Social Principles of The United Methodist Church 2017-2020
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About this ebook
This 64-page booklet is a tool designed to help individuals and small groups study The Social Principles of The United Methodist Church. It contains the official text of The Social Principles from The Book of Discipline of The United Methodist Church 2016 along with exercises for individuals or small groups, a topical index, and Social Creed.
The Social Principles of The United Methodist Church are the product of over one hundred years of legislative decisions made by lay and clergy members of The United Methodist Church and its predecessor denominations. The Social Principles are prayerful and thoughtful efforts on the part of many General Conferences to speak to complex and controversial issues in the global community.
Studying The Social Principles provides opportunities to examine your own theology and ethics and to practice discipleship.
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Social Principles of The United Methodist Church 2017-2020 - United Methodist Church
INTRODUCTION TO THE SOCIAL PRINCIPLES
The Social Principles are a good faith response to what we believe God is already doing in our lives and in the public square. They are an expression of the common ground we share, reflecting our priorities and helping us learn about and advocate for vulnerable peoples and a vulnerable planet. The Social Principles express The United Methodist Church’s official positions on societal issues, casting a vision for a just and equitable world.
Even though the Social Principles are church words,
their language may not be familiar to every member of The United Methodist Church. Part of our responsibility as members of the church is to unpack the Social Principles and to amplify what they actually mean in our own context and in the diverse contexts across the world.
The preface to the Social Principles emphasizes that they are instructive and persuasive in the best of the prophetic spirit.
The Social Principles can be clearly marked signposts on our journey toward living fully into God’s gracious love for the world; they give us clear direction. Sometimes, though, we may experience the Social Principles as a kind of road map on which the terrain is familiar but some twists and turns are strange to us. Once we orient ourselves to this new geography, we are able to explore the course we are to take. The Social Principles may also show us how far we have come as a church as we look back at the ground we’ve covered. As United Methodists, we covenant to be a connectional church, to travel together even in the midst of our diversity, periodically adjusting our road map and, hopefully, moving closer toward God’s vision for our world.
John Wesley invested in relationships with people most affected by societal inequities, making ministry to the poor or otherwise vulnerable a priority in the Methodist movement. Wesley pointed to the oppressive causes and effects of systemic poverty and forged personal friendships with impoverished and neglected people. He promoted equity in health care, sustainable economic development, sustainable food production and distribution, access to a clean environment, and equitable access to education. He spoke out against abuses such as expanding imperialism and colonialism, mass incarceration, and human trafficking; he promoted religious tolerance and the dignity and sacred worth of indigenous peoples. These emphases illustrate the prophetic ministry of the early Methodist movement, responding to God’s grace working in and on behalf of a wounded world. The Social Principles are a faithful and fresh expression of our Wesleyan missional mandate to make disciples of Jesus Christ for the transformation of the world,
or, as Wesley articulates, our call to reform the nation, particularly the church, and to spread scriptural holiness over the land
(¶ 120; Minutes of Several Conversations
Q.3, in The Works of John Wesley [vol. 8; ed. T. Jackson; Baker, 1978], 299).
The placement of the Social Principles between The Ministry of All Christians
and Organization and Administration
in the 2016 Discipline reminds us that we cannot engage in ministry and mission without also engaging society and its ills collectively. While personal choices, habits, and commitments do change the world, organizations and structures provide us with a concrete means by which we live out our faith, seek justice, and pursue peace in ways that we cannot accomplish on our own. The Social Principles urge us not only to make a difference in the world but also (and as urgently) to build a different kind of world than the one in which we live.
As you read through the Social Principles, you may find yourself enthusiastically nodding in agreement, or you may vehemently disagree. Many people may feel overjoyed when they discover that what their conscience and their lived experience has taught them is actually in accord with the Social Principles, and others, even lifelong United Methodists, may genuinely feel defensive when a portion of the Social Principles sounds as if it is in conflict with their core convictions. You might even find yourself surprised to discover a topic you had not thought about very much. Perhaps your curiosity will lead you to explore such an issue in greater depth.
