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Social
Statements | Freed in Christ

Adopted by a more than two-thirds majority vote
as a social statement of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
by its third Churchwide Assembly on August 31, 1993, in Kansas City,
Missouri.
Facing God
1. A Time of Vision
For us as members of the
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America there is one God and one
Lord, Jesus Christ, " . . . through whom are all things and
through whom we exist" (1Cor 8:6).
Scripture speaks of one
humanity, created by God. It recounts our rebellion and enslavement
to sin. Scripture tells of a diverse people reconciled to God
through the blood of the cross, a people set free for the work of
reconciliation. It heralds a new freedom and future in one Lord, one
faith, one baptism.
If the story of Babel is of a
people scattered, the story of Pentecost is of a people called and
gathered. Christ brings together the scattered children of God (John
11:52). The Holy Spirit breathes the freedom of the Gospel into the
Church, where every people under heaven is represented.
A humanity enslaved to sin has
been set free; a Church has been gathered in freedom. Cultural
differences still matter, but they can be seen for what God
intends--blessings rather than means of enslavement.
2. A Time of Confession
The Church is built on the
confession made by Peter (Mat 16:13-20) and by Martha (John
11:1-27), when they declared Jesus to be the Messiah, the Son of
God. From age to age the Church proclaims Christ, who was crucified
for our trespasses and raised for our justification (Rom 4:25).
The Church confesses Christ,
who has broken down the dividing wall (Eph 2:14). Christ, our peace,
has put an end to the hostility of race, ethnicity, gender, and
economic class. The Church proclaims Christ, confident this good
news sets at liberty those captive behind walls of hostility (cf.
Luke 4:18).
The Church looks toward the
freedom of the reign of God, announced by and embodied in Jesus. But
Christians live between the "now" of the reign of God and
the "not yet" of its fulfillment. Trusting the promise of
freedom, we can face the fact that each of us is captive, each of us
is in bondage to sin (1John 1:8).
Therefore, we confess our
sinfulness. Because we are sinners as well as saints, we rebuild
walls broken down by Christ. We fall back into enslaving patterns of
injustice. We betray the truth that sets us free. Because we are
saints as well as sinners, we reach for the freedom that is ours in
Christ.
3. A Time of Commitment
We of the Evangelical Lutheran
Church in America, with the whole Church, look forward to the time
when people will come from east and west, north and south to eat in
the reign of God (Luke 13:29). For the Church catholic, diversity of
cultures is both a given and a glimpse of the future.
The Evangelical Lutheran
Church in America has roots in church bodies with a strong immigrant
history. These churches kept the faith once delivered to the saints
in ways appropriate to the cultural background of their membership.
Besides preserving the faith, they furthered mission and ministry.
The Christ to whom the Church
witnesses is the Christ who breaks down walls of cultural
exclusivity (Mark 7:24-29; John 4). We of the Evangelical Lutheran
Church in America have recognized ourselves to be in mission and
ministry in a multicultural society, and have committed ourselves to
welcome cultural diversity. Given our history, the commitment was
neither quick nor easy.
The commitment was made,
though, in these and other ways:
- the goal that, within the first ten
years of its existence, ten percent of this church's membership
would be African American, Asian, Hispanic, or Native American;
- the adoption of an organizational
principle providing for the representation of cultural diversity
on churchwide staff and on boards and other decision-making
bodies;
- the creation of a Commission for
Multicultural Ministries and adoption of a Multicultural Mission
Strategy;
- the encouragement of African-American,
Asian, Hispanic, and Native American associations; the
recognition of the Slovak Zion Synod and German, Hungarian,
Finnish, and Danish special interest conferences; the regard for
distinctive cultures, such as the Appalachian culture; the
assertion that deafness leads to the creation of a unique
language and culture, and a new context for ministry;
- the effort to start and to support
ministry in African American, Asian, Hispanic, Native American,
or multicultural settings; the effort to recognize and to
empower pastoral leaders while honoring their cultures; the
effort to provide resources in languages other than English;
- the public policy advocacy at state,
federal, and international levels that seeks to eliminate racial
or ethnic discrimination; the private sector advocacy that
encourages corporate social responsibility for community
development;
- the attention to inclusivity by
seminaries, colleges, and social ministry organizations of the
church; and
- the respect for cultural diversity in
the work of global mission.
