
Involving Congregations in Advocacy Now (ICAN)
an ELCA guide to developing an advocacy ministry within your congregation
The How-tos of Advocacy
In this section:
ELCA
Washington Office: History
History
The year was 1945. United States military service
personnel were returning to live the hopes and dreams of post-World
War II America. It was the year that the churches of the National
Lutheran Council (NLC) moved from their wartime ministries to add
another dimension of service.
As a ministry to those returning veterans, the eight
ELCA predecessor churches began an official presence with the
federal government in Washington, D.C. During those early years, the
international aspect of church-state relations played a significant
role as a succession of German church leaders conferred with State
Department officials about the problems of German reconstruction.
1948 marked a ministry turning point. The NLC
expanded its service to its participating bodies in order to keep
them informed of important congressional activities and to channel
information about the churches and their work to key government
officials. Special relationships between the churches and the
government developed around programs of relief and rehabilitation,
and movement of refugees.
The focus of the nation turned to civil rights and
racial equality in the 1960's. The Lutheran churches spoke out
through their Washington office as staff worked with Lutheran
legislators and ecumenical colleagues on civil rights and justice
issues. At the beginning of the decade, the eight NLC churches
merged to become The American Lutheran Church (TALC, then simply
ALC) and the Lutheran Church in America (LCA). The office now
represented a two-church presence.
From 1967 to 1987, the ALC and LCA were joined by
the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod (LCMS) in the cooperative work of
the Lutheran Council in the USA (LCUSA). The Office of Public
Affairs continued the functions of representing the interests of the
church bodies, analyzing public issues, informing government
officials of church body positions, and planning and conducting
seminars.
Since 1988, the ELCA Washington Office has served as the Evangelical Lutheran Church in
America’s Washington, D.C. office for advocacy to the U.S. and
foreign governments.
The ELCA Washington Office seeks to enable effective interaction between
the church and the federal government. Through providing education
and information, it
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witnesses for social justice on domestic and
foreign policy issues facing the nation
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educates, informs and enables effective
interaction between the ELCA and the federal government, and
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represents the ELCA’s positions within the
arena of public debate.
The ELCA Washington Office is a program area of the ELCA’s Church in Society
unit.
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