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ELCA Council Nominates Presiding Bishop, Acts on Other Topics


From News News <NEWS@ELCA.ORG>
Date Thu, 10 Apr 2003 14:22:45 -0500

ELCA NEWS SERVICE

April 10, 2003

ELCA COUNCIL NOMINATES PRESIDING BISHOP, ACTS ON OTHER TOPICS
03-80-JB

     CHICAGO (ELCA) -- The Church Council of the Evangelical Lutheran
Church in America (ELCA) formally nominated the Rev. Mark S. Hanson,
ELCA presiding bishop, as a candidate for a six-year term as
president of the Lutheran World Federation (LWF).
     The Church Council is the ELCA's board of directors and serves
as the legislative authority of the church between churchwide
assemblies.  The council met here April 4-6.  Assemblies are held
every other year; the next is Aug. 11-17, in Milwaukee.
     The LWF, based in Geneva, Switzerland, is a global communion of
136 Lutheran churches in 76 countries. LWF membership includes 61.7
million of the world's 65.4 million Lutherans. The ELCA is an LWF
member.
     The election for president will take place at the LWF assembly,
July 21-31 in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
     Hanson was the nominee for North America when North American
LWF assembly delegates met in a January consultation in Denver.
However, formal nominations must be made by LWF member churches and
not by delegates from a particular region.
     If elected, Hanson said his role as LWF president will be in
addition to his primary call as ELCA presiding bishop.	Noting the
duties required of him as presiding bishop, Hanson said he
reluctantly agreed to allow his nomination after discussions with
many colleagues in the church.
     "This is no small decision for this church body, because you
are saying this is part of my call," Hanson told the council before
it acted. If elected, Hanson said the additional responsibility will
not diminish his call as ELCA presiding bishop.  It will remind the
church that it is "part of a larger Body of Christ," he said.
     If elected, Hanson said he will need support to "reconfigure"
some of his work as presiding bishop.
     Some council members voiced some caution about the nomination
while others strongly endorsed it.
     Earl L. Mummert, council member, Harrisburg, Pa., said he was
concerned that Hanson's roles as president and presiding bishop might
present some conflicts of interest on particular issues.  He asked if
another nominee from the ELCA could be identified.
     Grieg L. Anderson, council member, Portland, Ore., said he was
excited about "mission priorities" articulated by Hanson and hoped
the additional role wouldn't slow Hanson down. The church is on the
verge of potentially "earthshaking" decisions, Anderson said, adding
he is concerned that Hanson might not be fully focused.
     "I see this as a real opportunity to be partner in the global
church," said the Rev. Jonathan L. Eilert, council member,
Brecksville, Ohio, who said he had reservations about the nomination,
but had changed his mind.
     "We have been given much in this church and in this country,"
said the Rev. April Ulring Larson, bishop of the ELCA La Crosse Area
Synod, La Crosse, Wis.	"God has blessed us with a gifted bishop who
should be sent forth."	Larson serves as an advisory bishop to the
council.

PUBLISHING RELATIONSHIP, NEW CHURCH ORGANIZATION ACTED ON
     The Church Council acted on several other topics of business:
     + It noted the enhanced and improved publishing relationship
between the ELCA Division for Congregational Ministries (DCM) and
Augsburg Fortress (AFP), publishing house of the ELCA.	It thanked
the Rev. Robert N. Bacher, former executive for administration and
executive assistant to the presiding bishop, and the directors of
each unit and staff "for the hard work that has gone into making
these growing relationships happen."  Bacher has served as a
consultant to this process.
     The action resulted from a 2001 DCM board request that the
council review the relationship between Augsburg Fortress and the
ELCA churchwide offices, especially DCM.  In his third and final
report, Bacher said three positive steps have been taken to improve
the publishing relationship: development of resource management
teams, changes in Augsburg Fortress'  procedures at its location in
the ELCA churchwide offices here; and changes in attitudes.
     "Give the principal leaders the opportunity to deepen the
emphasis they have started," Bacher wrote in his report to the
council.  "Let them communicate to their staffs that they are sincere
about and committed to new ways of working.  Let the financial
viability of AFP work itself out.  Nothing else is needed at this
time."
     + The council recommended the 2003 Churchwide Assembly accept
an invitation for the ELCA to join "Christian Churches Together in
the U.S.A."  The concept grew out of a discussion in which 34 church
leaders met in 2001 to gather more Christian faith groups into a
forum to work for the unity of the church.  The organization's stated
purpose "is to enable churches and national Christian organizations
to grow closer together in Christ in order to strengthen our
Christian witness in the world."
     + The council approved a plan of consolidation and merger of
Bethphage, Omaha, Neb., and Martin Luther Home Society, Inc.,
Lincoln, Neb., two Lutheran social ministry organizations.  The ELCA
is a corporate member of both organizations.
     + It thanked those who served the Institute for Mission in the
U.S.A., which recently closed.	The institute was started in 1984 by
the former American Lutheran Church, an ELCA predecessor church body,
to assist the church to develop a theology for mission in United
States. The council approved "return of ownership" of the endowment
held in the ELCA Mission Investment Fund from the institute to the ELCA
Division for Outreach and  DCM.

For information contact:
John Brooks, Director (773) 380-2958 or NEWS@ELCA.ORG
http://listserv.elca.org/archives/elcanews.html


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