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As Eye See It : ELCA: How Did We Come to This? - Robert Benne
Posted by David Virtue on 2009/8/30 16:30:00 (2692 reads)

ELCA: How Did We Come to This?

by Robert Benne

During last week's biennial Church Wide Assembly of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, the church affirmed major policy recommendations to allow for the blessing of same-sex unions (which practice will soon inflate to same-sex marriage) and the rostering of gay and lesbian pastors in partnered relationships. Earlier in the week it also passed by one vote-out of over a thousand total votes cast-a Social Statement on Sexuality that admitted there was no consensus on the moral evaluation of homosexual conduct, and offered no compelling biblical or theological reasons to support the policies it later in fact adopted.

The Statement was firm and bold on issues that everyone agreed upon-the moral condemnation of promiscuity, pornography, sexual exploitation, etc.-but indecisive and vague about contested issues-co-habitation, premarital sex, the importance of the nuclear family, and, of course, homosexual conduct. Right before the vote on the Social Statement a totally unexpected tornado hit the Minneapolis Conference Center where we were meeting as well as the huge Central Lutheran Church next door, knocking the cross off one of its towers. Orthodox voting members saw the work of God in the tornado's cross-toppling effects and in the vote that passed with a .666 majority. Revisionists noted that the sun came out after the vote. In response the orthodox quipped that the sun comes out almost every day but rogue tornados are pretty rare.

Those in the orthodox camp warned the assembly not to vote on binding church doctrine, especially if it had no convincing biblical or theological arguments to overturn the moral consensus of the one, holy, catholic, and apostolic church held throughout the ages and by 99% of the world's Christians. Such action would identify the ELCA with a rapidly declining liberal Protestantism while departing from orthodox teaching and practice. Strong arguments against the Social Statement and policy recommendations were made by pastors and laypersons-bishops were for the most part silent-to no avail. The church left the Great Tradition of moral teaching to identify with the United Church of Christ and the Episcopalians.

How did this come to be? On the one hand, the fact that the largest American Lutheran church body had become the first confessional church to accept homosexual conduct was a traumatic shock to many. There was much anger and anguish. On the other hand, the decision was not at all unexpected by those of us who have fought against the underlying currents operating in the church from its very inception. The fight has been long yet predictable. Liberal Protestantism was the ELCA's destination. Indeed, its presiding Bishop, Mark Hanson-is fast becoming the charismatic leader of liberal Protestantism.

"There is nothing but the Social Gospel," shouted a voting member at the assembly. But that is certainly not Lutheran doctrine. The various programs of social change taken to heart by the church are human works in God's left-hand reign, having to do with the Law, not the Gospel. Rather, the real Gospel is clear: the grace of God in Jesus Christ is offered to repentant sinners condemned by the Law and then called to amendment of life by the Spirit. Liberating efforts in the realm of social and political change are possibly effects of the Gospel, but certainly not the Gospel itself.

But the ELCA has accepted the Social Gospel as its working theology even though its constitution has a marvelous statement of the classic Gospel. The liberating movements fueled by militant feminism, multiculturalism, anti-racism, anti-heterosexism, anti-imperialism, and now ecologism have been moved to the center while the classic Gospel and its missional imperatives have been pushed to the periphery. The policies issuing from these liberationist themes are non-negotiable in the ELCA, which is compelling evidence that they are at the center. No one can dislodge the ELCA's commitment to purge all masculine language about God from its speech and worship, to demur on the biblically normative status of the nuclear family, to refuse to put limits on abortion in its internal policies or to advocate publicly for pro-life policies, to press for left-wing public domestic and foreign policy, to replace evangelism abroad with dialog, to commit to "full inclusion" of gays and lesbians at the expense of church unity, and to buy in fully to the movement against global warming. Though it is dogmatic on these issues it is confused about something as important as the assessment of homosexual conduct. Yet, it acts anyway because of the pressure exerted by those who want to liberate church and society from heterosexism.

But how did the liberal Protestant agenda replace the Christian core? There are many reasons, a goodly number that evangelicals share with Lutherans: a culture moving quickly toward permissive morality; the self-esteem movement leading to cheap grace; lay individualism combined with apathy toward Christian teaching; an obliviousness to church tradition and to the voice of the world church; and, above all, the loss of an authentic principle of authority in the church. This last item I will address in more detail later.

