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Timeline of The United Methodist Church

Evangelical United Brethren Church Bishop Reuben H. Mueller (left) and Methodist Bishop Lloyd C. Wicke at Uniting Conference 1968. Photo courtesy of Archives and History.
1968

1969

  • Methodist churches in Argentina, Chile, Cuba, Malaysia-Singapore and Pakistan become autonomous.
  • United Methodist Church's Women's Division begins publishing Response magazine.

1970

  • Because of political developments in East and West Germany, two central conferences were created to serve United Methodists there.
  • A special session of the General Conference completes the work of organizing The United Methodist Church.

1971

  • MARCHA (Methodists Associated Representing the Cause of Hispanic Americans), one of the denomination's five U.S.-based racial-ethnic caucuses, is formed.

1972

  • The newly adopted United Methodist Social Principles includes the first statement on homosexuality and recognizes divorce and the right of divorced people to remarry. The decades-long church debate on homosexuality begins. In The Book of Discipline, the sentence, "We do not condone the practice of homosexuality and consider it incompatible with Christian teaching," is added to the phrase, "Persons of homosexual orientation are persons of sacred worth." The Discipline also makes the first reference to homosexual unions: "We do not recommend marriage between two persons of the same sex."
  • The Western Jurisdiction elects the Rev. Wilbur W. Y. Choy as the first Asian-American bishop.
  • The Black College Fund is established to minister to individuals underserved by the U.S. system of higher education.
  • The General Commission on the Status and Role of Women and the General Council on Finance and Administration are created. 
  • Reorganized church agencies form four general boards: Church and SocietyDiscipleship, <a "="" href="http://www.umcmission.org/" target="_blank">Global Ministries and Higher Education and Ministry. Three agencies are combined to form United Methodist Communications.

1973

  • The women's organizations in The United Methodist Church merge to form one inclusive organization with the name United Methodist Women."

1974

  • Garrett Theological Seminary (Methodist Church) and the Evangelical Theological Seminary (EUB) merge into Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary.
  • InfoServ, the official United Methodist information service, launches.

1975

  • The United Methodist Gay Caucus organizes in Evanston, Illinois.

1976

  • The first 10 clergywomen delegates are elected to the United Methodist General Conference.
  • A new category of "local pastor" is created for people who are not ordained. They are authorized to administer the sacraments within their church or churches.
  • The HANA Scholars program is established to assist Hispanic, Asian, Native American and Pacific Islander students.
  • The Ethnic Minority Local Church emphasis begins.

1977

  • The Foundation for Theological Education is created to assist clergy doctoral studies.
  • The Upper Room Living Prayer Center opens.

1980

  • The North Central Jurisdiction elects the Rev. Marjorie Swank Matthews as the first woman bishop.
  • Autonomous churches in Sierra Leone and Nigeria join The United Methodist Church. General Conference then authorizes the creation of a West Africa Central Conference, comprising Liberia, Nigeria and Sierra Leone.
  • The Methodist Church in India becomes an affiliated autonomous church.
  • The General Commission on Christian Unity and Interreligious Concerns is established.
  • General Conference grants voting rights to delegates from the Oklahoma Indian Missionary Conference.
  • The General Conference fails to add the phrase "no self-avowed, practicing homosexual therefore shall be ordained or appointed in The United Methodist Church" to the Discipline. The conference notes the denomination "has moved away from prohibitions of specific acts, for such prohibitions can be endless."

1984

1986

  • United Methodist bishops issue the "In Defense of Creation" letter opposing nuclear weapons.

1987

  • The United Methodist Publishing House launches the Disciple Bible Study.

1988

  • General Conference adopts The United Methodist Hymnal.
  • Delegates approve the establishment of Africa University in Zimbabwe.
  • General Conference approves a study of homosexuality to report to the 1992 General Conference.

1989

  • The Chautauqua (New York) Institution, founded in 1874 as a teaching camp for Sunday school teachers, is designated a National Historic Landmark.

1990

  • Fifty women serve as district superintendents in The United Methodist Church.
  • The first issue of the Korean-language magazine, United Methodist Family, is published.

1992

  • Africa University opens with 40 students from six African countries.
  • General Conference creates the Communities of Shalom initiative in response to the Los Angeles riots.
  • The United Methodist Book of Worship is authorized.
  • General Conference approves the creation of the Congo (formerly Zaire) Central Conference.
  • After the political reunification of Germany, two central conferences reunite into the Germany Central Conference.
  • The Council of Bishops appoints Bishop Ruediger R. Minor from the former German Democratic Republic to oversee the rebirth of Methodist presence in the former Soviet Union.
  • The Methodist Church in Russia is formally re-established when the First United Methodist Church in Moscow and the First United Methodist Church in St. Petersburg are legally registered.

1995

1996

  • "By Water and the Spirit," the official statement on baptism, is adopted.
  • The Rev. Minerva G. Carcaño is elected the first Hispanic clergywoman delegate to General Conference.
  • Two separate, distinct orders of clergy – elders and deacons – are created.
  • The General Commission on <a -href="http://www.gcumm.org/" href="http://www.gcumm.org/" "="">United Methodist Men is created as a separate agency.
  • Disability Awareness Sunday is introduced as a designated churchwide special Sunday.
  • General Conference adds three significant points to the church's position on homosexuality: a footnote defining "self-avowed practicing homosexual," a declaration that ceremonies to celebrate homosexual unions shall not be conducted by United Methodist clergy or in United Methodist churches and a call for the U.S. military not to exclude people from service "solely on the basis of sexual orientation."
  • Bishops launch an Episcopal Initiative on Children and Poverty.
  • The United Methodist Student Movement is established.
  • The United Methodist Publishing House produces official Spanish-language hymnal, Mil Voces Para Celebrar.