WHERE DO I START?
The 2016 Discipline describes the Social Principles as a prayerful and thoughtful effort on the part of the General Conference to speak to the human issues in the contemporary world from a sound biblical and theological foundation
(see preface to the Social Principles). The Social Principles are a catalyst for and a product of prayer. The Social Principles begin with holy conferencing by people of faith at General Conference, but they must be lived throughout the connection to have lasting value.
Read through the Social Principles and take a moment to consider from whom you first learned the principles that would guide your life. Was this a parent, grandparent, teacher, pastor, or neighbor? How have these ideals shaped your life? Ask yourself prayerfully, Have there been instances where I was persuaded by someone’s story, a new experience in my life, or by information I had not yet been exposed to that caused me to modify my perspective, to cultivate a different perspective, or to reevaluate a once firmly held conviction?
As you pray, study, discuss, and put into practice the Social Principles, allow them to ease you into a prayerful, studied dialogue
with yourself, your communities, your church, and God (see preface). You may find yourself beginning to critically and constructively question some principles that at one time seemed unquestionably clear to you and to appreciate new principles that at one time seemed unrelated to you.
WHERE DO THE SOCIAL PRINCIPLES COME FROM?
The Social Principles, spanning ¶¶ 160-166 in the Book of Discipline, connect The United Methodist Church as we express our faith in collaborative practice. As more than 43,000 local churches and 12.8 million United Methodists in the United States, Africa, Central and Southeast Asia, and Europe, we hold the Social Principles in common across our many diverse cultures, ethnicities, and national identities. At their best, the Social Principles articulate our ethical aspirations for the common good in our public policies and personal commitments. Through them, we seek to love God with our whole heart, mind, soul, and strength and to desire for our neighbors what we desire for ourselves.
The United Methodist Church publicly and officially speaks about social issues through the Social Principles as adopted by the General Conference. Additional legislated statements approved by the General Conference, included in The Book of Discipline of The United Methodist Church and The Book of Resolutions of The United Methodist Church are anchored in our Social Principles. Only the General Conference, the church’s highest policy-making body, has the authority to change the language in the Social Principles.
From the beginning, The United Methodist Church affirmed the gospel of Jesus Christ to be both social and personal. The predecessor to the Social Principles was written in 1908 and took the form of a Social Creed. The Social Creed was the first document of its kind written by a church. It was drafted during a historic period of rapid rural displacement and relocation, mass national migration, and unchecked corporate greed and industrial urbanization. Refusing to ignore that society was in the midst of social change, The Methodist Episcopal Church took the opportunity to act, illustrating these changing realities and seeking to respond in faith:
A young Irish girl named Maureen began work at the age of 14 in a woolen mill in Lawrence, MA. Beginning at six o’clock every morning she swept and cleaned the mill floor. For this task Maureen was paid $3.50 for a 56-hour week, ten cents of which went for drinking water from a polluted canal. While working, she saw many older workers seriously injured by the dangerous mill machinery because of being forced to work so fast. Maureen and her family who had left Ireland to escape famine all lived in one room in a boarding house. Lunch and supper everyday consisted of black bread, molasses, and beans. On Sunday hopefully there was a piece of meat.
The Social Gospel movement, evangelical at its heart and inspired by Jesus’ preaching of the kingdom of God,
was acutely aware of the brutality of deplorable working conditions, the social tensions arising from assimilating millions of European migrants, shifting cultural values, increases in addiction, inequitable economic practices in rapidly growing urban centers, and neglected rural regions in the United States. This movement advocated for a day of Sabbath rest, a living wage for workers, an end to sweatshop child labor, and recognition of human dignity and rights for persons marginalized by oppressive class divisions.
Inspired by the Wesleyan Methodist Union, recently organized in England, and the community organizing efforts of Methodist suffragettes Jane Addams and Mary McDowell, five Methodist Episcopal clergy established the Methodist Federation for Social Service. They included evangelist Frank Mason