Dissident Lutherans: Bullying over gays

 
 
By Wayne Anderson - The Washington Times - Saturday, December 19, 2009 
 
A decision to ordain actively gay clergy  has caused deep fissures in the 
nation’s largest Lutheran church group, with  some traditional Lutherans 
saying they have been subjected to threats and  retaliation as they consider 
breaking away. 
Several disaffected members of the  Evangelical Lutheran Church in America 
(ELCA) say the decision made at the  church’s national convention in 
Minneapolis in August could prompt a major  exodus from one of America’s 
biggest 
Protestant denominations.

“I  wouldn’t even begin to tell you how many thousands [of calls] I’ve 
gotten,” said  Paull Spring, chairman of Lutheran Coalition for Renewal, or 
CORE, a national  coalition based on traditional values. His group said last 
month that it cannot  remain inside the 4.7-million-member ELCA and will form 
a new synod.
 
He is not alone. 
“I am receiving every single week dozens  of phone calls, e-mails, from 
pastors of the largest Lutheran churches in ELCA,”  said the Rev. Walter 
Kallestad, senior pastor of Community Church of Joy in  Glendale, Ariz., who 
left 
the synod after having been “rostered” as a minister  with the ELCA for 31 
years. “I’ve answered hundreds … from congregations looking  to transition 
out of the ELCA.” 
For reasons of church structure - Lutheran  congregations retain their 
property as long as they are affiliated with a  Lutheran synod - the fallout 
from the ELCA’s decision isn’t likely to lead to  the kind of court fights 
that followed the U.S. Episcopal Church’s 2003  ordination of an openly gay 
bishop.

“I wouldn’t even begin to tell you how  many thousands [of calls] I’ve 
gotten,” said Paull Spring, chairman of Lutheran  Coalition for Renewal, or 
CORE, a national coalition based on traditional  values. His group said last 
month that it cannot remain inside the  4.7-million-member ELCA and will form 
a new synod. 
He is not alone. 
“I am receiving every single week dozens  of phone calls, e-mails, from 
pastors of the largest Lutheran churches in ELCA,”  said the Rev. Walter 
Kallestad, senior pastor of Community Church of Joy in  Glendale, Ariz., who 
left 
the synod after having been “rostered” as a minister  with the ELCA for 31 
years. “I’ve answered hundreds … from congregations looking  to transition 
out of the ELCA.” 
For reasons of church structure - Lutheran  congregations retain their 
property as long as they are affiliated with a  Lutheran synod - the fallout 
from the ELCA’s decision isn’t likely to lead to  the kind of court fights 
that followed the U.S. Episcopal Church’s 2003  ordination of an openly gay 
bishop.But the splits within the ELCA, which is  more than twice the Episcopal 
Church’s size, are getting ugly in their own way.  Pastors taking their 
churches out of the ELCA are making charges of “unethical,  immoral and in some 
cases, illegal” acts by bishops and other officials, Mr.  Kallestad said.
 
“I’m talking to some pastors and leaders  from many states around the 
nation, whose [ELCA] bishops are becoming very  hostile,” Mr. Kallestad said. 
The Rev. Mark Gehrke, of Faith Lutheran  Church in Moline, Ill., said that “
if you do not agree with the direction of the  ELCA, you are … bullied or 
ostracized or threatened. The threat has been to even  remove me and suspend 
me from ministry,” he said. 
In early September, he said, he was  leading meetings and seeking ways to 
leave the ELCA. His bishop heard of this  and sent a three-man team to 
address the problem. 
“They spent their first 10 to 12 minutes  bashing me and the leadership,” 
Mr. Gehrke said. “Quoting things out of context,  just totally humiliating 
me in front of the entire congregation.”Mr. Gehrke  said other pastors have 
been bullied into silence.
 
“In Illinois, I’m one of the only few  pastors that have taken a stand,” 
he said, noting there are others who are too  frightened to openly criticize 
the denomination’s position on homosexuality. 
“They are afraid for their jobs,” he said.  “They are afraid of standing 
against the church, the bishops.” 
In November, his church voted not to leave  the ELCA but to compromise by 
joining Lutheran Congregations in Mission for  Christ, an independent 
conservative Lutheran association. 
The ELCA denies threatening or bullying  anybody. 
“I would deny that completely,” said  Bishop Gary Wollersheim of the ELCA’
s Northern Illinois Synod. “That’s not  happening in northern Illinois. I’m 
sure that’s not happening anywhere in the  country.” 
More than that, the bishop said, the  denomination has taken the opposite 
approach toward those who back traditional  sexual morality.“I have done the 
exact opposite,” Bishop Wollersheim said.  “I have assured clergy, roster 
leaders, that hold different opinions on the  decisions that [neither] the 
synod nor I will discriminate against them in any  way. The last thing that I 
would do as pastor of the synod would [be to] bully  somebody or threaten 
them.”
 
