ROANOKE TIMES 
                      Copyright (c) 1996, Roanoke Times

DATE: Sunday, June 16, 1996                  TAG: 9606170094
SECTION: VIRGINIA                 PAGE: B-5  EDITION: METRO 
DATELINE: VIRGINIA BEACH 
SOURCE: NANCY LEWIS CORRESPONDENT 


METHODISTS AID MINORITIES

It was indeed a heavenly choir - one so colorful it might have slid in on a rainbow.

Seventeen women of Korean descent rustled onto the raised platform at the Pavilion Center garbed in vibrant hues of red, yellow, green and pink, and raised their voices in prayerful song Saturday.

The glossy satin and shimmering chiffon ``han boks'' worn by Richmond's Emmaus United Methodist Church choir for the noon worship service was just one example of how the spotlight shone on minorities and women at the four-day United Methodist Church state conference, which concludes today.

About 3,000 clergy and lay leaders attended the 216th annual gathering.

In an unusual move earlier Saturday, Methodists acted on a motion from the floor and overrode their financial committee's recommendations, adding $20,000 to the 1997 budget for a full-time campus ministry at the predominantly black Virginia State University in Petersburg.

``This just doesn't happen,'' said the Rev. Alvin Horton, communications director for the conference. ``They usually defer to the committee. It's the conference saying, `This is so important to us, we're going to do it anyway.'''

``The mood of the Virginia Conference - its racial consciousness - has significantly changed over the years,'' said Dee Pendley, president of the conference's board of communications. ``For the conference to take something out of finance with no opposition'' is rare, he added.

The state university ministry, now part-time, will become full time July 1, 1997.

On Friday, the group had acted unanimously on a floor motion by the Rev. Youtha Hardman-Cromwell to have its Leadership Development Institute look into why a disproportionate number of female clergy seem to be leaving the Virginia Conference.

"What are the reasons [that] when you look at the lists, you see more women's names?'' asked Hardman-Cromwell, a professor of divinity at Howard University in Washington, D.C.

She said that one-third of Virginia's Methodist ministers listed as on leave or transferred are women, and half of those transferred out-of-state are women. "It seems to be a pattern ... are there systemic factors?''


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