*False Churches, False Brethren, False Gospels
Chicago Lutheran Church Ordains Lesbian*
The Associated Press
CHICAGO (AP) - A Lutheran church in Chicago has ordained a lesbian
who refuses to take a vow of celibacy, becoming the first to test a
new resolution that gives bishops leeway in disciplining such
violations.
The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America requires vows of celibacy
for gay but not for heterosexual clergy - a policy the Rev. Jen Rude,
27, calls discriminatory.
Chicago's bishop, Wayne Miller, did not try to block Rude's
ordination at Resurrection Lutheran Church on Saturday, but he also
didn't attend the ceremony. While he has said he believes the
celibacy rule should reversed, he also has urged bishops to follow
rules set by the church.
"My goal is to keep people in the conversation, and I do not see this
as an issue that should be dividing the church," he said before the
church ordained Rude.
Rude, whose father and grandfather are both Lutheran ministers,
expressed gratitude to the congregation.
"It's meaningful to me in the sense that my call is being affirmed
not only by God, but the people of God," she said.
Some of the more than 100 members of the congregation cried as Rude
stood before them during the ceremony.
"We all realized that sexual orientation has nothing to do with how
well a person can minister a congregation," said Kathy Young, a
church member.
At a national assembly in August, Evangelical Lutherans urged bishops
to refrain from defrocking gay and lesbian ministers who violate the
celibacy rule, but they also rejected measures that would have
permitted ordaining gays churchwide.
Advocates for full inclusion of gays were encouraged at the time,
calling the resolution a powerful statement in support of clergy with
same-sex partners. Conservatives, however, said bishops would feel
more secure in ignoring denomination policy.
Miller said he met with Resurrection's congregation last month to
discuss the possible consequences of Rude's ordination if national
church leaders decide to enforce the policy later. Among those
consequences: the congregation could be expelled from the
denomination.
Like other mainline Protestant groups, the Chicago-based Evangelical
Lutheran Church in America has been struggling for decades to
reconcile differences on the issue.
An ELCA task force is near the end of an eight-year study on human
sexuality, which is expected to culminate in the 2009 release of a
statement that will influence church policy.
The 4.8 million-member ELCA is the country's largest Lutheran
denomination.