The ELCA has a particular history that has compounded these problems. The mid-80s planning stage of the ELCA was dramatically affected by a group of radicals who pressed liberationist (feminist, black, multiculturalist, gay) legislative initiatives right into the center of the ELCA structures. Among them was a quota system that skews every committee, council, task force, synod assembly, and national assembly toward the "progressive" side. (There are quotas for representing specific groups in all the organized activity of the church. 60% must be lay, 50% must be women, 10% must be people of color or whose language is other than English. The losers, of course, are white male pastors; our Virginia delegation to the assembly, for example, had only one male pastor among its eight elected members.) Further, the prescribed structure distanced the 65 Bishops from the decision-making of the church. The Bishops have only influence, not power. (Aware of their divisiveness, the Bishops voted 44-14 to require a two thirds majority for the enactment of the Sexuality Task Force's policy recommendations, but were ignored by both the Church Council and the Assembly.) Theologians were given no formal, ongoing, corporate role in setting the direction of the ELCA. They, too, were kept at a distance and actually viewed as one more competing interest group.

The radicals so decisive in the defining moments of the ELCA intended to smash the authority of the influential white male theologians and bishops who had informally kept both the American Lutheran Church and the Lutheran Church in America on course. The radicals wanted many voices and perspectives, especially those of the "marginalized," put forward in the ongoing deliberations of the ELCA. They were so successful that now after twenty years there is no authoritative biblical or theological guidance in the church. There are only many voices. The 2009 Assembly legitmated those many voices by adapting a "bound-conscience" principle in which anyone claiming a sincerely-held conviction on about any doctrine must be respected. The truth of the Word of God has been reduced to sincerely-held opinion.

What was truly chilling about the Assembly's debates was that the revisionists seemed to quote Jesus and the Bible as knowledgeably and persuasively as the orthodox. Passages reinforcing their respective agendas were selected and then brilliantly woven into their arguments. Both sides seemed to have the Bible on their side. The revisionists "contextualized" and relativized the relevant texts. The orthodox claimed a plain sense reading of Scripture. The Lutheran Confessions were utilized effectively by both sides. There was no authoritative interpretation conveyed by any agent or agency in the church. The church was and is rudderless.

Sola Scriptura, a Lutheran principle adopted by evangelicals, did not seem to be sufficient in such circumstances. An authoritative tradition of interpretation of the Bible seemed to be essential. More was needed than the Word alone. Protestants seem to lack such an authoritative tradition so they fight and split. In this situation the option of swimming the Tiber seems all the more tempting

The fall-out of these historic moves by the ELCA is hard to predict, mainly because the Lutheran orthodox have no group of dissenting Bishops around whom to rally. There will be a profusion of different responses by congregations and individuals. Many congregations and individuals will leave the ELCA. Others will bide their time to see what Lutheran CORE (Lutheran Coalition for Renewal) will become as it strives to articulate and then embody the best of Lutheranism. Many will withdraw from involvement in the ELCA and its Synods and live at the local level. Many others will try to live on as if nothing happened. Others will approve of the new direction. But a tectonic shift has taken place, and it wasn't primarily about sex. The ELCA has formally left the Great Tradition for liberal Protestantism.


----Robert Benne was a voting member of the Virginia Synod at the 2009 Church Wide Assembly of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. He is Director of the Roanoke College Center for Religion and Society.

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Poster Thread
cuervoria
Posted: 2009/8/30 19:45  Updated: 2009/8/30 19:45
Home away from home
Joined: 2006/6/15
From: College Station, Texas
Posts: 541
 Re: ELCA: How Did We Come to This? - Robert Benne
Quote:
The church was and is rudderless.


The True Church is, of course, never rudderless.

But in this time of judgment, when so many of our institutions become demonically possessed, it is helpful to remember those who have stood against similar affronts to the Gospel. Thank God they have not yet demanded our lives, only our goods.

Let goods and kindred go. Many blessings to Dr. Benne.

de la Cuervoria
olarmy02
Posted: 2009/8/31 10:45  Updated: 2009/8/31 10:47
Just popping in
Joined: 2009/6/18
From: San Antonio, TX
Posts: 18
 Re: ELCA: How Did We Come to This? - Robert Benne
I watched, online, much of the debate leading up to the vote and to be honest I did not hear many of the 'antinomians' effectively using scripture and when they did it was all about loving your neighbor. THe orthodox use of scripture was for the most part right and true, but the antinomians already had their minds made up.

I have to agree with my compatriot from 'Jerusalem on the Brazos' (that is College Station for those that don't know) the rudder is being steered by someone and it isn't holy. That is why I am a LCMS Lutheran now. If you get a chance, read Luther's "Letter Against the Antinomians" he could have written it just for the tec and elca.

"Thank God they have not yet demanded our lives, only our goods" Cuervoria, seams like I have heard that somewhere before...Eine feste Burg ist unser Gott.

