Wednesday, August 22, 2007

"Book of Faith" Initiative

The 2007 churchwide assembly endorsed the ELCA's "Book of Faith: Lutherans Read the Bible" initiative. Discuss it here.

2 comments:

Evangelical Mission Network said...

Here's the discription of the initiative from the ELCA's press release regarding the assembly:
"Book of Faith" Initiative Affirmed
The assembly endorsed "Book of Faith: Lutherans Read the
Bible," a five-year initiative to promote study of the Bible. The
initiative grew out of a proposal the North Carolina Synod made
to the 2005 Churchwide Assembly. One recommendation stressed the
importance of Scripture for believers "throughout the ages" and
thanked the North Carolina Synod for proposing the initiative. It
was adopted by a vote of 1,000 to 19. A companion recommendation,
adopted 956 to 68, gave specific suggestions for ways to "invite
and encourage all members, expressions, institutions and partners
of this church to commit themselves regularly and increasingly to
hearing, reading, studying, sharing and being formed by God's
Word."

Evangelical Mission Network said...

To coin a phrase, "What does this mean?"
I think that some in the leadership are concerned that some of the discussion regarding the recent initiatives regarding the Bible and homosexual practice demonstrated a creeping conservatism (sometimes indistinguished from fundamentalism).
I think that what we will Likely see is:
1. A committee will be formed composed of liberal/progressive/revisionist Lutherans, with a few folks with conservative leanings thrown in so the committee can say "we listened to all the voices".
2. They will produce a statement that might better be titled, "How liberal/progressive/revisionist Lutherans Read the Bible".
3. This statement will be used to support every liberal/progressive/ revisionist social and theological statement of the ELCA for a generation.
I say "likely" because I think that recent history points to this outcome.
I do not think it is an accomplished fact, however. This may be the question that brings the foundational issues at the root of recent discussions into focus for most Lutherans.