November 13, 2006 By Linda Green
MAPUTO, Mozambique – The bishops of the United Methodist Church are calling members
of the denomination to "live the United Methodist way" in their daily lives and
public witness and be a community of believers who offer hope to the world. Nearly
80 bishops affirmed that call to action Nov. 6 during their first meeting outside
the United States. The bishops accepted the concept but are seeking to clarify
what living the United Methodist way really means. The
council also introduced an action plan that includes starting new churches across
the globe, reaching and caring for children throughout the world and leading the
effort to stamp out the killer diseases of poverty: malaria and HIV/AIDS. West
Ohio Bishop Bruce Ough, chairperson of the bishop's plan team, said that the call
to action is an attempt to chart a response to the council's adopted seven vision
pathways and focus those pathways into four areas of emphasis to compel United
Methodists to action. He said these calls reflect a strategy
under development by the council, the church's general agencies and members of
the Connectional Table, the denomination's program coordination group. Ough
explained that the action plan is rooted in the denomination's mission to make
disciples of Christ, in the church's Wesleyan traditions "while spoken in ways
that resonate with members of the 21st century United Methodist Church" and the
commitment to be a global church, "grounded in our fervent belief that through
Christ, there is hope for a fractured world full of hurting people." Starting
new congregations According to North Georgia Bishop Lindsey
Davis, the council seeks to put hope into action by creating new congregations
that serve all people. The bishops not only envision
planting at least one new church every day outside the United States, where there
is significant membership growth, but also starting a new church every day in
the United States, where the membership has declined for 40 years, he said. Currently
75 new U.S. churches are begun each year. "Our team is discovering what it will
take for us to ramp up from 75 new church starts per year to 365 a year," Davis
added. Since the church in the United States "is at a
crucial tipping point," Davis said a way must be found to challenge United Methodist
churches in the country to "rekindle our Wesleyan passion for souls with the same
kind of enthusiasm and spirit that we see lived out Š throughout Africa." According
to the bishops' plan team, new churches are started so that disciples can be formed
and the world can be changed. These churches, the team said, must pay attention
to new immigrant and refugee communities, to expanding racial/ethnic populations,
to new generations of children and to "those places that have not yet received
the Good News of Jesus Christ." Reaching and caring
for children Ough told the council that 30,000 children
from across the globe die each day of hunger, preventable diseases and violence,
while 13 million children live in poverty. "The current
generation of children is the largest the world has ever experienced," the bishops'
plan team said, noting that the fastest-growing population of children being from
racial/ethnic communities. "If the United Methodist Church is to be the hope for
the world, we must offer hope to the world's children." The
call to action encourages the bishops to focus on transforming the lives of children
while working to eliminate poverty. "If the United Methodist Church is to be the
witness to Jesus Christ and be the hope for the world, we must be engaged in those
places where hope is most absent" and extreme poverty is the norm, the team pointed
out. United Methodist Bishops Eben Nhiwatiwa of Zimbabwe
and Jose Quipungo of East Angola spoke on the pandemic of malaria and AIDS, its
impact on the church and the world. During a workshop, the two bishops said both
epidemics annuallyclaim 4 million people, cause 300 acute illnesses and favor
the poorest countries in the world. Quipungo noted that
the impact of malaria on the continent "is terrible because we have been losing
lots of children, which is losing the nation since they are the future of the
nation." The United Methodist Church is engaged in a
malaria-prevention campaign called "Nothing But Nets." Partners include the United
Nations Foundation, Sports Illustrated, the National Basketball Association, Millennium
Promise and the Measles Initiative. The United Methodist Board of Global Ministries
and United Methodist Communications are coordinating the church's participation
in the campaign to raise funds to eradicate malaria in Africa, where the mosquito-borne
disease causes the death of one-fifth of all children under 5 years old. HIV/AIDS
has gone beyond clinical and medical parameters, Nhiwatiwa said. "Its tentacles
are economically, socially and even politically felt. It is no longer a health
issue alone but an issue that is affecting all aspects of human life." United
Methodist News Service Linda Green is a United Methodist News Service news
writer based in Nashville, Tenn. |