Peace,
Red
mathman
Posted: 2009/8/31 11:56  Updated: 2009/8/31 11:56
Home away from home
Joined: 2004/5/26
From: Rockville, MD
Posts: 1064
 Re: ELCA: How Did We Come to This? - Robert Benne
Can no one cry "FOREFEIT"?
The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America has formally and officially lost any contact with the theologian Martin Luther or the title Lutheran.
It is not possible to make any coherent connection between the Large Catechism and the recent decisions of the ELCA.
I believe that the title Evangelical has also been lost. Evangelical derives from the good news proclaimed by angels. And the social gospel is another gospel than the one which the shepherds heard while watching their flocks by night.
The new name:
Quote:
The Church in America

The steady progression towards irrelevance has taken close to a hundred years to reach fruition. The false gospel, which does not save, cannot attract new members, cannot be a light to the gentiles, cannot be salt to the earth, and does not bring the Holiness of God to an unregenerate and needy time.
Sow to the wind, reap the whirlwind.
Daniel10
Posted: 2009/9/1 2:19  Updated: 2009/9/1 2:19
Just popping in
Joined: 2009/8/31
From:
Posts: 4
 Re: ELCA: How Did We Come to This? - Robert Benne
Dear Mr. Benne,
1st off, thanks so much for your thoughtful summary of the sad decline of the ELCA to its shameful and divisive decision to ordain sexually active gay clergy co-habiting outside of marriage with a partner. As an ELCA seminarian and newcomer to Lutheranism, I am disheartened and disgusted by the substitution of social conformity for scriptural authority as professed in the ELCA Constitution & Visions & Expectations for Ordained Ministers.

You wrote: "The radicals so decisive in the defining moments of the ELCA intended to smash the authority of the influential white male theologians and bishops who had informally kept both the American Lutheran Church and the Lutheran Church in America on course. The radicals wanted many voices and perspectives, especially those of the "marginalized," put forward in the ongoing deliberations of the ELCA."

As an African-American woman who is an orthodox Christian now in the Lutheran Church, I'm disturbed by the representation of "influential white males and bishops" as guardians of Christian orthodoxy and the sweeping characterization of non-whites and females as "radicals."

The roots of Christian orthodoxy were formed on African soil by ecumenically recognized church fathers such as St. Augustine, regarded by many as the greatest Christian theologian since St. Paul (cf Thomas C. Oden's book How Africa Shaped the Christian Mind).

In the 4th century AD, the Ethiopian Kingdom of Axum became one of the 1st Christian nations on earth. And during the Muslim incursions of the 8th & 9th centuries, leaders from the African Kingdom of Nubia (modern day Sudan), were pivotal in pushing back Muslim forces, holding fast the Christian faith, and negotiating for Christian rights of worship with the Sultan of Baghdad.

In the 20th century, the fastest growing & most orthodox sectors of the Global Church are in Africa. As is well known, African Anglicans have been vocal defenders of Christian orthodoxy in the worldwide Anglican communion. African Lutherans from Ethiopia & Tanzania have likewise lifted their voices in defense of Christian orthodoxy. In America, George Barna's 2004 survey shows that African-Americans are the most Christian orthodox ethnic group in the U.S.: 57% strongly believe that the Bible is totally accurate and 59% read their Bibles regularly.

All this to say that African-Americans, women, and other ethnic groups can be powerful allies in the emerging orthodox Lutheran movement. The truly marginalized voices that need to be heard are the voices of those of us non-white men & women who are radically committed to upholding orthodox Christian faith.

Your partner in the good fight of faith.
Daniel10
Posted: 2009/9/1 2:54  Updated: 2009/9/1 2:54
Just popping in
Joined: 2009/8/31
From:
Posts: 4
 Re: ELCA: How Did We Come to This? - Robert Benne
Forgot to mention my good orthodox Christian sisters who were valiant in the fight of faith during their time -- e.g. Perpetua, a Christian woman martyred for her refusal to recant her faith; Susannah Wesley, Anglican mother of John Wesley, founder of the Methodist movement, who grounded her children in sound orthodox Christian theology and taught and proclaimed Christian faith steadfastly during her husband's many absences from their home parish; and of course, Katharina Von Bora, Martin Luther's wife, revered by him as a paragon of Christian virtue.
olarmy02
Posted: 2009/9/1 12:24  Updated: 2009/9/1 12:24
Just popping in
Joined: 2009/6/18
From: San Antonio, TX
Posts: 18
 Re: ELCA: How Did We Come to This? - Robert Benne
Yvonne,

If you look at the rest of the paragraph you started to quote:
"They were so successful that now after twenty years there is no authoritative biblical or theological guidance in the church. There are only many voices. The 2009 Assembly legitmated those many voices by adapting a "bound-conscience" principle in which anyone claiming a sincerely-held conviction on about any doctrine must be respected. The truth of the Word of God has been reduced to sincerely-held opinion."

