Supporters of the vote to leave said the PCUSA had strayed from biblical teachings and no longer reflected their church’s views. After the vote, some church members wiped away tears. Others said they were relieved it was finally over.
Members of Fremont Presbyterian Church – the largest PCUSA congregation in the Sacramento region – ended months of speculation Sunday when they voted to leave their national denomination and join one that church leaders said reflects more traditional beliefs.
By a vote of 427 to 164, members voted to seek dismissal from the Presbyterian Church (USA) and join the Evangelical Presbyterian Church.
Church leaders said their denomination had strayed from biblical adherence, most recently in July when the national denomination permitted the ordination of openly gay clergy.
“Let me make it clear that Fremont didn’t leave the PCUSA they left us,” said senior pastor the Rev. Donald Baird shortly before the vote.
For two months, members have been in turmoil about the vote to leave the national denomination which ordained Scott Anderson – a former Sacramentan – the first openly gay minister in the PCUSA last week.
The PCUSA has about 2 million members and is one of a growing number of mainline Protestant churches that have voted to accept gay clergy.
The list includes the United Church of Chirst, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and the Episcopal Church. The United Methodist Church is still debating.
Fremont becomes the seventh church in the Sacramento area – including churches in Roseville, Fair Oaks and, most recently, Redding – to leave the Presbyterian denomination in the past couple of years. About 100 congregations nationally have left in the last five years, according to the Presbyterian News Service. Many joined the EPC.
Sunday afternoon, nearly 800 people packed into the Fremont church – across the street from Sacramento State’s main entrance – for the largest congregational meeting in church history. The mood was cordial but at times tense. Over two hours, members on both sides of the issue headed to the microphone.
Read More
First Presbyterian, Enid, Oklahoma also votes to leave Story
[Editor’s note: Original URLs (links) referenced in this article are no longer valid, so the links have been removed.]
Subscribe to Free “Top 10 Stories” Email
Get the top 10 stories from The Aquila Report in your inbox every Tuesday morning.