| Messages
| AIDS

This message was developed and brought by the
Commission for Church in Society to the ELCA Church Council, where
it was affirmed on November 13, 1988.
In the presence of the human
suffering, anxiety and tragedy in the AIDS crisis, we commit
ourselves anew to the ministry of caring. The Church Council of the
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America recognizes with gratitude the
service of those who care for people with AIDS and their loved ones.
It urges church members to support this ministry and to serve those
who are suffering with respect and compassion.
AIDS (acquired
immunodeficiency syndrome), often with an intensity greater than
many diseases, calls us to remember our common humanity. The
suffering of persons with AIDS demonstrates anew that life for all
is vulnerable, limited, and broken, yet also graced with courage,
hope and reconciliation. As a disease that affects women, men and
children around the world, it shows how closely we are bound
together in relationships of mutual trust, need and responsibility.
The church's ministry of
caring is a grateful response to God's caring for us. The undeserved
love of God announced for all in the Gospel of Jesus Christ is our
reason for standing with our neighbor in need. Jesus responded
graciously to persons who were sick without assessing their merit.
In the same way we are called to "be Christs" for all in
our midst who suffer and are ill. Our calling summons us to
compassion for, acceptance of and service with people affected by
AIDS both within and outside of our congregations.
This ministry of caring
requires that we be well-informed about the nature of AIDS. We urge
our members to read the Surgeon General's brochure
"Understanding AIDS," and we encourage our congregations
to discuss the subject in their educational programs. Knowledgeable
and sensitive Christians are needed to help counter the prejudice
and injurious discrimination that people with AIDS experience. Wise
and informed people are needed to participate in the complex public
policy debates surrounding the disease.
This ministry of caring
challenges us to support efforts in the churches and in the wider
community that serve those with AIDS, their friends and families. We
will continue to encourage nurses, doctors, caregivers and pastors
who witness to God's grace in their daily ministry with people with
AIDS.
This ministry of caring
embraces the hospitality of our congregational life, whose center is
worship. There through Word and Sacrament the Holy Spirit offers to
all the comfort and the hope of the victorious God of the cross.
There persons who suffer come to know that they are not forgotten,
since God cares. There we participate in the concerns and care of
the sick through prayer, the laying on of hands and services of
healing. United by baptism, all are invited to receive the touch of
care. "Welcome one another, therefore, as Christ has welcomed
you, for the glory of God" (Rom 15:7).
Copyright © 1989 Evangelical Lutheran
Church in America. Produced by the Department for Studies,
Commission for Church in Society. Permission is granted to reproduce
this document as needed provided each copy carries the copyright
notice printed above.
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