No Images? Click here Antonia Blumberg is a HuffPost reporter focusing on religion coverage.A Texas church recently voted to stop hosting weddings as long as its denomination prohibits clergy from officiating same-sex marriages.The First United Methodist Church in downtown Austin announced on its website that its congregation had voted 93 percent in favor of the new resolution “to align its wedding policies with its strongly-held principle of full inclusion of all persons.” People who scheduled their weddings before the resolution was announced would still be able to continue them as planned, the church said. But the clergy would not schedule new ceremonies. The church published a video on its Facebook page on Thursday explaining the process that led to its decision. “This is a step we feel called to take as we continue to strive for change in the wider church,” the Austin church’s senior pastor, Rev. Taylor Fuerst, said in the video. The house of worship is formally affiliated with the United Methodist Church, which does not permit clergy to officiate same-sex weddings. The U.S. Supreme Court legalized gay marriage in all 50 states in a landmark ruling in 2015. But in the UMC, clergy risk being defrocked if they oversee such unions. The UMC’s constitution states that “all persons are of sacred worth.” But the denomination’s Book of Discipline holds that “homosexuality is incompatible with Christian teaching.” Current policies bar “self-avowed practicing homosexuals” from being ordained and prohibit pastors and churches from performing or hosting same-sex weddings. “We support laws in civil society that define marriage as the union of one man and one woman,” the UMC website states. In its resolution, the Austin church argued that the denomination’s policies regarding marriage and sexuality “are incompatible with the inclusive teachings of Jesus Christ, as well as our United Methodist Constitution, and are fundamentally contrary to our mission and to our service to each member of the church.” Fuerst said the congregation was inspired to take action after three same-sex couples ― all of whom were prominent members and leaders in the church ― were forced to wed in alternate locations given the denomination’s stance. “They didn’t even have the option to wed in the church,” the pastor told HuffPost. “Their weddings were joyful, beautiful occasions, but it was painful to have the shadow of this exclusion over so many people who are faithful, growing disciples of Christ and leaders in our congregation. It goes directly against what we believe Jesus taught and revealed to us about God in scripture.” The UMC boasts more than seven million members in the United States alone and has long struggled to come to an agreement about how to minister to LGBTQ people. UMC clergy members in Michigan, Pennsylvania and New York have come under fire in recent years for officiating at same-sex weddings. Want more? Head here. Get all of the queer news that matters to you.Don't miss out — subscribe here! Like what you see? Help us spread the world! Can't get enough? Here are two more newsletters we think you'd dig. Check out HuffPost Politics and HuffPost (In)formation. |
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