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  Commentary
COMMENTARY: Robert’s Rules of Order aren’t best guide for GC

James Howell, Apr 4, 2012


James Howell
By James C. Howell
Special Contributor

We Methodists are about to head to Tampa for our big quadrennial denominational meeting called General Conference. Like some beached whale, our church struggles to survive, and the underbelly frankly isn’t very pretty. I like to be hopeful that the creature can live, but worry that the way we do what we do at such meetings is an unacknowledged hindrance to healthy change. 

The ruin of not just General Conference but also the larger church will be the not-so-sacred procedure we unthinkingly use to decide things: Robert’s Rules of Order. When the faithful disagree, as fallen, imperfect Christians do inevitably, the advantage goes—always—to the one who is the master of the rules more than to someone who might have some wisdom or humble insight on their side, but isn’t swift to the microphone or doesn’t grasp a “substitute to the amendment.” 

Robert’s Rules fuel the unholy viewpoint that we have—and should have!—“sides.” Worst of all, Robert’s Rules seduce us toward a vote, where majority “wins,” and it’s winner-take-all. On an issue, the vote might be 51 percent-49 percent, but the “official” outcome is just one, unhedged thing. Winner-takes-all . . . and then we have “losers.” A political democracy works precisely this way with strategizing, clever plotting and fist-pumping victories. 

But we are the Body of Christ, where we don’t have winners and losers, but members. According to Paul, the most valued member of the Body isn’t the big winner who is crafty in procedure; in fact, Paul would dismiss such bunk as the world invading God’s church. The priority goes to the weakest member. What majority vote would Jesus ever have won? 

We may choose to speak of “holy conferencing,” but I suspect this is a cloak thrown over what our procedure fosters and even requires of us: Just get the votes for my biased version of how I think church should be. Such a church will never be a true Body with differing members that embrace, appreciate and even honor the small. 

Quakers know how to “discern” quietly, listening for the movement of the Spirit, refusing to vote in some fractional majority that will create wounded losers. In Tampa, stuck as we might be with Robert and his rules (how would we vote him out—by nimble pluck and majority vote?), can we pray for holier minds and shun any who dare to maneuver? Or call up to the stage a handful of the losers, hug them and share with them leadership in the new, victorious petition?

The Rev. Howell is senior pastor of Myers Park United Methodist Church in Charlotte, N.C. His latest book is What Does the Lord Require?: Doing Justice, Loving Kindness, Walking Humbly (Westminster John Knox Press). This essay earlier appeared on Duke Divinity School’s Faith & Leadership website (www.faithandleadership.com).

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Other articles by James Howell:
COMMENTARY: A pastor’s privacy boundaries are hard to find (Aug 31, 2012)
COMMENTARY: UM pastor’s prayers turn urgent, personal (Jan 5, 2012)
COMMENTARY: Tip for church marketing - Focus on clarity, not spin (Nov 17, 2011)
COMMENTARY: Is ‘first-rate madness’ the church’s best hope? (Sep 22, 2011)
COMMENTARY: Clergy evaluation time brings renewed anxiety (Aug 25, 2011)

Other articles in Commentary category:
AGING WELL: Tips for seniors on greeting young visitors in church  (Missy Buchanan, Jan 4, 2013)
COMMENTARY: Why it’s time for the UMC’s Era of Innovation.  (Rob Rynders, Jan 4, 2013)
WESLEYAN WISDOM: Aldersgate - a playbook for revitalizing the UMC  (Donald W. Haynes, Jan 4, 2013)
COMMENTARY: Congregations can help the troops coming home  (Larry Hollon, Jan 4, 2013)
REFLECTIONS: As we search for answers and a reason to hope  (Bishop Woodie W. White, Dec 28, 2012)

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