That’s the subject of a study being released today by the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, which has lost members amid divisions over homosexuality. Last year, delegates to the denomination’s national meeting split almost evenly on whether to let homosexuals in long-term relationships serve as clergy. The proposal, which needed a two-thirds majority, failed but a church task force was told to keep studying issues of sexuality and prepare the report that is being issued today. ELCA officials say the new study will invite Lutherans “to consider human sexuality through the lens of Scripture and Lutheran teaching.”
- AP
In a public rebuke of the Episcopal Church, a conservative diocese in California has voted to affirm its membership in the worldwide Anglican Communion. San Joaquin Bishop John-David Schofield calls it a first step toward a formal break with the U.S. Anglican denomination, though the proposal makes just minor changes to the status of the diocese. Schofield, who refuses to ordain women and homosexuals, has publicly accused the church’s first female leader, Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts-Schori, of promoting heresy. Six other conservative dioceses also have rejected Jefferts-Schori’s authority. Since 2003, when an openly homosexual bishop was consecrated, the Episcopal Church estimates that it has lost 115,000 members. Bishop N.T. Wright, a leading bishop in the Church of England, says the Episcopal Church was warned that the consecration V. Gene Robinson would fracture the worldwide Anglican Communion, but went ahead anyway. Wright says that defiance was unprecedented, but he still prays that the Episcopal Church will “step back from the brink” for the sake of Anglican unity.
- AP
A Rutgers University student who has found a unique way to promote dialogue between Jews and Muslims says she hopes she’s “planting a seed” that will flourish elsewhere. Danielle Josephs persuaded school officials to set up a living environment that includes a handful of students from various backgrounds. The Middle East Coexistence House has 11 female residents with diverse backgrounds including Jewish, Muslim, Hindu, Christian and agnostic. Josephs says she got the idea after being “positively shocked” by the campus tensions between Jewish and Muslim students. She admits they do have heated discussions at the Coexistence House, but she says “when it’s over, it’s over” and they are all still friends.
-AP