Wednesday, November 11, 2009

How to understand what's happening

to the Christians in the United States. Lutherans are in grief and shock--well, maybe not those who think only the local congregation matters. But the August "Church Wide Assembly" which approved gay pastors and marriage after 20 years of nibbling around the edges, for some reason, surprised some (not me). Here's one of the best explanations I've read by David Housholder to catch you up, just in case you're not a Christian, or you only show up for weddings, funerals and Christmas Eve.
Full document here.

"There are two emerging Christianities.

1) One is a postwar liberal movement with roots in the 19th century social gospel, liberal German theology from that same era, and flavored with a shot of very resilient Marxism. This faction has firm control over most mainline Protestant North American denominations, colleges, and seminaries. Their preaching is cool and reflective and nuanced.
    "Let us then go forth brothers and sisters to renew our efforts to establish justice and peace throughout God's creation. For the sake of the greater Gospel and the Christ who was crucified."
2) The other was born around campfires on the mission field and the songs of slavery. Its piety is "warm to hot," expressive, potent, and unpredictable. There is a supernatural vibe to the body language and speech. It is a high-touch world of prayer and laying on of hands. It can be found in storefront churches full of immigrants in any major world city."

These two, writes Housholder repel each of like two poles of a magnet--in some ways they gain identitiy by NOT being like the other and each sees their group as an upgrade over and against the other. They are mutually patronizing. When I (Norma) used to be on Usenet (all text) for a writers group, the Christian groups were the most vicious and snarly so I never joined any of those groups. Liberationist or charismatic or dispensationalist, it made no difference.

The fault line is not whether gays are saved by the work of Jesus Christ (Christians can't work their way to salvation), but whether they can be pastors in committed relationships or can be married in the church. In the good old days of theological splits and snipes, writes Housholder, traditional family morality was upheld by both groups (even as our divorce rates soared). Now that is gone. The Protestant denominations are unraveling. Yours too, in case you aren't there yet, there is a study group or task force planning to take you for a free and painful ride until the crash at the end.

All the king's horses and all the king's men will not be able to put Humpty Dumpty back together again. A community cannot be held together with two sets of rules on the big-ticket issues. There may be more understanding and consensus on the abortion issue than this one which goes to the heart of biblical revelation from Genesis to Revelation.

The grand coalition of North American Protestantism has unraveled, he says. Liberals will retain control of the mainline denominations, Housholder predicts, and the conservatives will either 1) stay and keep quiet, 2) leave the mainline world and join a non-denominational group, or 3) be visionary and creative.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

It was announced on the news last night that the S. OH Diocese (Episcopal) is lifting its ban on "blessing" same sex unions--80 churches are affected. Of course, that's not a "real" marriage, and they don't need a "real" priest, so that will be the next fight. Nibble, nibble, toil and dribble.

Norma said...

In July they approved openly gay bishops and liturgies for same-sex unions. Lutherans hoping to find peace and unity probably won't find it in Episcopal congregations because the fight isn't over.

Renee Nefe said...

My Lutheran congregation will probably (hopefully) be leaving the ELCA synod. Most of our congregation is very upset about the new resolution and has not been keeping up with their offering pledges or requesting that their money go into our Building fund account so that only the mortgage could be paid. So because there hasn't been money coming in 2 full time staff positions have been cut, 2 part time staff positions have less hours and all staff has a 8% pay cut!
I'm really upset with our church council for not acting sooner. After two months they just finally approved a new account so that folks could have their offering go there to pay the staff and not to the ELCA.

Luckily there are other synod options for us.

Norma said...

There are a number of options, and if your council is that slow, they would benefit from the Housholder document--he lists them and gives critiques. There is a growing group of former ALC churches that never joined ELCA in 1988.