A national
assembly of Evangelical Lutherans urged its bishops Saturday
to refrain from defrocking gay and lesbian ministers who
violate a celibacy rule, but rejected measures that
would have permitted ordaining gays churchwide.
Still, advocates
for full inclusion of gays were encouraged, calling the
resolution a powerful statement in support of clergy with
same-gender partners. The conservative group Lutheran
CORE, however, said bishops will now feel more secure
in ignoring denomination policy.
The 538-431 vote
came on the final day of a weeklong meeting in Chicago
-- and after emotional debate over how the
denomination should interpret what the Bible says
about homosexuality.
Like other
mainline Protestant groups, the Evangelical Lutheran Church
in America has been struggling for decades to
reconcile differences on the issue. An ELCA task force
is near the end of an eight-year study on human
sexuality, which is expected to culminate in the 2009
release of a social statement that will heavily
influence church policy.
The assembly
voted to refer proposals on ordaining gays and blessing
same-sex couples to the task force so the panel can make
policy recommendations part of its report.
The current
clergy standards require ministers to ''abstain from
homosexual sexual relationships.'' Earlier this year,
Bradley Schmeling, an ELCA pastor in Atlanta, was
removed from the clergy roster after he told his
bishop that he was in a relationship with a man. However,
even before Saturday's vote, liberal-leaning bishops
had refused to enforce the rule.
In the adopted
resolution, the assembly ''urges and encourages'' bishops
to either refrain from or ''demonstrate restraint in
disciplining'' ministers who are in a ''mutual, chaste
and faithful committed same-gender relationship.''
''This is huge,''
said Phil Soucy of Lutherans Concerned/North America,
which lobbies on behalf of gays and lesbians. ''More than
half of the people in the Churchwide Assembly have
said don't punish anyone for what is a simple
violation of the policy, where the offense is simply that
they have a partner.''
At the Chicago
gathering, dozens of gay and lesbian ministers and
congregants defiantly proclaimed their sexuality. They
distributed a prayer booklet that included
first-person essays on the pain of being forced to
choose between ministry and a lifelong partner. Theological
liberals believe that the overarching message of Scripture
is full acceptance for all people.
But Jaynan Clark
Egland, president of the conservative WordAlone Network,
said the resolution ''leaves the ELCA with inconsistent
patterns of discipline and standards.''
Conservatives
believe the Bible bars gay relationships. ''To refrain from
discipline in the home is bad parenting, but we're about to
do so in Christ's Church,'' Egland said.
Lutheran CORE
scheduled a September meeting to plan its next step. But
the Rev. Mark Chavez of WordAlone says conservatives aren't
planning a split from the denomination.
Membership in the
4.8 million-member ELCA, like other mainline churches,
has declined over the last two decades; only 30 percent of
Evangelical Lutherans attend worship weekly.
The 2.5
million-member Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod, based in St.
Louis, believes the Bible is literally true and does not
ordain gays. (Rachel Zoll, AP)