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When Trust Is Broken: A Response to Allegations against Musician David Haas
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America ^ | 2 November A.D. 2020 | ELCA Worship

Posted on 11/12/2020 8:34:58 PM PST by lightman

Musician David Haas has been accused of sexual misconduct by several women spanning many years. Although Haas is not a member of an ELCA congregation, Evangelical Lutheran Worship includes four hymns by him: “Blest Are They” (ELW 728), “Now We Remain” (ELW 500), “We Are Called” (ELW 720), and “You Are Mine” (ELW 581). Several institutions have requested congregations to no longer sing works by Haas pending an investigation. Those who plan worship in the ELCA are strongly encouraged to discontinue use of these hymns and other compositions in worship. Both the ELCA and 1517 Media / Augsburg Fortress have taken steps to discontinue suggesting hymns by Haas in worship planning resources for this church and to amend existing resources currently available online. The ELCA and 1517 Media have no plans to include his works in future resources and publications. The ELCA and 1517 Media do not tolerate sexual misconduct or abuse.

This church believes that God’s intention, revealed through the Scriptures, is for all of creation to flourish (Faith, Sexism, and Justice, 14). As the ELCA Social Message on “Gender-based Violence” declares, “God calls us to love. Gender-based violence is not love…. Simply stated, gender-based violence in all its forms is a sinful rebellion against the triune God and a rejection of God’s good work in this world” (6). All forms of violence interfere with God’s beloved creatures flourishing. And when people abuse power and authority to break trust, they must be held accountable (“Gender-based Violence,” 1-3, 6-7). This is particularly important when the people with power and authority serve in the church (Human Sexuality, 35).

Although this particular circumstance does not directly involve the ELCA, we as a church know we participate in the sin of gender-based violence. Through our own teaching documents, we have declared,

As a church of Jesus Christ, we deplore this suffering and we confess our collective and individual complicities in this violence in both church and society. The complex factors that contribute to the prevalence of this sin are deeply woven into society and into individual lives. As a member of Christ’s body, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) shares in the brokenness and judgment brought on by gender-based violence. This church’s members are survivors, perpetrators and bystanders. (“Gender-based Violence,” 2-3).

As you plan music for worship in your context, we encourage decisions that uphold God’s call to love the neighbor, especially those who have been harmed by gender-based violence. The ELCA resource, Principles for Worship, states that “assembly song forms memory and nurtures faith” and that “planning for worship calls for careful attention to the people’s memory” (Principle M-5; Application M-5C). When we become aware of songs that have positive associations for some are associated with painful memories and deep trauma for others, our concern for any who have been traumatized must be the church’s first priority. As noted in a recent document by the Mennonite church,

For survivors, singing a song of a known abuser can cause the traumatic harm of sexual violence to viscerally rush in. This is especially true when the abuser is alive or recently deceased. When people directly injured by the abuser’s violence experience a song as inseparable from its source, communities of faith cannot claim to make such a separation without doing harm to survivors. Show Strength: How to Respond When Worship Materials Are Implicated in Abuse.

The same document outlines specific steps in a survivor-centered response and provides suggestions for how to address this issue in your community. While certainly challenging, we cannot shy away from these difficult conversations and turn from our responsibility to show solidarity with those who are abused.

As a church, the ELCA continues to learn, to act, and to trust God’s promise of presence, forgiveness, and guidance. As church together, we are always being made new to serve the neighbor in love, to end gender-based violence. To spread the word about this love for neighbor, join the World Council of Churches in Christ #ThursdaysinBlack, a global ecumenical campaign to prevent and end gender-based violence.

Anyone with knowledge of sexual misconduct or abuse in the ELCA should report it to their synod or to ELCA Safe Place. If the misconduct or abuse relates to children, it should be reported immediately to law enforcement.


TOPICS: Mainline Protestant; Moral Issues; Worship
KEYWORDS: cancelculture; elca; guiltybyaccusation; haas
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To: lightman

:: The ELCA and 1517 Media do not tolerate sexual misconduct or abuse ::

But it’s OK for men to sodomize each other and play with resultant feces.
And, women can practice ‘sodomy by device’.
That? That’s not misconduct or abuse.
That’s love.


21 posted on 11/13/2020 2:58:19 AM PST by Cletus.D.Yokel (If there be WAR in the offing, let it begin HERE. With ME.)
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To: lightman

This sounds quite similar to the “Bird” scandal.


22 posted on 11/13/2020 2:59:27 AM PST by Cletus.D.Yokel (If there be WAR in the offing, let it begin HERE. With ME.)
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To: lightman

Amadeus is not a biography at all, but “Fantasia set to Mozart.” Here’s the sort of liberties they took: Mozart and Salieri were best of friends. Salieri was a happy, family man with 8 kids. Mozart was a devout Catholic, with no historical reason to suggest he was alcoholic or a philanderer. The worst that can be said for his morals was that he was evidently a fan of scatological humor. Fart jokes.


23 posted on 11/13/2020 4:41:32 AM PST by dangus
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To: lightman

Oh... and Salieri may not be as famous as Mozart today, but his students and imitators include Liszt, Schubert, and yes, Mozart. In his day, he WAS as well known as Mozart.


24 posted on 11/13/2020 4:44:26 AM PST by dangus
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To: lightman

+1


25 posted on 11/13/2020 7:25:41 AM PST by Honorary Serb (Kosovo is Serbia! Free Srpska! Abolish ICTY!)
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To: lightman

(eye roll). Play these hysterics some Frank Sinatra until they calm down... oh, wait.


26 posted on 11/13/2020 9:50:26 AM PST by Albion Wilde ("When you open your heart to patriotism, there is no room for prejudice." --Donald Trump)
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To: lightman
anyone who has watched “Amadeus” could not help but conclude that the composer of “Ave Verum Corpus” had a diseased and wicked soul.

I would appreciate it if you took some time to explain that. Thanks in advance.

27 posted on 11/13/2020 9:56:53 AM PST by spankalib
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To: spankalib

Granted, the film takes liberties, as did the book which preceded it.

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was, like all of us, someone who struggled with sin.

Romans 7 describes him and, if we are honest, describes us. In spite of sins of the flesh God used Mozart as a channel of grace for some of the finest Western liturgical music composed.

I would place Mozart’s Ave Verum and Requiem at the top of that list.


28 posted on 11/13/2020 10:07:54 AM PST by lightman (I am a binary Trinitarian. Deal with it!)
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To: lightman

Ahhh! Thank you.


29 posted on 11/13/2020 10:15:25 AM PST by spankalib
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To: lightman

I hope the investigation is fast and accurate. In 1997, when I attended an ELCA church, near San Diego, some women told the church president that our pastor said, “You look nice.” The women said that was sexual harassment, and he quit.


30 posted on 11/13/2020 4:22:51 PM PST by PhilCollins
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