Current:Home > StocksDefrocked in 2004 for same-sex relationship, a faithful Methodist is reinstated as pastor -Aspire Money Growth
Defrocked in 2004 for same-sex relationship, a faithful Methodist is reinstated as pastor
Charles Langston View
Date:2025-04-10 18:20:35
Twenty years ago, Beth Stroud was defrocked as a United Methodist Church pastor after telling her Philadelphia congregation that she was in a committed same-sex relationship. On Tuesday night, less than three weeks after the UMC repealed its anti-LGBTQ bans, she was reinstated.
In a closed meeting of clergy from the UMC’s Eastern Pennsylvania region, Stroud exceeded the two-thirds vote requirement to be readmitted as a full member and pastor in the UMC.
Bishop John Schol of Eastern Pennsylvania welcomed the outcome, stating, “I’m grateful that the church has opened up to LGBTQ persons.”
Stroud was brought into the meeting room after the vote, overcome with emotion.
I was completely disoriented,” she told The Associated Press via email. “For what felt like several minutes I couldn’t tell where the front of the room was, where I was, where I needed to go. Everyone was clapping and then they started singing. The bishop asked me quietly if I wanted to say anything and I said I couldn’t.”
She was handed the red stole that designates a fully ordained member of the clergy, and joined her colleagues in a procession into a worship service.
Earlier this month, delegates at a major UMC conference in Charlotte, North Carolina, struck down longstanding anti-LGBTQ policies and created a path for clergy ousted because of them to seek reinstatement.
Stroud — even while recalling how her 2004 ouster disrupted her life — chose that path, though some other past targets of UMC discipline chose otherwise.
At 54, Stroud doesn’t plan a return to full-time ministry — at least not immediately. Now completing a three-year stint teaching writing at Princeton University, she is excited to be starting a new job this summer as assistant professor of Christian history at the Methodist Theological School in Ohio — one of 13 seminaries run by the UMC.
Yet even with the new teaching job, Stroud wanted to regain the options available to an ordained minister as she looks for a congregation to join near the Delaware, Ohio, campus.
When Stroud finally made her decision, she knew it was the right one. But the decision did not come easily as she followed the UMC’s deliberations on the anti-LGBTQ policies.
“The first thing I felt was just anger — thinking about the life I could have had,” she told the AP at the time. “I loved being a pastor. I was good at it. With 20 more years of experience, I could have been very good — helped a lot of people and been very fulfilled.”
Instead of pastoring, she spent several years in graduate schools, while earning modest income in temporary, non-tenured academic jobs. There were challenges, including a bout with cancer and divorce from her wife, although they proceeded to co-parent their daughter, who was born in 2005.
Had she not been defrocked, Stroud said, “My whole life would have been different.”
The process that led to Stroud’s ouster began in April 2003, when she told her congregation, the First United Methodist Church of Germantown, about her same-sex relationship. The church — where Stroud had been a pastor for four years — set up a legal fund to assist with her defense and hired her as a lay minister after she was defrocked.
The UMC says it has no overall figures of how many clergy were defrocked for defying anti-LGBTQ bans or how many reinstatements might occur.
___
Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP’s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.
veryGood! (19)
Related
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- Did any LIV Golf players make Masters cut? Yep. In fact, one of them is tied for the lead.
- Faced with possibly paying for news, Google removes links to California news sites for some users
- Executor of O.J. Simpson’s estate plans to fight payout to the families of Brown and Goldman
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- UFL schedule for Week 3 games: D.C. Defenders, Arlington Renegades open play April 13
- Woman who stabbed classmate in 2014 won’t be released: See timeline of the Slender Man case
- Tiger Woods shoots career-worst round at Masters to fall out of contention
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- Heavy rain across Kauai prompts rescues from floodwater, but no immediate reports of injuries
Ranking
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- How to be a good loser: 4 tips parents and kids can take from Caitlin Clark, NCAA finals
- Wildlife ecologist Rae Wynn-Grant talks breaking barriers and fostering diversity in new memoir
- Body of missing Alabama mother found; boyfriend in custody
- South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
- Greg Norman is haunting Augusta National. What patrons thought of him at the Masters
- Right whale is found entangled off New England in a devastating year for the vanishing species
- Progressive candidates are increasingly sharing their own abortion stories after Roe’s demise
Recommendation
How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
Woman who stabbed classmate in 2014 won’t be released: See timeline of the Slender Man case
Eleanor Coppola, Emmy-winning filmmaker and Francis Ford Coppola's wife, dies at 87
Prince Harry scores goal in charity polo match as Meghan, Netflix cameras look on
South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
Houston area teacher, son charged with recruiting teenage students for prostitution
FDA chairman wants Congress to mandate testing for lead, other harmful chemicals in food
1 dead after shuttle bus crashes at a Honolulu cruise ship terminal