United
Methodist Heritage Sunday this year falls on May 20. That is also Pentecost
Sunday, giving the day a double-heritage significance, since that is when we
celebrate the birth of Christ’s church.
Speaking of
births, however, I invite us all to begin our United Methodist heritage celebration
a month early, on Sunday, April 22, in order to commemorate the birth of our denomination
from merger and reorganization 50 years ago. That labor-intensive birth
happened on April 23, 1968. But it came after nearly a decade of prayerful
negotiations, General Conference legislation and prevenient mergers of racially
segregated annual conferences—like ours—until the glorious day of delivery when
we finally became The United Methodist Church.
The
Methodist Church merged with the Evangelical United Brethren Church—both
denominations being offspring of earlier mergers themselves. The new
denomination abolished Methodism’s Central Jurisdiction, created in 1939 to
unify and segregate annual conferences with predominantly black churches and
members across the nation, like our former Delaware Annual Conference.
So, in 1968
and in the years that followed, after a history of divisions and dubious
mergers, we finally got it right, for the most part. Getting it right meant
reorganizing churchwide agencies and creating legislation and special commissions
to monitor our still-unfinished journey toward racial and gender equity and
denominational inclusiveness. For that same journey and others, it also meant
creating special programs and funds, Special Sunday offerings and eventually,
missional priorities.