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. |
South China theater festival to showcase outstanding classicsRishi Sunak rejects calls to proscribe Iran's Revolutionary Guard as a terror groupChinese traditional music charms Maltese audienceWoman, 45, suffers horrific and rare reaction to IBUPROFENChina unveils plan on equipment renewal, tradingBelarus, Azerbaijan to strengthen bilateral cooperationWorld Bank to further support health, nutrition in LaosChina to enhance coordination with Arab League: Chinese FMThe marathon task of trying America's most famous man: Trump 'smirked' as he became the first exJames Martin shares health update as he returns to TV following cancer battle