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ELCA Council Hears Presiding Bishop's Call To 'Moral Deliberation'

ELCA Council Hears Presiding Bishop's Call To 'Moral Deliberation'

November 15, 2006

CHICAGO (ELCA) -- In the wake of the mid-term congressional
elections, the presiding bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran
Church in America (ELCA) said he hopes ELCA congregations can
become places of "moral deliberation" before the country turns
its attention to what may be a contentious political environment
leading up to the 2008 elections.
The Rev. Mark S. Hanson made the comment in his Nov. 11
report to the ELCA Church Council, which met here Nov. 11-13.
The council is the ELCA's board of directors and serves as the
legislative authority of the church between churchwide
assemblies. Assemblies are held every other year; the next is
here Aug. 6-11, 2007.
Practicing moral deliberation is not natural for ELCA
congregations, Hanson said.
"Can we model communities of reconciliation without abdicating
our prophetic voice? I think we can," he told the council.
Hanson also commented on the murders of two Lutheran pastors
in El Salvador and recent significant losses in ELCA membership,
in his council report.
The presiding bishop said he is "deeply troubled" by the
murders of the Rev. Francisco Carrillo and his wife, the Rev.
Jesus Calzada de Carrillo, Lutheran pastors serving in El
Salvador. Both were killed Nov. 4 by three unknown young
perpetrators.
"I can tell you that this is a painful blow to an already
discouraged Bishop Medardo Gomez, who bears the weight on his
shoulder of being a prophet in that society," Hanson told the
council. Gomez is bishop of the Salvadoran Lutheran Synod.
"In many respects Medardo is a voice that the people still
look to to call them to the pursuit of justice," Hanson said.
"We need to remember the El Salvadoran Lutherans in a very
difficult time," Hanson said.
Referencing a loss of nearly 80,000 baptized ELCA members in
2005 and some 275,000 members since he became presiding bishop in
2001, Hanson said he wonders if the church has become ambivalent
or suspicious about numerical growth.
"It doesn't seem to be a scandal in this church," Hanson
said of the membership losses. He said some people try to
explain the losses by blaming changing demographics or simply
cleaning membership rolls. Others say it's "admirable," blaming
"consumptive consumer-oriented churches" that sell out the
gospel, he said. Some even suggest that a faithful church is a
declining church, Hanson told the council.
"I know congregations that are faithful to the gospel and to
a cruciform life of discipleship and worship centered around the
means of grace (that) are growing in membership and don't hold up
decline as evidence of faithfulness. We need to ask ourselves:
'Have we become a church of low expectations?' I don't think we
expect much from the Holy Spirit. I really don't," Hanson said.
He also said he doesn't believe the church expects its
members to invite others to church and it doesn't expect pastors
to "be evangelical leaders of congregations in mission." Many
congregations are not prepared to receive such leaders, he added.
The ELCA Conference of Bishops, an advisory body of the
church, is planning significant discussions at its spring 2007
meeting about membership losses and future growth.

Presiding Bishop Focuses on Five Strategic Directions
Hanson focused most of his report on the five strategic
directions of the ELCA, affirmed by the 2005 ELCA Churchwide
Assembly. He also commented on the writings of Christopher
Lasch, who was a social critic and historian. Lasch wrote about
the differences between "nostalgia" and "living memories," which
Hanson said contain some important lessons for the church.
+ Supporting congregations: Hanson said recent churchwide
activities related to this strategic direction are the ELCA's new
worship resource, "Evangelical Lutheran Worship," Christian
education, communication planning, mission funding and a new
churchwide initiative that will focus on biblical education,
"Book of Faith: Lutherans Read the Bible."
"When I think of 'living memory,' I think immediately of
Evangelical Lutheran Worship," Hanson said. "This is not a book
about nostalgic worship. This is a book that embraces the living
memory, the treasury of this church's worship life, its hymnody,
its prayer (and) multiple settings of the liturgy."
The upcoming "Read the Bible" initiative is important
because many ELCA members don't know much about what is in the
Bible, Hanson said.
"That's just becoming apparent more and more as I listen to
pastors. It's difficult, they tell me, to pastor a congregation
that (doesn't) know the biblical story, that seems too busy to
take time for Bible study," he said.
"If we don't know as a people the story of what God has been
up to in the past, if we don't know the parables ... how are we
ever going to bear witness to what God is up to today?" Hanson
asked.
Hanson said he had concerns about ELCA congregations and
whether they "welcome" visitors and potential new members.
"I have to tell you (that) I have heard some pretty
discouraging stories from pastors, often first-call pastors, or
pastors new to a call, that they find the communities they've
been called to serve very unwelcoming," he said, adding that
perhaps the art of welcoming people is becoming lost in today's
busy society.
"I think most congregations perceive themselves as welcoming
communities but (don't) know what the gift of hospitality looks
like, and it takes practice," he added.
+ Assist the church to grow in evangelical outreach: Hanson
cited recent churchwide activities such as mission developer
training, collaboration on new congregational starts, the Mission
Investment Fund, a recent African National Leaders Summit and
synod gatherings focusing on prayer and revival.
+ Step forward as a public church: Hanson cited recent
activities in this area such as a pastoral letter he issued with
the Rev. Frank T. Griswold, former presiding bishop and primate
of the Episcopal Church, on the Millennium Development Goals,
Middle East statements and the National Interreligious Leadership
Initiative, immigration reform efforts and the international AIDS
Conference in Toronto. Hanson attended the conference as did
many young adult Lutherans, he said.
There is "a growing awareness in this church that we must
join together with others in confronting the HIV/AIDS pandemic,"
Hanson said.
In addition to his suggestion that ELCA congregations become
places of moral deliberation, Hanson said he hoped the ELCA can
renew and increase its commitment to the World Hunger Appeal and
the Stand With Africa campaign.
+ Deepen global ecumenical and interfaith relationships:
Hanson recounted his recent visits in his role as LWF president
to Indonesia, India, Hungary and Romania, the opening of a
Christian-Muslim center at the Lutheran School of Theology at
Chicago, a Global Mission Event, the ELCA Youth Gathering in San
Antonio, and participation in the investiture of the Most Rev.
Katharine Jefferts Schori, who succeeded Griswold as presiding
bishop and primate of the Episcopal Church.
+ Bring forth faithful, wise and courageous leaders: Hanson
recounted churchwide events on diversity in leadership
development, and theological reflection on the vocation of
leadership. Both events were held in Chicago in September.
Hanson noted that in 2007, at least 11 bishops have said
they will not be available for re-election. The Rev. Lowell G.
Almen, who has served more than 19 years as ELCA secretary, also
announced he will not be available for reelection. Hanson said
the church is entering a time of transition and must assist its
leaders to "end well" so that their successors can "begin well."

For information contact:
John Brooks, Director (773) 380-2958 or news@elca.org
http://www.elca.org/news

- - -
About the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America:
The ELCA is one of the largest Christian denominations in the United States, with 2.8 million members in more than 8,500 worshiping communities across the 50 states and in the Caribbean region. Known as the church of "God's work. Our hands.," the ELCA emphasizes the saving grace of God through faith in Jesus Christ, unity among Christians and service in the world. The ELCA's roots are in the writings of the German church reformer Martin Luther.

For information contact:
Candice Hill Buchbinder
Public Relations Manager
Candice.HillBuchbinder@ELCA.org

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