21. United Church of Christ, 1,265,786, reporting a decrease of 2.38 percent.
Another gay church denomination is biting the dust. As ususual, a woman is in charge.
Wednesday, 06/21/06
Denomination welcomes predominantly gay church
United Church of Christ offers 'home'
By ANITA WADHWANI
Staff Writer
Nashville's largest predominantly gay and lesbian church is joining a national Protestant denomination that has seen dozens of churches leave in the last year because of its support for same-sex unions.
Holy Trinity Community Church in west Nashville officially will join the United Church of Christ in an installation ceremony Sunday.
The Rev. Cynthia Andrews-Looper, pastor of Holy Trinity, said that her 250-member church was drawn to the denomination because of its "open and affirming" position on gays and lesbians, in the pews and the pulpit.
In 2005 the United Church of Christ passed a resolution in support of "equal marriage rights for all regardless of gender" and encouraged churches to adopt new wedding policies for same-sex marriages. It has long allowed the ordination of openly gay and lesbian ministers.
"We've really been longing for a home," said Andrews-Looper. "There's a huge need for any church to be involved in something larger than itself. The thing that impressed us about the (United Church of Christ) is they are issuing an extravagant welcome. They are saying in many ways, 'what would Jesus do?' "
The denomination is New England's largest Protestant group, with about 5,700 churches with 1.2 million members nationwide.
(It should not to be confused with theologically conservative Churches of Christ, which are numerous in the Nashville area.)
At least four-dozen congregations have left the United Church of Christ, or U.C.C., between July 2005 — when the resolution was passed — and last January, according to Barb Powell, a denomination spokeswoman. That has helped drive a 10.7% dip in the denomination's overall membership and 4.9% drop in its number of churches over the past five years.
But in the Bible Belt, the United Church of Christ's stance is resulting in something of a growth spurt, attracting not only churches withpredominantly gay and lesbian members, but also others leaving their denominations because of disagreements over their positions on gay and lesbian issues.
Membership is up 79% in the denomination's Southeast Conference — encompassing Alabama, Tennessee, Georgia, Mississippi, South Carolina and the Florida Panhandle — where three churches have joined in the past two months and other churches have contacted the denomination to begin the process of joining, according to the Rev. Tim Downs, of the Southeast Conference of the United Church of Christ.
Powell said that one of the reasons the Bible Belt is bucking the trend is that the denomination had fewer churches here than in other parts of the country, making even a few added churches inflate membership rates.
The Rev. Dan Rosemergy, a retired adjunct professor of UCC history at Vanderbilt University Divinity School, said the denomination's growth in the South also could result from a conservative religious landscape.
"I think in the South, there's a greater consciousness and awareness of religion being often defined by the religious right," said Rosemergy, a retired UCC pastor. "So when you have a denomination that offers a place to have a faith home that moves away from that very narrow understanding — in a place where there's a higher profile of conservative religion — there's a greater response."
Andrews-Looper, the Holy Trinity pastor, says her congregation was drawn to the denomination not only because of its stance on gay and lesbian marriage, and its longstanding policy to allow the ordination of gay pastors, but because she found it accepting of her church's theology.
The church is "evangelical in its worship. We do believe in the Virgin birth, (Jesus Christ's) death and literal bodily resurrection, that the Gospel message is that of Jesus Christ and our mission is to get the word out," said Andrews-Looper.
While the church doesn't believe in a blanket literal interpretation of the Bible, it is still more theologically conservative than most UCC churches, she said.
And a key reason for joining a denomination is to be able to pool resources to do mission work, here and abroad, she said.
The 10-year-old church began in an east Nashville living room and has grown to a congregation of 250, moving to a new building in January. Most of the church members are gay or lesbian, but about 10% are not, said Andrews-Looper, who does not generally preach about gay issues from the pulpit.
Many congregation members have left other churches that did not accept their sexual orientation, she said.
Angie Smith, 36, said she had left one of Nashville's largest nondenominational churches after letting the pastor know she was gay. His response, she said: "you're welcome to worship here, but you can't be involved in church life or hold any leadership positions."
"I was looking for a place to serve," said Smith. "If I'm led into a leadership position I want to be able to do that." Smith said joining a national denomination will give her that chance.
"I always felt worse when I left church than when I went in," said Phillip Haynes, 46, who said he grew up Southern Baptist and tried the Catholic Church before turning to Holy Trinity about six years ago. "I left because of the prejudice."
"I could not be myself at church and I always thought that God hated gay people," said his life partner, Steve Deasy, who was raised in a Church of Christ. "This is the first church that's opened its arms and accepted me for who I am."