¶ 427.
Council of Bishops--1. Bishops, although elected by jurisdictional or
central conferences, are elected general superintendents of the whole Church. As
all ordained ministers are first elected into membership of an annual conference
and subsequently appointed to pastoral charges, so bishops become through their
election members first of the Council of Bishops before they are subsequently
assigned to areas of service. By virtue of their election and consecration,
bishops are members of the Council of Bishops and are bound in special covenant
with all other bishops. In keeping with this covenant, bishops fulfill their
servant leadership and express their mutual accountability. The Council of
Bishops is a faith community of mutual trust and concern responsible for the
faith development and continuing well-being of its
members.
2. The Council of Bishops is thus
the collegial expression of episcopal leadership in the Church and through the
Church into the world. The Church expects the Council of Bishops to speak to the
Church and from the Church to the world and to give leadership in the quest for
Christian unity and interreligious relationships.
3. In order to exercise
meaningful leadership, the Council of Bishops is to meet at stated intervals.
The Council of Bishops is charged with the oversight of the spiritual and
temporal affairs of the whole Church, to be executed in regularized consultation
and cooperation with other councils and service agencies of the
Church.
4. The Council of Bishops may
assign one of its members to visit another episcopal area or Methodist-related
church. When so assigned, the bishop shall be recognized as the accredited
representative of the Council of Bishops, and when requested by the resident
bishop or president in that area or Church, may exercise therein the functions
of episcopacy.