Posted on 09/30/2009 6:15:38 PM PDT by SmithL
St. Paul, Minn. Members of St. Paul's Evangelical Lutheran Church in Minneapolis decided to leave the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America after a 96 percent vote by members on Sunday.
The decision to leave came after the ELCA Church-wide Assembly vote on Aug. 21 in Minneapolis, that allowed gays and lesbians in committed relationships to serve as clergy.
Before the ECLA's decision, gay clergy were allowed to be ministers only if they were celibate. Some church members object to the new policy, saying it goes against Scripture.
The St. Paul's congregation's council set a policy in October 1990 that stated if the ELCA ever moved to allow such ordinations, the congregation would immediately begin the process to leave.
"We feel quite affirmed by the hundreds of congregations who are contemplating the same move," St. Paul's Senior Pastor, Rev. Roland J. Wells, Jr. said in a news release.
According to Wells, there are many pastors and members who are withholding funds from the national church, and are working to establish a new denomination called Lutheran Congregations in Mission for Christ.
(Excerpt) Read more at minnesota.publicradio.org ...
The exodus continues.
If these churches were leaving because a Christian denomination was too conservative, it would be front page national news. All the talking heads would be pontificating about it. “Yet another church departs XYZ due to conservative stance” would be the headlines.
Wow! A MALE ECLA pastor?! What's this world coming to?
Good for them! And if and when the church I’m considering joining does the same, I will join. But not a minute before!
Lutheran Leadership? You are FORCING me to convert to Catholicism. You remember...the religion that Martin Luther so strongly ‘suggested’ that we leave? That big note he left on your door? Remember? Hellooooo?
Happy now? Jerks.
Read my tag and give me a pat on the back.
Is the Missouri Synod of the Lutheran Church still conservative?
Yes. Notably pro-life.
Martin Luther's intention was never to leave the Catholic church. His intent was to reform the Catholic church from within. This was halted when Luther was excommunicated by the Pope. There are a group of Lutherans today working to maintain their Lutheranism traditions while rejoining the Catholic church. It's a work in progress.
Re LCMS, they still have a stated strong statement against abortion, gay rights, and evolution, but our experience is that too many within the synod reject the synod’s views. We left to join the Presbyterian Church in America (PCA), even though this group is not the ideal solution either.
Some ELCA folks who are leaving will not join the LCMS because they consider it too exclusive on communion.
“It’s a work in progress.”
I call BS. It’s been since the Middle Ages! Let’s get on with it. Enough of the back-sliding. Enough of the caving to gays and anything ‘pc.” *SPIT*.
I was raised Missouri Synod Lutheran. There was NONE of this stupidity when I was coming up.
I’m too old to wait around for religion to catch up with ME again...which means they’re moving backwards, LOL!
bump
Yes!
The lines are getting drawn more clearly every day. End times, no?
“Unless I am convinced by proofs from Scriptures or by plain and clear reasons and arguments, I can and will not retract, for it is neither safe nor wise to do anything against conscience. Here I stand. I can do no other. God help me. Amen.” ~ Martin Luther
Sure. It started as a reformation. It became something else, entirely. Come on. We’re talking since 1517!! Let’s get with the program, People, LOL!
I visited Wartburg Castle while I was stationed in Germany, where Martin Luther was in exile. (Or ‘hidden away’ as others would say.) It was a once-in-a-lifetime experience and totally cemented my faith.
To see what MY church and belief system has become is very distressing to me. Show some compassion, Bro! ;)
And make no mistake: The ELCA is pro-abortion. Long before they expected me to take communion from the hands of a practising homosexual(god knows what he was "practising" before the service or where his hands were), the decision to give financial support to abortion was a deal breaker for me.
http://www.advocate.com/News/Daily_News/2009/09/30/Lutheran_Church_Splits_Over_Gay_Clergy/Lutheran Church Splits Over Gay Clergy
Members of St. Paul's Evangelical Lutheran Church in Minneapolis voted on Sunday to leave the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, the nation's largest Lutheran denomination.May be a screen capture JPG that links to the video player, or an embedded video from an external source like YouTube.com
May be a screen capture JPG that links to the video player, or an embedded video from an external source like YouTube.com-->Following a 96% affirmative vote by members of the congregation, St. Pauls Evangelical Lutheran Church in Minneapolis moved one step closer to splitting from the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.
