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Christianity TodayJanuary 10 2000

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Methodists: Creech stripped of clergy credentials
United Methodist minister guilty of breaking church law at gay ceremony



A jury of 13 United Methodists stripped one of the denomination's most outspoken ministers of his clergy credentials November 17. The jury found Jimmy Creech guilty of disobeying church law by presiding at a ceremony of a homosexual couple in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, last April. Creech, who made headlines when he was acquitted of a similar charge in 1998, will now become a layman in the harshest penalty the denomination has meted out for blessing a same-sex union. The verdict sends a clear signal to the 44,000 ministers in the United Methodist Church that the denomination will not tolerate gay unions and will, in effect, fire those who perform them. Sixty-seven ministers from California and Nevada await trial for performing a collective ceremony uniting two lesbians in January.The Creech decision could also have wide-ranging consequences at the denomination's General Conference—its highest decision-making body—which will discuss homosexuality in May. Various sides have lined up to draft new proposals to include or exclude gays from covenant ceremonies and ordination.Creech, who argued that his trial was immoral and presented no defense, said he was not shocked by the decision."Those who love justice and are compassionate and merciful, those who have a vision of Jesus where all are welcomed without favor, are injured by this decision today," he told reporters outside Trinity United Methodist Church in Grand Island, Nebraska, where the trial took place.The night before the trial, Creech presided at a recommitment ceremony for Larry Ellis and Jim Raymer, the two men he united in North Carolina. Creech says he does not plan to appeal, a continuing sign of his opposition to the entire process."I admire Jimmy's courage of ...

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