As a newbie here, I must say that I am impressed at the hospitality: even having a thread just for Lutherans. As an ELCA member, I must comment on the social statement and the resolutions on gay clergy and on recognizing non-marital unions. I am president of council and have been working to keep the congregation together since the vote. My membership predates the ELCA by a long time. I was baptized in the Evangelische Kirche Deutschland (Evangelical Church of Germany) and we joined my congregation in the mid-50’s. Though I disagree with the resolutions, I am not about to let a bunch from Minneapolis run me out of my own church.
For all the lofty language and ideals, the resolutions are just sentiments. Critical terms are not defined, so the implications of the votes are still unclear. How long is a relationship before it can be called “committed?” And what does it mean to recognize a union? Are we talking church or labor relations? It will take years probably to sort out how the resolutions can be put into practice.
The independence of the local congregations is a two-edged sword. The national church has no control over the local churches, and the state synods have little more. They act a clearinghouses for finding pastors and coordinating larger church efforts. The only time the synod can impose any will on a local congregation is if there is a split and then they only help decide which group gets to keep the building.
A case in point is the Georgia Synod. They were only able to suspend the membership of the church in Atlanta with the gay pastor. I don;t know how much benevolence the congregation sent the Synod, but the upshot was that the local congregation had to keep all that nasty money.
I do not totally denigrate the national church. One of its predecessor bodies funded and supported the Lutheran Refugee Relief effort that brought my family to this country after WWII. The church of which I am now a member sponsored us to come to this area. I do not see how a single church could do such things.
Without its conservative membership, the ELCA would end up looking like Barack Obama’s denomination. If we are in the struggle, at least we can keep the liberals from totally becoming Lutheran Unitarians. Then, too, the Lutheran World Fellowship looks askance at this vote. The Lutheran Church in Africa, which is totally opposed to the social statement and the resolutions, is considering asking that the ELCA be kicked out. There are about twice the Lutherans in Africa than in Europe and nearly seven times those in the US. So, this story is a long way from played out.
One of the great themes of the Epistles is endurance. This is the time for us in the ELCA to endure, and not jump ship precipitously. As bad as the frying pan is, the fire is worse.