4. A Time of Spiritual
Crisis [see
addendum]
We of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America rejoice in our
freedom in Christ Jesus. But we know we must persevere in our
commitment to follow Christ and to serve neighbor, and live up
to our specific commitments. While we have taken many
measures fitting to a church in mission and ministry in a
multicultural society, we still falter.
We falter in what we do, or in
refusing to carry out what we have promised to do. We falter through
ignorance of what we have done or left undone. We falter when we
cling to old ideas that prevent us from becoming the people God
calls us to be.
With all Christians
everywhere, members of this church live in a time of crisis (Rom 2:1
ff.). We are torn between the freedom offered in Christ, the new
Adam, and the captivity known by the old Adam. We are torn between
becoming the people God calls us to be and remaining the people we
are, barricaded behind old walls of hostility.
The social, economic, and
political dimensions of the crisis are acute, and indications of it
abound. A burning cross reminds us that blatant acts of
intimidation, hatred, and violence continue. A critical look reminds
us of barriers that are more insidious.
The source of this
many-faceted crisis, however, is profoundly spiritual. We will rise
to the crisis, not by making a longer list of commitments, but by
persisting with repentant hearts.
Facing Obstacles
1. A Time to Take Culture
Seriously
We of the Evangelical Lutheran
Church in America too often react fearfully or grudgingly to the
diversity of cultures. We are to delight in the fact that the people
called, gathered, and enlightened have such diversity. We are, as a
multicultural church, to minister in a diverse but divided society.
Culture includes music, art,
and dance, but is more than that. Culture--the attitudes and
patterns of life--plays a part in setting priorities, developing
procedures, and choosing expressions of faith.
This church has not moved much
beyond an "assimilation" approach to culture, where the
assimilated are those who adopt the values and behavior of the
dominant culture. This keeps us from benefitting from the plurality
of cultures already present in our church, and from appreciating the
plurality of cultures in society.
This church clearly shares the
brokenness of a society that has responded to cultural diversity
through fear and efforts at assimilation. Our society has melded
many European ethnic groups into mainstream America, but it has
included people of other cultural identities only insofar as they
have taken on the values and behavior of the dominant culture.
A wall of hostility stands
intact. Captive on one side of the wall, people with access to
opportunities and institutions are largely unaware either of their
own cultural biases or the worth of other cultures. On the other
side of the wall, people scarred by slavery and other forms of
degradation and suffering have seen their cultures ridiculed and
reviled, or destroyed.
2. A Time to Confront
Racism
All of us sin and fall short of the
glory of God (Rom 3:23).
Racism--a mix of power,
privilege, and prejudice--is sin, a violation of God's intention for
humanity. The resulting racial, ethnic, or cultural barriers deny
the truth that all people are God's creatures and, therefore,
persons of dignity. Racism fractures and fragments both church and
society.
When we speak of racism as
though it were a matter of personal attitudes only, we underestimate
it. We have only begun to realize the complexity of the sin, which
spreads like an infection through the entire social system. Racism
infects and affects everyone, with an impact that varies according
to race, ethnicity, or culture, and other factors such as gender or
economic situation.
This church has often
addressed words on racism to white members. We have done so because
our mission and ministry are in a society where white people have
been favored and hold unequal power to implement their
prejudices--socially, politically, and economically. What has been
the case is still the case: skin color makes a difference and white
people benefit from a privileged position.
Racism, however, infects and
affects everyone. It deforms relationships between and within
racial, ethnic, or cultural groups. It undermines the promise of
community and exacerbates prejudice and unhealthy competition among
these groups. It robs white people of the possibility of authentic
relationships with people of color, and people of color of the
possibility of authentic relationships with white people.
Racism also can lead to the
rejection of self, as when white people internalize guilt or people
of color internalize values associated with white culture. It
hinders us from becoming who God calls us to be.
