Officials have defrocked a United Methodist (U.M.) pastor for refusing to denounce same-sex marriage in compliance with church law, following a 30-day suspension for presiding over the 2007 wedding of his gay son to another man.
Rev. Frank Schaefer of Lebanon, Pa., met with the U.M. Board of Ordained Ministry on Thursday — the final day of his suspension and the deadline for the 51-year-old to decide whether he would obey church law, which bars clergy members from marrying couples of the same gender, or his own conscience.
Schaefer had already made up his mind, announcing on Monday that he would neither uphold the U.M. church’s position on homosexuality, nor voluntarily surrender his ordination credentials. The law, he said, is discriminatory and “filled with competing and contradictory statements.”
“I wanted to find a way of answering truthfully and still keep my credentials in the church,” said Schaefer in a press briefing Monday. “I have really wrestled and agonized over this, but finally came to the conclusion that my honest answer has to be no. I cannot uphold the Book of Discipline in its entirety. In fact, I don’t believe anybody can.”
The U.M. Book of Discipline teaches its subscribers to accept gay and lesbian Christians as members, but reject the practice of homosexuality as “incompatible with Christian teaching.” It also forbids clergy members from presiding over weddings between two people of the same sex, or from being “self-avowed practicing homosexuals” themselves.
In 2007, Schaefer bucked this law when he married his oldest son, Tim, to another man in Massachusetts, the first state in the U.S. to legalize same-sex marriage. Two more of his children are gay, and Schaefer said at the end of trial that he would no longer be a “silent supporter” of LGBT rights.









