From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


Brand Leaves Legacy of Lutheran Ecumenism


From ELCANEWS@ELCASCO.ELCA.ORG
Date 18 Feb 1997 13:57:43

ELCA NEWS SERVICE

February 17, 1997

BRAND LEAVES LEGACY OF LUTHERAN ECUMENISM
97-04-010-ET*

     GENEVA (ELCA) -- The Rev. Eugene L. Brand leaned back in
his chair and reflected on recent ecumenical breakthroughs in
Europe.   Agreements between Lutherans and Anglicans and
between Lutherans and the Reformed have "re-drawn the
Christian map," he said.   "It's either a marvelously colored fabric
or a sticky mess."
     Brand sees it as a fabric he helped weave as head of the
Lutheran World Federation's Department of Ecumenical Affairs.
He also prefers to call it a fabric because he believes in the
theological rightness of patching the denominational divisions of
the 16th century.
     He did not see all the divisions removed before he retired
in November, but when the Evangelical Lutheran Church in
America pastor, ecumenical scholar and liturgical expert moved
to Columbus, Ohio, after 15 years in Geneva, Switzerland, he
took with him a clear record of bringing churches closer together:

     *    The Porvoo Agreement in 1995 brought Anglicans and
          Lutherans into full communion in the British Isles,
          Norway, Sweden, Finland, Iceland, Estonia and
          Lithuania.

     *    The Meissen Agreement in 1991 instituted pulpit and
          altar fellowship between the Church of England and the
          24 Lutheran, Reformed and United churches in Germany
          that make up the Evangelical Church of Germany.

     *    The Leuenberg Agreement in 1973 (before Brand's time at
          the LWF) instituted church fellowship or "full mutual
          recognition" among 85 Lutheran, Reformed and United
          churches stretching from the British Isles and Portugal
          across Europe as far east as Greece and Latvia and
          including five churches in Argentina and Uruguay.

     *    The Lutheran-Roman Catholic Joint Declaration on the
          Doctrine of Justification is expected to be accepted by
          mid-1998.

     *    Lutheran World Federation dialogues continue with the
          Orthodox churches, Seventh-day Adventists, Roman
          Catholics and Anglicans.

     *    In Norway an agreement for full communion was accepted
          by Lutherans and Methodists.

     *    Eucharistic hospitality is in place between Lutherans
          and Mennonites in Germany.

     *    An agreement of communion was signed between
Lutherans in Sweden and the Filipino Independent Church.

     *    Steps toward fellowship are under way between Lutherans
          and the Mar Thoma church in India, between Lutherans
          and Anglicans in Brazil, and between Lutherans and
          Anglicans in several southern and eastern African
          nations.  In addition, Lutherans and Anglicans in Japan
          are recognizing each other's baptisms.

     "The dialogues focused mostly on the past," Brand says,
"trying to break down the barriers that the churches have erected
within the one Body of Christ.  The Leuenberg Agreement, for
example, not only set up fellowship between Lutherans and the
Reformed in Germany.  It also overcame a lot of condemnations.
     "Many of these condemnations from Lutherans toward the
Reformed were sharper than those between Lutherans and
Roman Catholics.  Now even the Methodists have come into the
Lutheran-Reformed Leuenberg orbit because the European
Methodist conference includes Methodists in England," said
Brand.
     Although the Meissen Agreement established pulpit and altar
fellowship between German Lutherans and the Church of
England, it did not include exchange of clergy.  When the Porvoo
Agreement between Lutherans and Anglicans in the British Isles
and the Nordic and Baltic countries solved that issue, it raised
tensions between continental Lutherans and Nordic Lutherans
because the German churches thought the Nordics were trying
to set up something separate, Brand explains.  The Nordics
went beyond what German Lutherans thought possible.  But the
Nordics have been episcopal in structure since the Reformation,
so it was easier for Anglicans and Nordic Lutherans to get
together.  Moreover, Porvoo puts Lutherans back together in
Scandinavia just as Leuenberg does in Europe.
     As he steps aside, Brand says that ecumenical approaches
in Africa and Asia may require different approaches and
emphases.  "The Southern Hemisphere will come to the same
conclusions as the North," Brand says, "but by a different route.
Even so, the conflicts that historically divided the churches
belong to the whole Church and their resolution will involve the
whole Church."
     At the same time, Brand knows "that confessional labels for
the average person are less and less important.  So we have to
go both ways at the same time -- upholding heritages and
traditions and being open to new directions."
     In some ways, Brand completed a career's worth of work
before he went to the LWF.  He was project director for the
Lutheran Book of Worship, worship director for the former
Lutheran Church in America and a professor at the Evangelical
Lutheran Seminary in Columbus, Ohio, now Trinity Lutheran
Seminary.  Brand will be a "distinguished visiting professor"
there in 1997-98.  Raised and educated in the former American
Lutheran Church, he earned respect in liturgics and interchurch
matters so he moved freely among Lutheran churches around
the world.
     LWF is a communion of 56 million Lutherans in 122 member
church bodies in 68 countries.  The 5.2-million-member ELCA is
the second largest LWF member.

     * The Rev. Edgar R. Trexler is editor of The Lutheran,
     the magazine of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in
     America.

For information contact:
Ann Hafften, Director (773) 380-2958 or NEWS@ELCA.ORG
http://www.elca.org/co/news/current.html


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