The Rev. Amy DeLong, a Methodist pastor from Osceola, Wisconsin,
decided to come clean. She brought to the attention of her local bishop
that she had officiated over the same-sex union of a lesbian couple. It
is a rite prohibited by her religion and having performed it, DeLong
could be put on trial by the church. She also told the bishop that she
might as well be prosecuted for something else: she is in a lesbian
partnership.
And so, last week, DeLong, 44, faced a jury of church elders in
Kaukauna, Wisconsin. At issue was whether she violated the Book of
Discipline, which guides the church's teachings, by blessing the same
sex union and for being a "self avowed, practicing homosexual." The
13-member jury acquitted her on the second charge. But it also found her
guilty of the first. But that's where something historic happened. The
elders handed down the first sentence in 20 years of United Methodist
jurisprudence that did not indefinitely suspend or defrock an elder for
officiating a same-sex union.
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