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Reverend Stroud convicted of violating Methodist church law
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Reverend Stroud convicted of violating Methodist church law
Reverend Stroud convicted of violating Methodist church law
A jury made up of United Methodist Church clergy convicted a lesbian minister Thursday of violating church law by living openly with her partner in a committed relationship. The Reverend Irene Elizabeth Stroud could be defrocked as a result of the ruling, which came on the second day of her church trial. The same 13-member jury was set to meet Thursday afternoon to decide her penalty. Methodist law bars "self-avowed, practicing homosexuals" from ministry. Nine votes were necessary for a conviction, and the jury voted 12-1 to find Stroud guilty. The last time the 8.3 million-member denomination convicted an openly gay cleric was in 1987, when a New Hampshire church court defrocked the Reverend Rose Mary Denman. Last March a Methodist court in Washington State acquitted the Reverend Karen Dammann, who lives with a same-sex partner, citing an ambiguity in church law that the Methodist supreme court has since eliminated. Before the jury returned, Stroud, 34, told reporters that whatever the verdict, "this case has shown how divided we are" over the role of gays in the church. She had expected to be convicted.