When we rebuild walls of
hostility and live behind them--blaming others for the problem and
looking to them for solutions--we ignore the role we ourselves play
in the problem and also in the solution. When we confront racism and
move toward fairness and justice in society, all of us benefit.
3. A Time to Be the Church
Vision breaks through brokenness.
We are one in Christ. As the body of Christ, we are free to live out
our connectedness with each other. Promises are kept when vision is
communicated in word and deed, and members are captured by it. For
this to happen, we need the leadership of all who have been given
responsibility and authority: members of congregations and their
pastors; boards and staff of institutions and agencies of the
church; synodical bishops; and the bishop of this church.
We expect our leadership
to name the sin of racism and lead us in our repentance of it.
Although racism affects each one of us differently, we must take
responsibility for our participation, acknowledge our complicity,
repent of our sin, and pray God will bring us to reconciliation.
Racism, both blatant and
subtle, continues to deny the reconciling work of the cross. God's
forgiveness frees us from the enslavement of racism. For some, this
may mean giving up power or privilege; for others, it may mean
giving up anger or prejudice. Let us know this reconciliation in our
lives!
We expect our leadership
to persevere in their challenge to us to be in mission and ministry
in a multicultural society. The Church catholic already has
diversity of cultures. For the Evangelical Lutheran Church in
America, catholicity is a given. Members will question, however, why
intentional measures have been taken in order for us to be a
multicultural church.
Because of sin and
indifference, intentional measures are necessary for vision
to become reality. We expect our leadership to clarify why measures
were taken, and to help members deal with the implications of such
measures.
Doing Justice
1. A Time for Public
Leadership
Our world is one where racial and
ethnic lines are drawn and enforced. Our world is one where
hostility festers along those dividing lines, often bursting out in
violence. Our world is one where power and prejudice combine in
bitter oppression.
But God has not gathered the
Church as yet one more example of brokenness. The Church exists to
proclaim Jesus the Christ, whose life, death, and resurrection mean
freedom for the world. The Church also exists to teach the law of
God, announcing that the God who justifies expects all people to do
justice.
So, the Church must cry out
for justice, and thereby resist the cynicism fueled by visions that
failed and dreams that died. The Church must insist on justice, and
thereby refuse to blame victimized people for their situations. The
Church must insist on justice, and thereby assure participation of
all people.
The Church that pursues
justice will face and address difficult social, political, and
economic problems such as:
- how racism must be confronted in order
to build a society where diversity is truly valued;
- how race and ethnicity figure in
political decisions on immigration, crime, and environmental
pollution; and
- how economic forces work against people
of color in housing, medical care, education, and employment.
In its pursuit of justice,
this church must question responses that are quick, easy, and,
therefore, probably inadequate.
2. A Time for Public
Witness
The Church that confesses Christ in
public demonstrates its commitment through involvement in public
life--globally and locally, nationally and in neighborhoods. Through
public events such as elections or town meetings, through public
bodies such as legislatures or volunteer groups, church members help
to forge political will and consensus.
Participation in public life
is essential to doing justice and undoing injustice. Only when
people affected by racial and ethnic division speak publicly of
painful realities, does there emerge the possibility of justice for
everyone.
In places served by the
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, however, public life is too
often in sorry shape, shallow, and fragmented. Increasingly cynical
or simply bored, many residents ignore public debate. Many find it
difficult to participate fully because of racial or ethnic barriers,
or economic hardship.
This church, therefore, will
actively promote a public life worthy of the name. We encourage
public witness by members, and stand publicly as a church against
injustice. We insist on a public forum accessible to everyone, since
the interests of everyone are at stake.
3. A Time for Public
Deliberation
One way that we, the members of the
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, will promote a better public
life is through example. This church has already committed itself to
a moral deliberation that deals openly with conflict and
controversy. In fact, such deliberation has helped us to discover
new dimensions of mission and new possibilities for ministry.
