One thing that still sticks out to me in the above minutes, and the reason I posted the attendees, is that one of the two attendees who tabled the motion is Lawrence Nyarko. Everyone else is either representing a position in Toronto Conference or one of its presbyteries, if I have that right. Mr. Nyarko has "diversity" next to his name. That diversity appears to be limited to diversity of race, not of thought.
Also, Gretta wrote an update on her blog:
http://www.grettavosper.ca/dividing-the-church/
It seems that this review process was started with no attempts to talk to Ms. Vosper herself, or with any member of her congregation.
Think about that for a second. Toronto Conference initiated a review of the suitability of one of its ministers,
without so much as consulting a single member of her congregation. It boggles the mind how they think this is the correct way to go about this.
Then read the comments at the end of her blog. The last voice when I wrote this, the one who says she is unsuitable to continue as a United Church minister, uses lines like, "
The reality my dear is that being a minister in the United Church of Canada has certain requirements. .... Them’s the facts darlin’"
And it's not like this is the only example of such thought. Read the UCCan Facebook comments. The side that's against Gretta? Way too many of them sound like Rush Limbaugh listeners. What this is showing, is that the United Church still has a real ignorance problem, in much the same way that the rest of Christianity does. I know you guys like to think you're above that level of discourse in the United Church, but you're clearly not.