Tag Archives: ELCA (Lutheran)

Lutheran “Vision and Expectations” Revisited

The ELCA Church Council meets today at the Higgins Road headquarters in Chicago to consider a document entitled Trustworthy Servants as a replacement for a prior document entitled Vision and Expectations. The proposed document comes to the Council following recent action by the Conference of Bishops. To be sure, the current document purports to be LGBTQ-friendly and apologizes for the harm done by the earlier document, but the failure of the Conference of Bishops to consult with, much less to include, voices from the LGBTQ community regarding the draft document has resulted in a firestorm across broad swaths of the ELCA. I have friends and colleagues who will be present today to oppose the document, and my sense is that the document in its current form is doomed, and the process will be re-opened with the red-faced bishops belatedly welcoming LGBTQ voices to the conversation.

My own take is that this is a classic example of privilege blind to its own malign paternalism. I’m sure the bishops genuinely believed their intentions to be pure and their actions to be beneficial toward those most affected by the policy. That bishops failed to recognize their flawed process is especially head-scratching in light of the sordid history in which the predecessor document became church policy. 

The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) came into existence in 1988 as a result of the merger of three Lutheran bodies, including the two largest Lutheran denominations at that time. In the fall of 1987, just prior to the effective date of the merger, four gay Lutheran seminarians from California “came out” following their attendance at a national “Coming Out Day” in Washington D.C. Three of the seminarians were seniors and one a junior. Without any fuss just weeks before the merger became official, the three seniors were routinely certified for call and ordination as part of a larger slate of candidates approved by seminary faculty and the “Professional Preparation Commission” of the local synod.

The press picked up the story of the pending ordinations, and the new headquarters of the ELCA in Chicago was barely operational when the s___ hit the fan in February 1988 with “an avalanche of letters and phone calls to parish pastors, synodical bishops and our church-wide offices here in Chicago.” A month later, at the March 1988 meeting of the Conference of Bishops, a statement was crafted announcing the policy that “Persons of homosexual orientation who seek to be ordained or who are already ordained will be expected to refrain from homosexual practice.” In the new denomination with new rules and practices, no one realized at that time that the Conference of Bishops had neither adjudicatory nor legislative authority to establish such a policy for the church. Only the voting members at Church Wide Assemblies or the elected Church Council have the authority to enact church policy. Nevertheless, the bishop’s policy was followed, and the three candidates for ordination were grilled. “Are you presently celibate, and do you promise to remain so?” When the candidates declined to make such a promise, their ordination approvals were withdrawn.

A number of Bay Area congregations responded by forming a coalition called Lutheran Lesbian and Gay Ministry (LLGM)*, “committed to the Gospel, to lesbian/gay ordained pastoral leadership, and to progressive ministry, with, by and for the lesbian/gay community.” In 1989, the coalition devised a bold plan to call and ordain Jeff Johnson, one of the rejected seminarians, to a San Francisco congregation, and—for good measure—to call a lesbian couple (Ruth Frost and Phyllis Zillhart) to another congregation. The watchword for the pending ordinations was extra ordinem (extraordinary), and the ordinations were scheduled for early 1990. At the November 1989 Church Council meeting, the chair of the Legal and Constitutional Review Committee was invited to submit a “hurry-up” proposal because the prior Bishop’s statement was non-binding and “because some synods have immediate need [for] such guidelines, in order to deal with issues already pending,” an obvious reference to the scheduled San Francisco extraordinary ordinations.

The council adopted the proposal which lumped all sorts of sexual behavior together: “adultery, promiscuity, the sexual abuse of another, the misuse of counseling relationships for sexual favors, and homosexual genital activity constitutes conduct that is incompatible with the character of the ministerial office.” Nevertheless, the Bay Area ordinations proceeded with great fanfare, resulting in controversial ecclesiastical trials and ultimately the banishment of the two offending congregations from the ELCA, but that’s a story for another day. Our present focus is on the genesis of the document known as Vision and Expectations. It was at the October 1990 meeting, following the extraordinary ordinations and tumultuous church trials earlier that year, that the document was discussed. The document included the language, “Ordained and commissioned ministers who are homosexual in their self-understanding are expected to abstain from homosexual sexual relationships.”

