Will the ELCA finally do the right thing?

by Hopeful Spirit on Saturday, February 24, 2007

Gay Rul­ing Poses Tough Ques­tions for Luther­ans

By Kather­ine Boyle
Reli­gion News Service

WASHINGTON — The Evan­gel­i­cal Lutheran Church in Amer­ica may be asked to change a ban on prac­tic­ing gay and les­bian clergy after a dis­ci­pli­nary com­mit­tee voted to remove an openly gay pas­tor but sug­gested the church find a way to rein­state him.

The rul­ing called for the Rev. Bradley Schmel­ing, an openly gay pas­tor in a com­mit­ted rela­tion­ship, to be removed from his pul­pit at St. John’s Lutheran Church in by Aug. 15. The com­mit­tee said it reached the deci­sion reluc­tantly and sug­gested the ELCA’s Church­wide Assem­bly in August should “recon­sider and revise” guide­lines pro­hibit­ing gay clergy who are not celibate.

The com­mit­tee, made up of 12 Lutheran pas­tors from across the coun­try, also rec­om­mended the assem­bly con­sider rein­stat­ing pas­tors who have been ousted from their posi­tions for being in com­mit­ted homo­sex­ual relationships.

Emily East­wood, exec­u­tive direc­tor of the Lutheran gay rights group Luther­ans Concerned/North Amer­ica, called the rul­ing “astound­ing and unprece­dented.”

“This is not about the removal (of Schmel­ing),” she said. “If he had been acquit­ted or cen­sured we would have dodged a bul­let in this one case, but, since the deci­sion calls for his removal at a spe­cific time and calls for a change within that time frame, we have an oppor­tu­nity to change the pol­icy outright.”

It’s much bet­ter not to dodge the bul­let only for this one,” she added.

In an open let­ter to his parish, which was largely sup­port­ive dur­ing the case, Schmel­ing said he thought the pol­icy of the church was wrong and needed to be changed, though he acknowl­edged that “change never comes with­out a struggle.”

My sex­ual ori­en­ta­tion and my part­nered sta­tus shouldn’t pre­clude me from serv­ing the church,” he wrote.

ELCA spokesman John Brooks said he could not com­ment on the case because both Schmel­ing and Atlanta Bishop Ronald War­ren, who began the dis­ci­pli­nary pro­ceed­ings against Schmel­ing, still have 30 days to appeal the decision.

At the church’s last national meet­ing, in 2005, ELCA del­e­gates defeated a move to allow prac­tic­ing gay and les­bian clergy, and upheld a 1993 pol­icy ban­ning same-sex marriage.

The Rev. Mark Chavez, direc­tor of Word­Alone, a con­ser­v­a­tive Lutheran group based in Min­nesota that sup­ports the ban on actively gay clergy, said the committee’s deci­sion is “fur­ther evi­dence that many of the lead­ers of the ELCA are con­vinced that they can dis­re­gard the author­ity of God’s word and, espe­cially, the word as revealed in the scrip­tures of the Old and New Tes­ta­ment that clearly pro­scribes homo­sex­ual behavior.”

Chavez said it was “very dis­ap­point­ing” that ELCA lead­ers would try to push the denom­i­na­tion “in the direc­tion of the Epis­co­palian Church, the Pres­by­ter­ian Church USA and the United Church of Christ.”

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