Read below:
The Reverend Dr. R. Guy Erwin was elected
bishop of the Southwest California Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran
Church in America (ELCA) on the sixth ballot becoming the first
publicly-identified gay and first Native American bishop in the history
of the twenty-five year old denomination.
Erwin’s election to bishop comes just two years after his ordination as pastor in the church. Erwin has served congregations in the ELCA for over twenty years but chose not to be ordained until the ELCA changed its policy regarding gay and lesbian ministers. The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America voted in 2009 to ordain gay and lesbian people in publicly accountable, lifelong committed same-gender relationships. Erwin was one of the first publicly-identified gay pastors in the ELCA to be ordained after the 2009 changes. There were seventeen publicly-identified LGBTQ people who were extraordinarily ordained outside the regular ELCA process prior to the vote, and subsequently received onto the ELCA roster following 2009.
Erwin is a member of Proclaim, a professional association of 130 Lutheran pastors, rostered lay leaders and seminarians who publicly identify as LGBTQ. Proclaim is a program of Extraordinary Lutheran Ministries, a social ministry organization that supports LGBTQ pastors and their ministries. Bishop-elect Erwin also currently serves on the Extraordinary Lutheran Ministries Board of Directors....
Bishop-elect Erwin currently serves Faith Lutheran, Canoga Park as interim pastor and is Professor of Religion and History at California Lutheran University. Erwin is a native of Oklahoma and an active member of the Osage Tribe of Indians. Erwin and his partner Rob Flynn are members of St. Matthew’s Lutheran Church in North Hollywood, CA, and are very active in Lutheran circles locally, nationally, and internationally. He will be installed as bishop September 21, 2013 and will serve a six year term.
Erwin’s election to bishop comes just two years after his ordination as pastor in the church. Erwin has served congregations in the ELCA for over twenty years but chose not to be ordained until the ELCA changed its policy regarding gay and lesbian ministers. The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America voted in 2009 to ordain gay and lesbian people in publicly accountable, lifelong committed same-gender relationships. Erwin was one of the first publicly-identified gay pastors in the ELCA to be ordained after the 2009 changes. There were seventeen publicly-identified LGBTQ people who were extraordinarily ordained outside the regular ELCA process prior to the vote, and subsequently received onto the ELCA roster following 2009.
Erwin is a member of Proclaim, a professional association of 130 Lutheran pastors, rostered lay leaders and seminarians who publicly identify as LGBTQ. Proclaim is a program of Extraordinary Lutheran Ministries, a social ministry organization that supports LGBTQ pastors and their ministries. Bishop-elect Erwin also currently serves on the Extraordinary Lutheran Ministries Board of Directors....
Bishop-elect Erwin currently serves Faith Lutheran, Canoga Park as interim pastor and is Professor of Religion and History at California Lutheran University. Erwin is a native of Oklahoma and an active member of the Osage Tribe of Indians. Erwin and his partner Rob Flynn are members of St. Matthew’s Lutheran Church in North Hollywood, CA, and are very active in Lutheran circles locally, nationally, and internationally. He will be installed as bishop September 21, 2013 and will serve a six year term.
12 comments:
Why is this a surprise? The ELCA are heretics and have been for a long time. If the LCMS were smart, they would cut off ALL relations with them. The Orthodox would be wise to do the same. There is no point in continuing to work or even dialogue with people who have so forsaken the faith. Pr. Harrison would be wise to announce an immediate severance of any ties immediately.--Chris
Nothing like keepin' up with the Piskies!
Fr. D+
Anglican Priest
i hope that such actions by the ELCA will continue to help motivate the NALC and the LCMC to become as confessional as the LCMS.
I'm a non-denominational Christian, not a Lutheran who enjoys reading your blog posts. But after reading about the ordination of a homosexual Lutheran pastor, I nearly ceased consideration of Lutheranism as a denomination worthy of further exploration.
Thankfully I decided to check what ELCA meant and was reminded that you yourself are not part of that form of Lutheranism.
But unless you make it clear that you are LCMS Lutheran as distinct from the ELCA, you will be considered to be the same denomination by non-Lutherans, which will only harm your denomination.
You may want to make it clear on your Blog banner that you belong to the LCMS!
As people continue to stampede out of the the ELCA and TEC (Episcopal Church) in droves, we can only hope that both church bodies will merge to form a new denomination with the word "Lutheran" excluded from it.
As the 2009 XXXA Church Wide Assembly wrapped up their meeting which had approved ordaining active homosexuals two days earlier, on Friday, August 21, 2009, then LCMS World Relief Executive Director Matthew Harrison, now LCMS President, answered a question (at 9:16) from Rev. Todd Wilken on Issues, Etc.:
Wilken: "Is apostasy too strong a word to describe what we’ve watched over the last — better part — of the decade that culminates this afternoon in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America?"
Harrison: "No, it is apostasy. There’s no way around it. It gives me great pain to say that, but there’s no other word for it."
I saw this coming twelve or so years ago when the ELCA had their full communion with the Episcopal church and our new parish pastor told our middle school boys that it is not a sin to be homosexual. Anyway, C.F.W. Walther said it best. If a church doesn't follow the Lutheran confessions, it isn't Lutheran, if it doesn't believe the Bible, it isn't Christian. The ELCA is deep in apostasy, as our Rev. Harrison has noted.
I am a member of the ELCA and could not be prouder of our faith for including all, as Jesus did. My prayers are with those who live within closed minds and hearts.
Those outside have closed minds, for sure, but only closed as Christ, Scripture, and tradition. It might be worth considering that you are open to the wrong things and you yourself have a closed mind when it comes to Christ, Scripture, and tradition.
Annon #1 you're confusing a cliche with scripture (and for that matter the advertising slogan for the United Methodist church). Acceptance and inclusion are not the same thing as justification and sanctification. Jesus didn't die on the cross so we could remain in our iniquity trespasses and sin, but be brought to life and freed from sin and to grow in holiness through the work of the Holy Spirit.
That should be annon #3...
Isn't it time to stop placing judgement and ridicule upon others?
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