While researching for my book, Queer Clergy, a History of Gay and Lesbian Ministry in American Protestantism, I reviewed the minutes of that October Council meeting at the ELCA archives in Chicago. The minutes do not record an actual vote on the document (was it formally adopted?), but they do include comments from a robust discussion. 

A [member] inquired in what sense is the document to be considered policy. [Another member responded], “It is not a juridical document that is to be used in an official sort of way. It is rather a document that describes the behavior of clergy. It is not a prescriptive document.” [Another member] termed the document “a teaching resource.”

Vision and ExpectationsNon-prescriptive, indeed. Despite the questionable de jure status, the document became de facto policy. The document was soon published in booklet form and seminarians were required to submit to oral and written interviews in which they were asked, “Do you intend to live in accord with  … Vision and Expectations?” 

At the time, a seminarian complained, which became the lament for an entire generation, “I could lie about who I am. I could deny who I am. I could say openly who I am. The first two options meant loss of my self. The third option meant loss of my calling.”

At the 2009 Church Wide Assembly, the policy was reversed (another story for another day), and in the ten years since, countless LGBTQ persons have joined the official roster of ELCA ordained clergy, which brings us to the current hubbub over the recent action of the Conference of Bishops pertaining to the Trustworthy Servants document, which is intended to replace Vision and Expectations.

I smile inwardly at the irony that reflects the change in American and Lutheran culture. In 1988, a firestorm of protest resulted in restrictive, anti-gay, exclusionary policies through a flawed deliberative process. Three decades later, the outcry resounds in the opposite direction and will likely effect a more inclusive process and result.

This is merely a “tip of the iceberg” treatment of the history. If you’re interested in digging deeper, contact me to obtain a copy of the book I referenced above, which former Presiding Bishop, Herb Chilstrom, calls “the definitive text on the subject.”

*LLGM is the predecessor to Extraordinary Lutheran Ministries (ELM).

James Siefkes: straight ally and founder of Lutherans Concerned

A straight ally, Lutheran Pastor James Siefkes, a “rather rotund church executive” in the home offices of the American Lutheran Church (ALC), a predecessor to the ELCA, was the principal inspiration for the founding of “Lutherans Concerned for Gay People” in 1974. That’s the short version; here are the details. Well, even what follows is a condensed version; read Queer Clergy: A History of Gay and Lesbian Ministry in American Protestantism for the full story, woven into an overarching narrative.

Pastor SiefkesAfter a couple of stops as a parish pastor, Iowan James Siefkes landed in the western regional office of the ALC in Palo Alto, California. Rev. Siefkes was a third-generation Lutheran pastor after his father and grandfather. Serving in the San Francisco area during the tumultuous 1960s, Siefkes developed a program designed to introduce clergy and spouses to hot-button issues such as the Vietnam war, campus riots, runaway youth, drugs, and more. His Matrix program offered the streets of San Francisco as Petri dish for clergy to examine life on the edge.

I would set up a program, take maybe thirty, forty people and move them into the YMCA in the Tenderloin in San Francisco and, then, would try to introduce them to what was going on in the Bay Area at that time.

Matrix came to the attention of the ALC home office in Minneapolis, and Pastor Siefkes was offered a position to develop something similar; he was to establish and lead a new ALC department to be called, “Congregational Social Concerns.” So far, so good, but when he invited approximately sixty persons from the Twin Cities (Lutheran and Catholic Social Services, ALC executives, an ALC bishop, the YMCA, the University of Minnesota Medical School, and more) to a seminar to evaluate the potential for ministry in the area of human sexuality, “the milieu heated up,” according to Siefkes. In particular, the scandalized director of Catholic Social Services published an unfriendly report in Commonweal magazine entitled, “Sex, Sex, Sex!”

Undeterred, Siefkes successfully sought a small ALC appropriation of a few thousand dollars:

To enable at least one national meeting of up to twenty ALC homosexual persons plus 5 resource persons to discuss their sexual orientation and their relationship because of it, to society and their church; to the end that they may address the church and the church might respond to them and become less a source of oppression to ALC and other persons with homosexual orientation.

Earlier, Siefkes had been interviewed by a reporter from the Minneapolis Star Tribune, Howard Erickson, who was a closeted gay man who also published in the gay periodical, The Advocate, under the pseudonym, Bjorn Bjornson. Erickson’s Advocate article introduced Siefkes to the gay community as an ally, and Siefkes used contacts he attained following that article to invite around twenty gay and lesbian persons to an inaugural meeting in Minneapolis in June 1974. Five persons actually attended the weekend event, including reporter Erickson. Siefkes himself stepped back and let the five persons plus three facilitators conduct the meeting themselves.