This church will live up to
its commitment to deliberation. Specifically, we will:
- model an honest engagement with issues
of race, ethnicity and culture, by being a community of mutual
conversation, mutual correction, and mutual consolation;model a
healthy and healing response to the change that inevitably comes
from cultural contact;
- model exchanges in which people of
different cultures can find points of agreement while sometimes
"agreeing to disagree;"
- encourage and participate in the
education of young people, in order that they might be better
equipped to live in a multicultural society;
- bring together parties in conflict,
creating space for deliberation; and
- participate in identifying the demands
of justice, and work with others who would have justice for all.
4. A Time for Advocacy
The Evangelical Lutheran Church in
America received from its predecessor church bodies a solid
foundation upon which to build advocacy for justice and opposition
to racial and ethnic discrimination. We will listen to our advocates
as we examine our own institutional life, and will model that for
which we call.
Our advocacy will take place
in partnership ecumenically, among corporations and local, state,
and national governments. We look for positive incentives for change
and fair distribution of the social costs of correcting past wrongs.
We will work for respect of cultures, for example in mass media and
public presentations, in art and advertising, and in other
endeavors. We will speak against policy initiatives that
discriminate on the basis of language.
This church will support
legislation, ordinances, and resolutions that guarantee to all
persons equally:
- civil rights, including full protection
of the law and redress under the law of discriminatory
practices; and to all citizens, the right to vote;
- access to quality education, health
care, and nutrition;
- opportunity for employment with fair
compensation, and possibilities for job training and education,
apprenticeship, promotion, and union membership;
- opportunity for business ownership;
- access to legal, banking, and insurance
services;
- the right to rent, buy, and occupy
housing in any place; and
- access to public transportation and
accommodation.
We of the Evangelical Lutheran
Church in America will advocate for just immigration policies,
including fairness in visa regulations and in admitting and
protecting refugees. We will work for policies that cause neither
undue repercussions within immigrant communities nor bias against
them.
Our efforts on behalf of local
and international community and in opposition to racism will
recognize the multicultural nature of the world. We will promote
international respect for human rights, and support the
international movement to eliminate discrimination.
* Addendum
"Social Statements in the
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America," adopted by the 1989
Churchwide Assembly, states that an addendum shall be added to those
statements that elicit significant division in the Churchwide
Assembly. The following amendment (at the point indicated in the
text) received support at the Churchwide Assembly but not the vote
needed for approval.
We of the ELCA with all
Christians everywhere live in a time of crisis (Rom 2:1ff). We are
faced with choices and decisions which mean success or failure, life
or death. The Church cannot remain silent while the cross, symbol of
Christ's death to set us free, remains an instrument of racial,
ethnic, and cultural hatred and evil. Cross burnings continue as
acts of intimidation, hatred, and evil. Groups which espouse racial,
ethnic, and cultural purity and which foster acts of racial and
cultural annihilation recruit youth as well as adults. Ethnic
centricity (racial, ethnic, and cultural purity) and economic
instability give rise to worldwide acts of rioting, hatred, and
violence. Some U.S. corporations exploit people of color in poorer
nations by employing these people at below living wages to work in
sweatshop conditions like those long outlawed in the United States,
while efforts at economic self-sufficiency by people of color in the
United States are resisted and undermined. Racism also creates
identity and self-esteem crises for children of color, particularly
those of interracial heritage.
Christ calls upon us to love
our neighbors as ourselves (Luke 10:27). Christ does not qualify
this mandate. A major part of the crisis is over lack of experience
or knowledge of those whose race, ethnicity, and culture differ from
our own.
The social, economic, and
political dimensions of the crisis are acute. We consider the source
of the crisis to be profoundly spiritual. The activist Christ threw
the money changers out of the temple. The Church must continue to
take an activist role. We must make a choice. Are we going to
continue barricaded behind old walls of ignorance and hostility or
are we going to be the people God calls us to be?
Copyright © September 1993 Evangelical
Lutheran Church in America. Produced by the Department for Studies,
Division for Church in Society. Permission is granted to reproduce
this document as needed, providing each copy displays the copyright
as printed above.
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