United Methodist Advocate - Connecting Methodists in South Carolina Since 1837

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you can, in all the places you can, at all the times you can,
to all the people you can, as long as ever you can."
- John Wesley

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The Purpose of South Carolina Advocate is to communicate the message of the United Methodist Church and to connect United Methodists by independently reporting news, engaging readers, and providing a forum for dialogue.

Advocate 1937 cover

Advocate a few decades away from its bicentennial – The South Carolina United Methodist Advocate (founded as the Southern Christian Advocate ) has been publishing the news for South Carolina Methodism since 1837.   

In 1836, the following was written, establishing the Southern Christian Advocate : "That act of the General Conference authorizing these publications was called for by the Southern Delegates … in view of the peculiar political aspect of the time … in connection with the feeling which is known to pervade all classes of men on the subject of our domestic situations. We propose, therefore, to publish at the city of Charleston … a religious paper … devoted to the promotion of good morals and religion – to give expression to the views and feelings of our people, kindly but firmly, on all subjects bearing on the Church ... ."

It was first commissioned by the General Conference of 1836 to be published in Charleston, one of three papers authorized by the 1836 General Conference. Others were to be published in Nashville and Richmond.

At a time when there were more black Methodists in Charleston than white, it was off to an inauspicious start, espousing the noisy call of Southerners on the issues of slavery and secession. But in most instances since then, it has stood firmly as it faced the challenges of a society that sometimes defied the Christian beliefs of the Methodist Church. There have been courageous and loving editors who were almost a lone voice on difficult issues when needed; its editors have just as eagerly cheered the small and grand work of the church.

While the paper may have begun alongside the Civil War and the political struggle of its region, a later chapter in the Advocate 's history is that which it played in another civil rights debate – the civil rights struggle of South Carolinians, Methodists in particular. The newspaper played a critical role in the 1972 merger of the racially divided 1866 and 1785 Methodist Conferences.

The Advocate has had its home in numerous South Carolina cities and at least once in Georgia. The paper has had 28 editors, including 26 men and four women. Its first editor was William Capers, who later became a bishop of the church and whose remains rest beneath the pulpit at Washington Street United Methodist Church, Columbia. All but five editors have been clergy. Initially a weekly publication, the Advocate became a monthly publication with the action of the S.C. Annual Conference of 1995. It is published the last week of each month.

The Advocate is best described as "a loving critic, " or an "independent voice" in the South Carolina Conference.

"The propagation of religion by means of the press is next to importance to the preaching of the Gospel. "
– Francis Asbury

 

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Winter Retreat will INFUSE Youth

ImageLAKE JUNALUSKA, N.C. – Each weekend between December 31, 2010 and February 18, 2011, Christian youth from across the southeast will have the opportunity to gather in the mountains of western North Carolina to hit the slopes and join in fellowship during MYP at Lake Junaluska’s INFUSE Youth Ski Retreats. Together, youth will be transformed by God through vibrant praise and worship, unifying fellowship and fun.
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