Court clarifies decision on clergy session voting

Members of the 2016-2020 Judicial Council. (From left) Front row: Deanell Reece Tacha, N. Oswald Tweh Sr., the Rev. Luan-Vu Tran. Back row: Lydia Romão Gulele, Ruben T. Reyes, the Rev. Øyvind Helliesen, the Rev. Dennis Blackwell, and the Rev. J. Kabamba Kiboko. (Not pictured, Beth Capen) Photo by Kathleen Barry, United Methodist Communications.
Members of the 2016-2020 Judicial Council. (From left) Front row: Deanell Reece Tacha, N. Oswald Tweh Sr., the Rev. Luan-Vu Tran. Back row: Lydia Romão Gulele, Ruben T. Reyes, the Rev. Øyvind Helliesen, the Rev. Dennis Blackwell, and the Rev. J. Kabamba Kiboko. (Not pictured, Beth Capen) Photo by Kathleen Barry, United Methodist Communications.

The United Methodist Church’s top court has clarified a 2019 ruling related to the administrative process for clergy and the right of a clergy person to fair and due process.

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In Memorandum 1408, issued March 22, the Judicial Council added specific language to four paragraphs in the 2016 Book of Discipline — the denomination’s law book — to ensure that those directly involved in certain administrative matters would not vote on recommendations brought to the clergy session of annual conference.

The particular administrative matters affected are involuntary leave of absence, involuntary retirement, administrative location and discontinuance from provisional membership.

Covering Disciplinary paragraphs 354, 357.3, 359 and 327.6, the ruling applies to members of an annual conference cabinet, board of ordained ministry, conference relations committee or administrative review committee who can’t vote on these matters at the clergy session “if they were involved in any prior discussions, communications, proceedings and/or decisions.”

The ruling is in response to a request from the United Methodist Council of Bishops, which voted last July to ask for a declaratory decision clarifying Decision 1383. The petition also requested a conditional stay of Decision 1383 “pending legislative action by General Conference.”

The Judicial Council is continuing to deliberate on a 19-item docket in its first virtual meeting since the coronavirus pandemic began. It took the unusual action of releasing one of its opinions prior to the completion of that docket, said the Rev. Kabamba Kiboko, Judicial Council secretary, because Memorandum 1408 bears directly on the question as to whether annual conferences may or should prepare legislation in response to Judicial Council Decision 1383, while also addressing the bishops’ inquiry.

Issued on Nov. 1, 2019, Decision 1383 was in response to a request by the Western Pennsylvania Conference. In its ruling, the Judicial Council found that provisions “setting forth the administrative process” in those specific paragraphs of the Discipline violated the guarantees of “a fair and unbiased process” found in church law and were unconstitutional, null and void.

Since then, there has been no opportunity for General Conference, the denomination’s top legislative body, to amend the paragraphs deemed unconstitutional.

Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, the General Conference originally set for May 5-15, 2020, was postponed. Since then, General Conference has been rescheduled twice, first for Aug. 29-Sept. 7, 2021, and, more recently, for Aug. 29-Sept. 6, 2022. The meeting venue remains in Minneapolis.

The top court’s memorandum addresses a question in the petition from the bishops about whether an annual conference can continue to employ the administrative process provisions of the paragraphs earlier declared unconstitutional by adopting specific language.

The clarification made in Memorandum 1408 “ensures that the administrative processes continue to remain in effect while bringing the issue of voice and vote into compliance with the fair process requirements of the Constitution,” the council wrote.

“As such, no specific annual conference action is necessary other than to ensure continued compliance with the Discipline, including the voting restrictions that are set forth herein.”

excerpt from a story by Linda Bloom, assistant news editor emeritus, UMNS

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