We gather in a Wesleyen style Class meeting on Monday nights at Clapps Chapel UMC. this blog is an outpouring of the growth that occurs there.

Gabe Davis

Changes and Challenges

By Gil Hanke

I expect some of you have read or heard  something about the Call to Action, an effort launched by the Council of  Bishops and the Connectional Table.
        Over  the past two years, several committees have moved the Call to Action from  research to several recommendations and a proposed new structure to be  considered by the 2012 General Conference.
        I  strongly encourage you to follow these developments at www.umc.org; add your comments to news stories  posted there. I also encourage you to express your opinions and concerns to  members of your conference delegation to General Conference.
        As  I write this, Bishop James King, Martha Davis and I have just completed a week  of meetings where this "reordering of the church" was debated. There is no  doubt our denomination must make changes that will result in more vital  congregations, the debate is how that can be achieved.
        A  Call to Action committee and the Connectional Table are recommending a massive  reordering of all general agencies. How that translates to needed reforms  within the local congregation is unclear.
        Under  the proposed plan, only the UM Publishing House and the General Board of  Pension and Health Benefits would continue in their present structure. The  governing boards of all other agencies, including GCUMM, would be discontinued.  Under the proposed structure, the functions of these agencies would be guided  by a 15-member board of directors.
        It  is not clear how the functions of UMM and UMW will fit in this organizational  model. Harriett Olson, deputy general secretary for GBGM and top staff executive  of the Women's Division, and I have been asked to propose ways in which the  work of our organizations might be included. That proposal will be completed in  the next few weeks.
        No  one is questioning the functions of the GCUMM. Men's ministries and scouting  ministries do help create vitality in congregations.
        Please  continue to pray for me and for the other general secretaries as we go through  this process. We know that our funding from World Service apportionments will  be reduced by 6.5 percent beginning in 2013. If the plans from the Call to  Action are enacted at General Conference that reduction is projected to be 16  percent. Such a reduction would affect the staff and the core functions of  every agency, including GCUMM.
        In  the midst of all this, I have hope. God's hand was on the creation of the  GCUMM, and He is not done with us yet. Readings in the Upper Room Disciplines remind me that we can do more together than  we can do on our own.
        Along  with these meetings there has been a lot of writing for the upcoming magazine,  webinars, the new edition of Guidelines,  and a report to General Conference. In each, I get to relate God sightings as  we journey together.
        I  am thankful that my work and prayer have led me to more work and more prayer.  Please let me hear from you.
        I  am honored to be of service to you, your congregation and the men in your  community who don't yet know Christ.
        Striving, 
Gil Hanke, general  secretary
General Commission on  UM Men
GHanke@gcumm.org

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