of Discipline, states, “We do not condone the practice of homosexuality and consider this practice incompatible with Christian teaching…Ceremonies that celebrate homosexual unions shall not be conducted by our ministers and shall not be conducted in our churches,” reads the declaration.

That sentiment is at odds with beliefs of many who lead Bay Area congregations. Most of local the groups adopting the declaration did so unanimously. Many of those churches are part of the Reconciling Ministries Network, a group that tries to operate within Methodist teachings while remaining inclusive of people in the LGBT community.

“What this means is that we have undertaken a continuing obligation of making issues sensitive to LGBTQ individuals a matter of regular spiritual discourse across our membership…when people are invited into membership at Napa First, they are invited into that ongoing conversation,” reads the February newsletter from the First United Methodist Church in Napa, which adopted the declaration by a 12-0 vote.

Though compelling, the support from laymen doesn’t necessarily translate into open same-sex unions performed in those churches by members of the Methodist clergy. The Book of Discipline states that “The decision to perform the ceremony shall be the right and responsibility of the pastor.” So the onus to perform a ceremony on church grounds still remains with the officiating member of the clergy.

Some pastors have pledged to begin performing same-sex marriage in the wake of the Pennsylvania controversy, a move endorsed by thousands of online petitioners. Western Bishops and other senior church officials also made headlines in 2012 when they signaled their opposition to the church’s current stand on gay marriage.

“We pledge to you that we will continue to work for that day when we, The United Methodist Church, can truly live up to our logo of open hearts, open minds, open doors,” Bishop Minerva Carcaño, president of the Western Jurisdiction College of Bishops, said at the time. It was a stance which drew criticism from other members of the faith.

The Declaration of Inclusion is the latest step in the process of reconciling the teachings of the church with the goal of inclusiveness. It remains to be seen whether this will be a step toward common ground or further the rift between those who wish to maintain a ban on same-sex unions and those who believe they are a sacred right.

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