The decision to leave came in response to the ELCA's general assembly vote in Minneapolis on August 21 to allow gays and lesbians in committed relationships to serve as clergy.
The new law lifts a restriction that had required gay and lesbian ministers to remain celibate.
According to St. Paul's senior pastor, the Reverend Roland J. Wells Jr., there are many pastors and members who are withholding funds from the national church and are working to establish a new denomination called Lutheran Congregations in Mission for Christ, reports Minnesota Public Radio.
"We feel quite affirmed by the hundreds of congregations who are contemplating the same move," Wells said in a news release.
The congregation will now consult the local ELCA bishop and conduct another vote 90 days from Sunday to finalize the split.
What a bunch of babies. This has been voted on before, and as long as they win, everything is hunky dory. As soon as they lose, they pack up their toys and leave? Same deal with anti-marriage folks- we bust our asses and prove our case, and then when they don't like the results of us playing by THEIR rules, they change them. Ridiculus
Without congregations like St. Paul, ELCA will be more welcoming than ever.
Let them go. They are not worth keeping. Their teachings are poisoning your families & children. They'll vanish.
So long bigots, don't let the door hit ya in the ass on your way out of the ELCA..............
I've talked to Jews and they generally reply about my religion that "we Jews don't really think about Jesus unless a Christian brings him up". The same is probably true with most Catholics and Martin Luther. We never think "how would Martin Luther feel about this?" We only reflect on Martin Luther's teachings when a Lutheran mentions him.
I think you'll find most Catholics today would agree that Martin Luther had some valid points, the Catholic church had become really corrupted and worldly at the time (the 1500s). No doubt I can see why someone would be outraged that the Catholic church was selling indulgences to get into heaven (of course my church hasn't done that for 400 years, but was mainly prompted to stop due to Luther and his followers holding them accountable). But Martin Luther still remains "excommunicated" according to official Catholic doctrine, and the church shows no signs of rehabilitating him and undoing that since Lutherans won't renounce some of the "errors" that got him excommunicated in the first place (Christian churches are notorious for old wounds taking a long time to heal... when the Catholic and Orthodox church split in 1054, they didn't undo the excommunications until 1965)
The thing I would say my church has going for it is consistent doctrine. With Lutherans (and Protestants in general) you have all these little groups off on their own making up their own moral teachings as they go along. We have three major Lutheran groups in the U.S., the ELCA, the LCMS, and the WELS. I always assumed they were in communion with each other. I learned on FR that they are NOT, and that each interprets scripture differently. So for Catholics to reach a joint agreement just with American Lutherans, you'd have to negotiate with all three groups and get them to agree on the same statement. Needlessly complicated.
The Catholic church has a billion members. There are all kinds of different "factions" and types of Catholics out there, little movements and denominations, there are even little known Catholic churches under the Pope that AREN'T 'Roman' Catholic, for example the Syro-Malankara Catholic Church and the Byzantine Catholic Church. But no matter what "faction" of Catholicism they belong to, they all have the same doctrine. A lot of protestants have a problem with a universal head of the church, but it does ensure little groups within won't "do their own thing" and fall victim to heresy. The main weakness I see in the Catholic church is they often fail to ENFORCE their doctrine and allow renegade priests to do whatever they want, as a result you have wacky heretical "Catholic" churches like Fr. Pfleger at St. Sabina worshiping Obama and promoting pro-abortion people.
I'm not trying to rehash the old Catholic vs. Protestant fight, but if you take a look at this video from 1:25 onward, you'll see the point I'm trying to make:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eluVxhM2qJo
You also may want to look into this group, if you want to maintain your Lutheran beliefs but don't feel comfortable being a member of any of the "official" major Lutheran denominations and want something closer to Catholic unity. But if you can find a conservative, traditional Lutheran group that you feel comfortable with, more the power to you.
Dang were not that bad! lol
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