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Defrocked pastor reinstated after LGBTQ bans lifted

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Key points:

  • During a closed session of the Eastern Pennsylvania Annual Conference, about 200 ordained clergy voted overwhelmingly to readmit former clergywoman Irene Elizabeth “Beth” Stroud as a full member of its body.
  • Stroud’s ministerial orders as an elder were removed in 2004 after a church trial in which she admitted to being in a committed relationship with another woman.
  • During the evening worship service, Bishop John Schol drew wide applause when he announced Stroud’s reinstatement and presented her to the full assembly.
  • The inspiration of that moment intensified when worshippers, numbering nearly 500, began to sing “Draw the Circle Wide,” which has become an unofficial anthem of the United Methodist movement to extend full ministerial, membership and marital rights to LGBTQ members.

On its final day on May 3, The United Methodist Church’s momentous General Conference voted to allow for the reinstatement of clergy who previously were defrocked under the denomination’s LGBTQ bans.

On the first evening of the Eastern Pennsylvania Annual Conference on May 21, a closed session of about 200 ordained clergy voted overwhelmingly to readmit former clergywoman Irene Elizabeth “Beth” Stroud as a full member of its body.

Stroud’s ministerial orders as an elder were removed in 2004 after a church trial in which she admitted to being in a committed relationship with another woman. The now Rev. Stroud was reinstated and welcomed back with loud applause, hymn singing and tearful hugs by her fellow clergy after their votes of approval far exceeded the required two-thirds majority.

Following that decision, friends ushered her into the meeting room, where she was speechless and overcome with emotion. She was given a red clergy stole and later joined her robed colleagues in their procession onto the annual conference floor at Wildwoods Convention Center for their opening ordination and commissioning worship service.

“I’m deeply grateful for the discernment of the clergy of Eastern Pennsylvania,” said Bishop John Schol, who leads both the Eastern Pennsylvania and Greater New Jersey annual conferences. “And I’m grateful that the church has opened up to LGBTQ persons.”

After more than a half century of debate and defiance over the place of LGBTQ people in the denomination, General Conference delegates voted earlier this month to end decades-old bans on the ordination of “self-avowed practicing” gay clergy and the officiation of same-sex weddings.

Schol, who retires in August, expressed deep admiration for Stroud, who served as his associate pastor at West Chester United Methodist Church when she completed seminary more than two decades ago. She then served briefly at First United Methodist Church of Germantown in Philadelphia before she was defrocked. Current and former pastors of the congregation were among the many who embraced her after the vote.

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“I couldn’t be prouder as your bishop, and you couldn’t have given me a better gift as I retire,” Schol told the clergy gathering before inviting Stroud to rejoin her colleagues in the clergy session.

“I was so disoriented when I came in,” Stroud said in a later interview. “For a while, I couldn’t tell where the front of the room was, where I was, where I needed to go… The bishop asked me if I wanted to say anything, and I said I couldn’t.”

More hugs greeted her long after the session ended.

During the evening worship service, after clergy members were ordained, commissioned and presented to the annual conference, Schol drew wide applause when he announced Stroud’s reinstatement and presented her to the full assembly.

Later, after he invited anyone interested in pursuing ministry to come forward, Schol suddenly knelt before Stroud at the stage front. As the moved congregation sang the Mark A. Miller hymn “Child of God,” she laid her hands on his shoulders and quietly prayed for him.

The inspiration of that moment intensified when worshippers, numbering nearly 500, then began to sing “Draw the Circle Wide,” another hymn arranged by Miller, a longtime professor of church music and innovator in United Methodist hymnody. The hymn has become an unofficial anthem of the United Methodist movement to extend full ministerial, membership and marital rights to LGBTQ members.

Miller and his band led the worship, and most of the singing congregants then began moving out from their chairs to the edges of the spacious hall. They gradually encircled the room facing one another, with many holding hands as they sang the chorus several times.

Stroud, after leaving ordained ministry in 2004 and then briefly serving her supportive First United Methodist Church of Germantown congregation as a hired lay ministerial aide, moved to New Jersey and earned more academic degrees. She earned a doctorate in religion at Princeton University in 2018.

She had been a lay member of Turning Point United Methodist Church in Trenton, New Jersey, and has taught and lectured at Princeton and other colleges. She was recently hired to teach History of Religion at the Methodist Theological School in Ohio, one of the denomination’s 13 affiliated seminaries. She will join the faculty there this summer.

Coleman is editorial manager for the Eastern Pennsylvania and New Jersey conferences.

News media contact: Julie Dwyer at [email protected]. To read more United Methodist news, subscribe to the free Daily or Weekly Digests.

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