Methodist Church to Perform Same-Sex Marriages Despite Ban

A group of 900 United Methodists in New York and Connecticut will marry gay and lesbian couples in spite of their denomination’s ban on same-sex marriage. The announcement marks the kick-off of a project called We do! Methodists Living Marriage Equality. In an unprecedented move in any major religious denomination, We do! is not only bypassing the formal rules of the church, but also reaching out directly to LGBT groups in New York and Connecticut to let them know about the new network. This morning the group published a list of all its members: clergy members who will perform weddings for gay couples, lay members of the denomination who support them, and congregations who have adopted policies to formally make weddings available to all couples.
“We refuse to discriminate against any of God’s children and pledge to make marriage equality a lived reality within the New York Annual Conference, regardless of sexual orientation or gender expression,” the group declared in statement called A Covenant of Conscience and signed by 164 clergy members, 732 lay people, and six entire congregations. In all, 74 congregations within the New York Annual Conference (NYAC) are represented among the signers.