I got the sense Mr. Benne was referring to the Bishops of the ALC and LCA which prior to the merger would have been almost exclusively white and male. I took it as point of historical fact not that only white males can uphold orthodoxy. Judging by what I saw watching the debates of the CWA from the live feeds of the ELCA white males make up a significant amount of the folks that voted for heresy.

I am always glad to hear of anyone in seminary that is orthodox regardless of gender or race. My seminary experiance at a protestant mainline school was that the vast majority of students are of the ilk that voted for heresy at the CWA. There were five of us out of 150 that formed a support/prayer group for each other as we were a minority of orthodox amongst a lot of heterdox. May God bless you.

Peace of Christ,
Red
shytech74
Posted: 2009/9/2 0:01  Updated: 2009/9/2 0:01
Home away from home
Joined: 2005/4/23
From: Ontario Canada
Posts: 1054
 Re: ELCA: How Did We Come to This? - Robert Benne
How did Lutheranism come to this?

Ask the founder who abandoned the Catholic Faith, insulted the Church, violated his own monastic and ordination vows, the vows of his "wife", rewrote the Bible to suit his own fancy, and directly incited the revolt and civil disobedience that lead to the deaths of thousands of hapless peasants.

Can an evil tree bring forth good fruit?
olarmy02
Posted: 2009/9/2 12:43  Updated: 2009/9/2 12:45
Just popping in
Joined: 2009/6/18
From: San Antonio, TX
Posts: 18
 Re: ELCA: How Did We Come to This? - Robert Benne
"Ask the founder who abandoned the Catholic Faith"

He did not abandon the faith, the powers that were in control of the Western Church abandoned Luther.

"insulted the Church"

Really he insulted the Pope and other clergy who perpetuated evil in the Church such as indulgences.

"violated his own monastic and ordination vows, the vows of his "wife""

Yeah, maybe so but if you want to cast stones there are plenty to cast toward Rome at that time.

"rewrote the Bible to suit his own fancy"

Translated it into the vernacular which if you know the history of the Brothers of the Common Life then you know that Luther was not the first to do so.

"directly incited the revolt and civil disobedience that lead to the deaths of thousands of hapless peasants"

Correct me if I am wrong, but I believe that was Thomas Muntzer, of whom Luther was against

If you want to find someone to blame why not blame the hedenistic (and there were plenty) Popes, Cardinels, Bishops, & Priests who did their worst try and rot the Church from within? WHy not blame the West for the addition of the filioque and primacy of the Bishop of Rome? After all if the East and West had not split maybe there would have been enough checks and balances in place that the Reformation would not have been necessary. Plus Pope Benedict lifted the charge of heresy against Luther not to long ago and against Calvin just a month or two ago and called them both Christians! So if the Pope says it that must be the case, right?

I actually am fond of Rome and grateful that they standfast against the murderous secularism of the age, but don't confuse the modern Roman Church for the Roman Church of the Middle Ages!
Daniel10
Posted: 2009/9/3 14:35  Updated: 2009/9/3 14:35
Just popping in
Joined: 2009/8/31
From:
Posts: 4
 Re: ELCA: How Did We Come to This? - Robert Benne
Hi Red!
Thanks for reading & responding to my comments.
I think your description of Lutheran orthodox leaders as "Bishops of the ALC & LCA" is a more clear and helpful way of presenting them since, as you aptly noted, being white & male is no guarantee of standing for orthodoxy.

It's also encouraging to hear about the "orthodox remnant" support/prayer group that sustained you during your seminary years. The remnant still lives! God will never leave Himself without a witness! Thanks so much for your prayers.

Warm regards in Christ Jesus.
billyum
Posted: 2009/11/16 3:17  Updated: 2009/11/16 3:17
Quite a regular
Joined: 2007/1/18
From: Morgan Hill, CA
Posts: 52
 Re: ELCA: How Did We Come to This? - Robert Benne
A philosophy which cannot give us any higher concept than "pluralism" or "diversity" is not much of a philosophy. A moral code which cannot give any higher value than diversity is, for all intents and purposes, no moral code at all -- and a church denomination which cannot do any better than to talk about diversity is headed toward becoming an ecclesiastical flophouse.

Want to know where the ELCA may now be going? Look no further than the Unitarian church - Politically correct, theologically irrelevant, morally bankrupt - and small.
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