From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


Thousands of Lutherans Challenged to 'Communicate Hope'


From Brenda Williams <BRENDAW@elca.org>
Date 29 Jul 1998 16:07:42

Reply-To: ElcaNews <ELCANEWS@ELCASCO.ELCA.ORG>
ELCA NEWS SERVICE

July 29, 1998

THOUSANDS OF LUTHERANS CHALLENGED TO 'COMMUNICATE HOPE'
98-27-157-FI

     CHICAGO (ELCA) -- Lutherans in the United States are known for their
songs, theology and potlucks.  They're known for their social services,
refugee resettlement and disaster response.  They may not be so well-known
for their bold, public witness of Jesus Christ in their own neighborhoods,
speaker after speaker told Global Mission Event (GME) participants.  The
theme is "Communicate Hope" at the four GMEs of the Evangelical Lutheran
Church in America (ELCA) this year.
     Three thousand mission-minded ELCA members have already met the
missionaries they support around the world in July.  The church's Division
for Global Mission hosted three similar events July 9-12 at the University
of Wisconsin, La Crosse, Wis.; July 16-19 at Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute, Troy, N.Y.; and July 23-26 at San Jose State University, San
Jose, Calif.  A fourth event will be held Oct. 30- Nov. 1 in San Juan,
Puerto Rico.
     "A cosmic tug of war is taking place," said the Rev. James Kenneth
Echols, president of the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago, during the
opening worship service.  "We experience the tug of despair on this world
and its people, as hope loses ground."
     Hunger, disease, crime, war and the production of weapons illustrate
the world's despair, said Echols.  The recent brutal murder of an African-American man
in Texas is a sign that "racism is alive and well in this
country."
     "If hope is to hold its own in this cosmic tug of war, then who will
communicate hope?" he asked.  "The hope the world needs is not only
external and material, but it is also internal and spiritual."
     "The good news is that we gather as the hope-filled people of God ...
people claiming Jesus Christ as their savior," said Echols, challenging the
Lutherans to proclaim their faith boldly.  "We love Jesus deep down in our
hearts, but we struggle to express that with our voices....  May God give
us strength in this tug of war."
     Monsignor Patrick A.B. Anthony, director of the Pastoral Centre, St.
Lucia, led Bible studies during the events.  He is president for the
Caribbean region of the World Association for Christian Communication.
     "The media tend to give us a way of reading that is not the way to
read sacred writings," said Anthony.  When we read a newspaper, magazine or
textbook, we expect to get facts, he said.  "The Bible is not a book about
facts; it is a book about truths."
     "We are reading the stories of God's love," said Anthony.  He
instructed the group to read, meditate, pray and contemplate when they read
the Bible.  In the stories they will be able to read their own fears
addressed, he said.
     "The word of God is life ... the witness of Christians who have gone
before us," said Anthony, stressing that many were cowards who were
inspired by God to do miraculous things.  "We must be prepared to be
transformed."
     The Lutheran church in the east African nation of Ethiopia has grown
from 870,000 in 1990 to 2.3 million today.  The Rev. Wakseyoum Idossa of
the Ethiopian Evangelical (Lutheran) Church Mekane Yesus attributed that
growth to the work of God's Holy Spirit, the holistic ministry of the
church and a backlash to years of political suppression of religion.
     "The closing of churches has resulted in a hunger for the word of
God," he said in the events' keynote address.  "The more Christians were
persecuted, the more they grew in numbers."
     Through years of drought and starvation, the church distributed food
and "communicated hope," said Idossa.  "The church must realize that the
greatest need for people is salvation," he said.  "We have done our best to
communicate hope and to meet their needs for many years....  Now in those
areas we have many strong congregations."
     Idossa said, "God has given us a wonderful time to communicate hope."
Churches in the United States have the facilities and the resources to
communicate hope through every medium, he said.  "We don't have the
facilities or the resources, but we have the Holy Spirit."
     "Communicating hope was central in the life of Jesus Christ.  It must
also be central for Christ's church," said Idossa.  "How can the love of
Jesus in our hearts flow to others unless we talk it out?"  He added,
"Communicating hope is a responsibility."
     Communicating hope may be illegal for the Rev. Twila K. Schock, an
ELCA missionary at the Moscow Protestant Chaplaincy in Russia, she said
during the events' closing worship service.  That ministry is under the
umbrella of the U.S. Embassy in Moscow as a military chaplaincy.
     Under a new religion law designed to discourage "foreign" religions
from flooding Russia, only churches registered during the communist era
will be recognized.  Honoring that law, the U.S. Embassy has directed the
Protestant chaplaincy to not engage Russians.
     "I, an ELCA pastor, will agree not to preach the gospel," said
Schock.  She still intends to communicate hope to Russian pensioners who
have grown to rely on the chaplaincy's weekday soup kitchen.
     "How does a bowl of peasant soup communicate hope to the Russian
people?"  Schock cited the words of Jesus in the Christian Bible that if
the people are not allowed to praise God, God will make the rocks cry out
in praise.  "The soup cries out in our stead, and the grandmothers of
Russia are not deaf to this cry," she said.
     "This is the gospel.  We can be silenced by laws, but somehow God
will proclaim that message," said Schock.  "Our promise of eternal life
will be made known."

For information contact:
Ann Hafften, Director 1-773-380-2958 or NEWS@ELCA.ORG
http://www.elca.org/co/news/current.html


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