Constitution And Standing Orders Of The Methodist - Church

Critics—especially from evangelical or charismatic wings of Methodism—argue that the Standing Orders have accumulated too many procedural layers. For instance, changing a church’s meeting time or starting a small group can require multiple committee approvals. This can stifle spontaneity, mission innovation, and local initiative, contradicting Wesley’s own adaptable methods.

Excellent for ensuring accountability, but the minimum meeting frequency and reporting requirements overwhelm small rural churches. Constitution And Standing Orders Of The Methodist Church

Methodist Standing Orders are more flexible than Anglican Canons but more prescriptive than congregationalist church covenants. SO 001 – Basis of Union A theological masterpiece, but non-justiciable. Good for identity, bad for dispute resolution. and local initiative