1997

1998

  • The Philippines marks 100 years of Methodism on the anniversary of the first Methodist service by the Americans in Manila.

2000

  • Igniting Ministry, the first multifaceted national welcoming and advertising campaign, is launched.
  • Find-A-Church, an online directory of churches, debuts.
  • General Conference delegates participate in an act of repentance, confessing the sin of racism that has caused major divisions among American Methodists.
  • General Conference votes to add to the Social Principles the language, "We implore families and churches not to reject or condemn their lesbian and gay members and friends."
  • The Fund for Theological Education in Post-Communist Europe is created to support United Methodist clergy training.
  • The United Methodist Church opens the Baltic Mission Center in Tallinn, Estonia, for training church leaders from the former Soviet Union.
  • The Puerto Rico Methodist Church becomes fully autonomous.
  • The United Methodist Publishing House produces the songbook, The Faith We Sing.

2001

  • After the 9/11 attack in the U.S., United Methodist Communications sponsors a billboard near ground zero. Offering support and reassurance, it features an image of praying hands and a simple statement: "Fear is not the only force at work in the world today." More than 600,000 people see the billboard every day of its three-month presence.
  • By Nov. 30, the United Methodist Committee on Relief receives a total of $22.3 million through general Advance specials. This includes "Love in the Midst of Tragedy," the church's special offering in response to the Sept. 11 attacks.
  • The Judicial Council rules that the central conferences have jurisdiction over adaptations of the Discipline except for matters protected by The United Methodist Church constitution.
  • Come, Let Us Worship, an official bilingual Korean-English hymnal of The United Methodist Church, is published.

2002

  • Boris Trajkovski, president of Macedonia and a United Methodist, receives the World Methodist Peace Award.

2003

  • The 300th anniversary of John Wesley's birth is celebrated.
  • Korean-American United Methodists celebrate 100 years since their first worship gatherings in Hawaii.

2004

  • General Conference adopts This Holy Mystery as the denomination's official statement on Communion.
  • The General Council on Ministries is eliminated and the Connectional Table is formed.
  • The United Methodist Church Global AIDS Fund is started with the goal of raising $8 million by 2008 to address the worldwide pandemic.
  • The Global Education Fund is created to assist 748 Methodist schools, colleges, universities and seminaries in 69 countries.
  • General Conference approves the Central Conference Pension Initiative.
  • The Division on Ministries with Young People is begun.
  • The Western Jurisdiction elects the Rev. Minerva G. Carcaño as the first female HIspanic bishop.
  • Chargeable offenses related to homosexuality are added to the Discipline.
  • Delegates endorse "A Resolution on Church Unity."
  • The first United Methodist congregation is established in Mongolia.

2005

2006

  • The United Methodist Church is a founding partner of the Nothing But Nets initiative, an effort to fund and distribute insecticide-treated bed nets in Africa to prevent malaria.

2008

  • The Protestant Methodist Church of Côte d'Ivoire is received into full membership in The United Methodist Church with the Rev. Benjamin Boni as bishop.
  • The Rev. Joaquina Filipe Nhanala is elected the first female United Methodist bishop in Africa.
  • General Conference celebrates full communion with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.
  • General Conference celebrates the 100th anniversary of men's ministry.
  • The Advance, the mission fundraising arm of the church, celebrates 60 years.
  • Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, the Liberian president and a United Methodist, addresses General Conference. She is first African leader and first female president to do so.

2009

2010

  • A 7.0 earthquake in Haiti on Jan. 12, 2010, left more than 200,000 dead — including mission agency leaders the Revs. Sam Dixon and Clinton Rabb. Some $45 million in donations to the United Methodist Committee on Relief supported the church's long-term response to the disaster.
  • Imagine No Malaria expands on the Nothing But Nets initiative to help eliminate malaria deaths in sub-Saharan Africa.

2012

  • General Conference celebrates full communion with five historically black Methodist denominations.
  • General Conference participates in "An Act of Repentance toward Healing Relationships with Indigenous Peoples."
  • General Conference delegates vote to make <a -href="https://www.unitedmethodistwomen.org/" href="https://www.unitedmethodistwomen.org/" target="_blank" "="">United Methodist Women a separate organization rather than a part of the Board of Global Ministries.
  • General Conference delegates authorize a fourth episcopal area for the Congo Central Conference to accommodate church growth in that region.

2013

2014

  • The United Methodist Church is a leader in responding to the worst Ebola outbreak in history, providing accurate information about the outbreak and how to avoid the disease as well as direct relief in Sierra Leone and Liberia.

2015

  • The United Methodist Radio Network of Africa, formed by the directors of the denomination's four radio stations in Angola, Congo, Côte d'Ivoire and Liberia, shares content in French, English and Portuguese.

2016

2017

2018

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