This article from the Christian Century gives the lay of the land on the homosexuality issue in the ELCA as we go into the churchwide assembly this month. Despite what the article says, I wouldn’t be surprised if we ended up with essentially the status quo. A “local option” has been vigorously opposed by some of our top theologians (Robert Jenson, Carl Braaten, etc.) as theologically and ecclesiologically incoherent. And a full-fledged overturning of the existing policy seems even more unlikely.
Toward the end of the article my old pastor Jeff Johnson is quoted:
To Jeff Johnson, the openly gay pastor of the University Lutheran Chapel at the University of California at Berkeley, “the trajectory of the church is clearly moving in a progressive direction.”
His bishop, David G. Mullen, has chosen not to remove at least 13 openly gay, lesbian or bisexual pastors serving in the Sierra Pacific Synod, said Johnson, who cochairs Good Soil, a Lutheran gay alliance. “The current policy of the church really serves no one,” Johnson said.
“The progressive wing is frustrated and unsatisfied because the policies intimidate a class of people unjustly,” he said. “The conservative wing is frustrated because the policies are inconsistently followed or ignored.”
Despite putting in a year at “the Chapel” as we called it, I remain a squishy fence-straddler on the whole issue. Ironically, I was considerably more pro-Bush then than I am now (this was pre-Iraq), and used to dread the anti-Bush polemics we would occasionally get from the pulpit. Ah, Berkeley…
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