Evangelical Lutheran Synod disagrees
with homosexual clergy resolution adopted by ELCA (Evangelical Lutheran Church
in America)
MANKATO,
MINNESOTA—Officials of the Evangelical Lutheran Synod (ELS), a church body
based in Mankato, noted with concern and disappointment the decision of the
national convention of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA), held
in Minneapolis August 17-23, to allow the ordination of practicing homosexuals
and lesbians as pastors of the church.
The smaller ELS is not affiliated with the larger
ELCA, even though the names of the two churches are very similar.
ELS President, Rev. John A. Moldstad, said: “Ordaining practicing homosexuals and
lesbians to the ministry is a serious departure from the Biblical standards of
morality to which Lutherans and Lutheran pastors have historically been
held.” Moldstad clarified that, in
contrast to the newly-adopted position of the ELCA, the position of the ELS on
the matter of homosexuality and marriage is as follows:
We confess that Scripture condemns homosexuality and
extra-marital relations (fornication and adultery) as sin. Nevertheless, when
an individual caught up in such sins truly repents, the forgiveness of the
Gospel is to be fully applied. We confess that the divine institution of
marriage is to be heterosexual, in which, according to God’s design, a man and
a woman may enjoy a life-long companionship in mutual love. We teach on the
basis of Holy Scripture that marriage is the only proper context for the
expression of sexual intimacy and for the procreation of children. See Rom.
1:26-27, 1 Cor. 6:9, 18 and 7:2-9, John 4:17-18, 1 John 1:9, Gen. 1:27-28 and
2:18-24, Matt. 19:4-6. (From We Believe,
Teach, and Confess, adopted by the ELS in 1992)
Moldstad explained that ELS churches welcome into
their midst those who may struggle with temptation toward a same-sex
attraction, but who know in their conscience that this is wrong, and who seek
God’s help in their struggle. Said Moldstad, “The ELS believes that in this
world it is the duty of the church – as the body of Christ – to be a community
of healing and reconciliation in the Gospel, and a beacon of hope to all
humanity. And so, while the church is indeed called by the Lord to condemn as
sin that which God condemns as sin, it is the church’s privilege also to offer
and apply the grace, forgiveness, and acceptance of God, in Jesus Christ, to
all who repent of their sins – whatever those sins may be.”
In addition to the similarity in names, the ELS shares
a common heritage with some segments of the ELCA. The Mankato-based group was organized in 1918 by pastors and
congregations that had declined to enter a merger that formed one of the
predecessor bodies of the ELCA. The ELS
has not participated in subsequent Lutheran mergers either – including the one
that formed the ELCA in 1988 – because of what it saw as doctrinal compromises
that these mergers represented.