Lutherans find no consensus on homosexuality

c. 2008 Religion News Service (UNDATED) A long-awaited draft statement by the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America shies from taking a position on homosexuality, saying the church has yet to reach consensus on the matter. Current ELCA policies, which bar non-celibate homosexual clergy, are not discussed in the draft released Thursday (March 13). And while […]

c. 2008 Religion News Service

(UNDATED) A long-awaited draft statement by the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America shies from taking a position on homosexuality, saying the church has yet to reach consensus on the matter.

Current ELCA policies, which bar non-celibate homosexual clergy, are not discussed in the draft released Thursday (March 13).


And while the church “recognizes the historic origin of the term `marriage’ as … between a man and a woman,” the statement also notes that some ELCA pastors and congregations support same-sex unions.

“After many years of study and conversation, this church does not have consensus regarding loving and committed same-gender relationships,” the statement reads.

Nearly seven years in the making, “Journey Together Faithfully” is intended as a framework for future ELCA debates on sexuality.

Compiled by a 15-member committee of bishops, pastors, psychologists, professors and a homemaker, the draft now begins an eight-month comment period within the ELCA, the nation’s largest Lutheran body. A second draft will be produced after the comment period.

If approved by a two-thirds majority at the ELCA’s Churchwide Assembly next year, the statement will be used to guide church policy for its 4.8 million members.

Like other mainline Protestant denominations, the ELCA has been torn by how open the church should be to gay and lesbian clergy and laity. But efforts to liberalize the church’s gay policies have stalled.

At last year’s Churchwide Assembly, delegates voted to uphold a ban on sexually active gay and lesbian clergy but cautioned bishops against applying the ban too strictly.


“Although this church lacks consensus, it encourages all people to live out their faith in the community of the baptized,” the draft says. “We call on congregations to welcome, care for and support same-gender-oriented people and their families, and to advocate for their legal protection.”

(OPTIONAL TRIM FOLLOWS)

The statement concerned both liberal and conservative groups, and both sides pledged to try to make changes. A revised statement will be issued after the comment period, and then be sent on to the 2009 assembly.

Emily Eastwood, executive director of Lutherans Concerned/North America, a gay and lesbian advocacy group, called the draft “inconsistent and insufficient.”

“It calls for an end to discrimination,” she said. “Yet the church continues to discriminate against same-gender couples and families by relegating them to second-class status.”

But the statement also “opens the door to supporting same-gender committed relationships,” by defining marriage as a “relationship of love and trust between two people,” said Mark Chavez of the conservative group Lutheran CORE.

Jaynan Clark Egland, president of the WordAlone Network, said, “We can draft statements and we can take votes and we can even change rites and ceremonies, but we still have no authority to change what God first ordered.”


KRE/PH END BURKE

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