¶ 304.
Qualifications for Ordination--1. Those whom the Church ordains shall
be conscious of God's call to ordained ministry, and their call shall be
acknowledged and authenticated by the Church. God's call has many
manifestations, and the Church cannot structure a single test of authenticity.
Nevertheless, the experience of the Church and the needs of its ministry require
certain qualities of faith, life, and practice from those who seek ordination as
deacons and elders. In order that The United Methodist Church may be assured
that those persons who present themselves as candidates for ordained ministry
are truly called of God, the Church expects persons seeking ordination
to:
a) Have a personal faith
in Christ and be committed to Christ as Savior and Lord.
b) Nurture and cultivate
spiritual disciplines and patterns of holiness.
c) Acknowledge a call by
God to give themselves completely to ordained ministry following Jesus' pattern
of love and service.
d) Communicate
persuasively the Christian faith in both oral and written
form.
e) Make a commitment to
lead the whole Church in loving service to humankind.
f) Give evidence of God's
gifts for ordained ministry, evidence of God's grace in their lives, and promise
of future usefulness in the mission of the Church.
g) Be persons in whom the
community can place trust and confidence.
h) Accept that Scripture
contains all things necessary for salvation through faith in Jesus Christ; be
competent in the disciplines of Scripture, theology, church history, and Church
polity; and possess the skills essential to the practice of ordained
ministry.
i) Be accountable to The
United Methodist Church, accept its Discipline and authority, accept the
supervision of those appointed to this ministry, and be prepared to live in the
covenant of its ordained ministers.
2. For the sake of the mission of
Jesus Christ in the world and the most effective witness to the Christian
gospel, and in consideration of the influence of an ordained minister on the
lives of other persons both within and outside the Church, the Church expects
those who seek ordination to make a complete dedication of themselves to the
highest ideals of the Christian life. To this end, they agree to exercise
responsible self-control by personal habits conducive to bodily health, mental
and emotional maturity, integrity in all personal relationships, fidelity in
marriage and celibacy in singleness, social responsibility, and growth in grace
and in the knowledge and love of God.
3. While persons set apart by the
Church for ordained ministry are subject to all the frailties of the human
condition and the pressures of society, they are required to maintain the
highest standards of holy living in the world. Since the practice of
homosexuality is incompatible with Christian teaching, self-avowed practicing
homosexuals1
are not to be accepted as candidates, ordained as ministers, or appointed to
serve in The United Methodist Church.
[FTN] 1. "Self-avowed
practicing homosexual" is understood to mean that a person openly
acknowledges to a bishop, district superintendent, district committee of
ordained ministry, board of ordained ministry, or clergy session that the person
is a practicing homosexual. See Judicial Council Decisions 702, 708, 722,
725, 764.
4. The United Methodist Church
entrusts those persons who are in the ordained ministry with primary
responsibility for maintaining standards of education and preparation for
ordination. Having been originally recommended by a charge conference and by
authorization of the ordained members in full connection with the annual
conference, according to the procedures set out in the Book of Discipline
for the examination and approval of candidates for ordination, persons are
elected to membership in the annual conference and ordained by the
bishop.
5. In all cases where the
district committee on ordained ministry, conference boards of ordained ministry,
or ordained members in full connection in clergy session vote on granting any
status regarding license, ordination, or conference membership, it is understood
that the requirements set forth herein are minimum requirements only. Each
person voting is expected to vote prayerfully based on personal judgment of the
applicant's gifts, evidence of God's grace, and promise of future usefulness for
the mission of the Church.