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ELCA Presiding Bishop Sums up a Very Busy Week


From NEWS <NEWS@elca.org>
Date 15 Nov 1998 18:37:33

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

November 15, 1998

ELCA PRESIDING BISHOP SUMS UP A VERY BUSY WEEK
98-CC2-04-FI

     CHICAGO (ELCA) -- Referring to a current movie title, "Six Days and
Seven Nights," the Rev. H. George Anderson, presiding bishop of the
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, told the ELCA Church Council about
his experiences the week of Nov. 9-15.  His report included information
from meetings with the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod (LCMS), National
Council of Churches of Christ in the U.S.A. (NCC) and Lutheran World
Federation (LWF).
     The Church Council is the ELCA's board of directors and serves as the
legislative authority of the church between meetings of the ELCA's
Churchwide Assembly.  The council is meeting here Nov. 13-16.  Assemblies
are held every other year; the next is August 16-22 in Denver.
     Anderson met with other members of the Committee for Lutheran
Cooperation on Nov. 9.  That committee includes six ELCA leaders and their
LCMS counterparts.
     The bishop told the council it will see a recommendation to appoint a
team of ELCA members to begin theological conversations with the LCMS.  He
added the LCMS leaders were clear that these would not be "church union
talks."
     Anderson was an ELCA delegate to the NCC's General Assembly, Nov. 11-
13.  He told the council that an independent report commissioned by the NCC
"said the finance and human resource infrastructure (of the NCC) is
broken."
     Much of the discussion on how to fix the infrastructure became
centered in the job performance of the NCC's General Secretary, the Rev.
Joan Brown Campbell.  The need to fill key positions in the organization
came into a scheduling conflict with the end of Campbell's term.  The NCC's
assembly decided to extend Campbell's term one year while maintaining some
flexibility for determining when a different person would become General
Secretary.
     Anderson flew to Geneva, Switzerland, to attend an executive
committee meeting of the LWF Council, Nov. 14-15.  He said he had hoped
this meeting would decide when the LWF and the Vatican would formally sign
a "Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification" which the Lutheran
and Roman Catholic churches approved in June.
     What Anderson termed "fax-to-fax diplomacy" between Geneva and Rome
"rivaled this past week only by negotiations between Iraq and the United
Nations" failed to yield a clear agreement between the two churches. 
"Don't expect any fast breaking news on that," he added.
     After an intercontinental flight back to Chicago, Anderson told the
ELCA Church Council on Nov. 15 he was encouraged by the church's financial
situation.  "Our challenge is to use this bounty wisely," he said.
     Referring to reports of an economic "rural crisis" and a
recommendation to establish a rural desk within the church structure,
Anderson said, "I'm wondering if we need to think of other ways to
respond."  In the City for Good, Lutheran Disaster Response and Leaders for
Mission are other ELCA programs that could use additional support, he
added.
     "It's a good time to be the church," Anderson concluded his report,
"maybe even good enough to make a movie about it."
     In a question and answer period, council member Ida Marie Hakkarinen
of Greenbelt, Md., told the bishop that she has been asked for the ELCA's
position on genetic experimentation, but she could not provide an answer.
     The Rev. Charles S. Miller, executive director of the ELCA Division
for Church in Society, presented the 37 council members and 11 advisors
with a new book the division commissioned, "Genetic Testing and Screening,"
which outlines a basic Lutheran ethic on genetic engineering.

For information contact:
Frank Imhoff, Assoc. Director (773) 380-2955 or NEWS@ELCA.ORG
http://www.elca.org/co/news/current.html


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