Presiding Bishop Mark Hanson, the head of  the ELCA, also denies that the 
synod is engaging in intimidation and questions  reports of any split. 
“I think some of the characterization of  polarization is a simplification,”
 Bishop Hanson said. “To be brutally honest,  it seems to me media can only 
tell stories about polarization and  fragmentation.” 
The head bishop recently met with  subordinate bishops from across the 
country, and told The Washington Times that  he is not aware of “any 
allegations”
 of improper or illegal acts by ELCA  officials - or even that an exodus is 
taking place. 
Through the end of October, the church  estimates that “50 of the ELCA’s 
10,396 congregations have taken first votes to  leave,” said ELCA spokesman 
John Brooks in an e-mail. “Five such votes have  failed.” 
To leave the ELCA, a church must conduct  two votes, 90 days apart, with 
both votes attaining a two-thirds majority. 
Bishop Hanson also questions pastors who  are making accusations of 
wrongdoing by officials. 
“It saddens me when any descriptions by  those who are in opposition to our 
actions or those who support them are less  than what I would call a 
faithful Christian witness,” he said. 
Hosanna Lutheran Church in St. Charles,  part of the Metropolitan Chicago 
Synod, does not agree with that assessment and  voted overwhelmingly on Nov. 
8 to leave the ELCA. In that case, according to the  church’s senior pastor, 
the threat was financial, against a pastor’s  pension. 
“It was threatened to me by a  representative of the synod,” the Rev. John 
Nelson said. “We have  defined-contribution pensions … we are the owners 
of them. I just looked at him  and said, ‘You know that’s illegal. You can’t 
do that.’” 
Mr. Nelson declined to name the synod  representative but said the motive 
for these threats is rooted in fear. 
“The ELCA is scared,” Mr. Nelson said.  “They are making decisions out of 
fear.” 
Bishop Wayne Miller, of the Metropolitan  Chicago Synod, declined repeated 
requests for specific comment about the Hosanna  situation and the 
pension-threat charge. 
Instead he sent The Times a general  “pastoral letter” written to synod 
members, asking people to “give time for  conversation and reflection” during 
this time. 
“Bishop Miller stated that he had no more  comments to give you,” Mary 
Richardson, executive assistant to the bishop, said  in an e-mail. “And [he] 
would appreciate it, if you would stop calling him.” 
Lutheran churches are leaving across the  nation, not just in the Midwest. 
“I, too, have talked with both lay and  clergy people around the country 
who tell some pretty horrific stories,” said  the Rev. Mark Graham, of St. 
John Evangelical Lutheran Church in Roanoke, Va.  These are stories of “
duplicity and deceit and outright mean-spirited action -  even illegal action.” 
His church voted to leave the ELCA shortly  after the controversial gay 
vote, though no one in “Virginia has acted in an  untoward manner,” Mr. Graham 
said. 
Some pastors say a Lutheran exodus has  been going on for some time. Mr. 
Kallestad was head of one the largest ELCA  churches in America. But he said 
his congregation decided to leave two years  before the gay vote at the 
national convention. 
“We started the process before the  convention because it was clear that 
the vision, values and direction of the  ELCA was totally opposite of where we 
believe that the New Testament church was  destined and designed to be,” 
Mr. Kallestad said. 
The bone of contention is not “strictly  about sexuality,” he said, but a 
fundamental view of Scripture. “Either the  Bible is the final authority or 
it is not.” 
According to Mr. Kallestad, disaffected  Lutherans are also closing their 
wallets in protest. 
“I do know financially the ELCA revenue is  down,” Mr. Kallestad said. “I’
ve heard figures between 20 percent and 40  percent.” 
Bishop Hanson called such reports of  massive declines unsubstantiated, 
acknowledging a “drop” in offerings but  “certainly not 20 percent to 40 
percent.” He did not provide exact figures. 
Somesupporters of the decision to ordain openly gay  clergy say they are 
homosexual Christians who love God and feel called to  service. And some 
churches encourage and celebrate this act of faith. 
“For this place, it was a celebration in  August when the church voted to 
make it possible for clergy who are in committed  same-sex relationships to 
be open about that,” said the Rev. Pam Fickenscher of  Edina Community 
Lutheran Church in Edina, Minn. 
There, no one is heading for the exit  door. 
“We’re actually seeing more life and  people coming instead of leaving,” 
she said. 
Robert Gagnon, New Testament scholar at  Pittsburgh Theological Seminary 
and author of “The Bible and Homosexual  Practice: Texts and Hermeneutics,” 
called the whole debate surreal for a church  named after one of the 
principal leaders of the Protestant Reformation. 
“It is impossible to imagine … how [Martin  Luther] would have reacted to 
a church endorsing homosexual practices. It’s off  the charts.”

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to