(Gazette Blog Editor's note: Payson Town Councilor Ed Blair passed this on. "For those of you who don’t know him," Blair wrote, "Herb
was bishop of our Minnesota area and then of the national ELCA; he’s about 80 and
almost blind, but finds time to write. This topic we in Minnesota know was one of
his priority issues.")
Star Tribune - Sunday, August 4, 2013
A single step can begin the longest
journey
Despite the pope’s warmhearted words,
be patient
BY HERBERT W. CHILSTROM
The pastoral, warm-hearted response
of Pope Francis to a reporter’s question about homosexual persons quickened
many hearts. Was it a harbinger of change in the near future?
My experience tells me that such
hopes are unrealistic.I became a Lutheran bishop in Minnesota in the
mid-1970s. It wasn’t until then that I began to meet members of our Lutheran
congregations who were gay and lesbian.
Among them were graduates of our Lutheran colleges and children of some
of our most prominent parish pastors.
They told their stories -- tales of
heartless rejection and accounts of persistent faith. I listened and asked
questions.
It was a step.
It was a full two years before I
wrote a pastoral letter to all of the more than 600 ordained ministers on our
roster in Minnesota. I urged them to do as I had done, to get acquainted with
gay and lesbian members of their churches and to give them pastoral care.
It was a step.
Over the next decade I carved out
time to study carefully the handful of Bible passages that refer to same sex
behavior. Eventually I came to believe that all of them addressed homosexual
abuse and rape. I had seen none of this among the growing number of homosexual
Lutherans I had come to know first-hand.
It was a step.
In 1987 I was elected the first
presiding bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church
in America (ELCA), the
fourth largest Protestant denomination in the United States. By now the issue had
bubbled up into a national crisis. Along with other denominations, the ELCA was
seeking to develop a policy on gay ordination, gay marriage and related
questions. Each attempt at a resolution failed.In the meantime, in 1991 I urged the
65 regional bishops of the ELCA not to bring disciplinary action against parish
pastors who felt free in conscience to bless homosexual pairs who came for an
affirmation of their relationships.
It was a step.
After I retired from office in 1995
the ELCA continued to wrestle with these matters. Finally, in 2009, more than
three decades after my first encounters with gay and lesbian members, the
national assembly of the ELCA, by a 2/3 majority, affirmed those in faithful,
life-long same gender relationships and allowed congregations to call a
homosexual pastor who is in that kind of partnership.
It was a step.
In the four years since then a small
but growing number of the near-10,000 congregations in the ELCA have opened
wider their doors to these fellow believers.
It is a step.
In a hierarchal organization like the
Roman Catholic Church, where such decisions are made by a small coterie of
cardinals in Rome,
the process could drag on far more than three decades. And the outcome can only
be surmised.
In the meantime, many of us --
Lutherans, Roman Catholics, other Christians and non-Christians -- give thanks
for the kind and understanding words of Francis.
It is a step.
Herbert W. Chilstrom, of St. Peter,
is former presiding bishop of the Evangelical
Lutheran Church
in America.
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