On Sunday evening, June 16, 1974, Siefkes and his wife, Sally, joined the others for a social event and report at a professor’s home near the University of Minnesota campus. When he arrived, he learned that Lutherans Concerned had been born, the LGBT advocacy group that would grown in size and strength and become the lobbying force that encouraged the ELCA to revise its attitude and policies toward gays and lesbians. Five LGBT Lutherans and three facilitators would have “an impact way out of proportion to their numbers.” Sort of like five fishes and two loaves.

The conservative Lutheran press picked up on the story and lambasted the “Dollars for Disobedience” appropriation. By printing copies of the organizational newsletter, including the subscription form, the conservative publication unwittingly helped to spread the word. Four years later at the first national gathering of Lutherans Concerned, reporter Erickson would reminisce, “We five had our differences, all right, but it started to look like this nestling we’d hatched just might be around for awhile.”

In 1992, Lutherans Concerned established the Jim Siefkes Justice-Maker Award, to recognize superior and tireless efforts of straight allies on behalf of LGBT Lutherans. Siefkes himself was honored with the 2010 Peace and Justice Award from the Hawkinson Foundation. The award honors individuals or couples who have made significant and sustained contributions to peace and justice. Now retired, Siefkes remains in Minneapolis and helped me with background information to the founding of Lutherans Concerned (now ReconcilingWorks).

 

Where to buy the book

Print copies are available from Amazonthe publisherBarnes and NobleCokesbury, or an autographed copy straight from me. Amazon offers it in digital, eBook format for Kindle, and Barnes and Noble offers it for Nook. For iPad or other Apple users, you may order through the iTunes bookstore. Search on RW Holmen.

This post is part of the series Cast of characters, which are biographical snippets and summaries of the stories of the iconic pilgrims and prophets on the road to full inclusion who are featured prominently in Queer ClergyAs with all these posts, this is merely a summary of the full story, which is woven into an overarching narrative in the book. Here’s the full list of these posts:

1968 Troy Perry (founder of the MCC)

1970 Robert Mary Clement (gay priest who marched in the first Gay Pride parade)

1972 William Johnson (first out gay man to be ordained by a traditional denomination)

1974 James Siefkes (Lutheran pastor behind the formation of Lutherans Concerned)

1974 David Bailey Sindt (founder of More Light Presbyterians)

1975 Steve Webster (organized the first gathering of gay Methodists)

1975 Dr. Louie Clay (founder of Episcopal Integrity)

1976 Chris Glaser (longtime Presbyterian activist)

1977 Ellen Marie Barrett (first out lesbian ordained to the Episcopal priesthood)

1978 Loey Powell (early UCC lesbian pastor and activist)

1980 Mark Bowman (founder and leader of RMN and editor of Open Hands Magazine)

1982 Melvin Wheatley (Methodist bishop and straight ally)

1987 Ann B. Day (Led the UCC ONA for twenty years)

1990 Jeff Johnson, Ruth Frost, Phyllis Zillhart (Extraordinarily ordained Lutherans)

1990 John Shelby Spong (leading straight ally in the Episcopal House of Bishops)

1992 Janie Spahr (Presbyterian leader of “That All May Freely Serve”)

1994 Ross Merkel (defrocked Lutheran allowed to remain on call with a “wink-and-a-nod” from his bishop)

1996 Walter Righter (Episcopal Bishop whose heresy trial opened the door for queer clergy)

2000 Jimmy Creech, Greg Dell, Joseph Sprague, and Jack Tuell (Methodist trials to punish clergy who performed covenant services for same-gender couples)

2001 Anita Hill (extraordinarily ordained Lutheran)

2003 Gene Robinson (gay bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of New Hampshire)

2004 Karen Dammann and Beth Stroud (Methodist clergy put on trial for being lesbians)

2007 Bradley Schmeling and Darin Easler (defrocked Lutheran clergy who were the first to be reinstated)

2011 Scott Anderson (first gay Presbyterian to be ordained following policy change)

2011 Amy DeLong (out, partnered Methodist minister on trial)

2012 R. Guy Erwin (gay professor elected as ELCA bishop)