Living Theology in the Metropolitan Chicago Synod
Evangelical Lutheran
Church in America
Volume 4, Number 2
Pentecost 1999
Called To Common Mission
How
Shall We Answer the Call to Common Mission?
This issue of Let’s Talk is devoted to the presentations and discussion at a
Workshop on Called to Common Mission (CCM)[1],
the revised Concordat with the Episcopal Church, which will come before the
Churchwide Assembly in August. The Workshop
preceded the 1999 Synod Assembly and was sponsored by the Synod Ecumenical
Affairs Committee.
“There appears to be deep division
regarding this matter within the ELCA,” wrote Mike Bennett, a lay delegate to
the Assembly from St. James in Lake Forest, during the question period. He goes on to cite evidence of strongly
divided opinion in the ELCA concerning CCM and to ask probing questions about
the implications of this division. (See
Comments and Questions: The Dialogue
Extended in this issue.)
What is it about CCM that is driving
Lutherans into two camps? There is no
disagreement when the proposal declares that the ELCA and the Episcopal Church
“recognize in each other the essentials of the one catholic and apostolic
faith.” CCM’s account of commonality in
doctrine is unchallenged; mutual acceptance of the authority of Scripture, of
the ecumenical Creeds and the basic Trinitarian and Christological dogmas to
which they testify; a common understanding of Baptism and the Lord’s Supper and
God’s justifying grace, a common belief that the church is constituted and
sustained by the Triune God. The
earnest desire of Episcopalians and Lutherans to be in full communion, to
answer the call to common mission, is unquestioned. But Mr. Bennett is right.
There is a passionate, potentially divisive disagreement about the same
issue that permeated the Concordat debate in 1997. The heat rises from the question of whether the ELCA shall
receive the historic episcopate, a tradition that goes back to the ancient
church, in which bishops already in the succession install newly elected
bishops with prayer and the laying-on-of-hands. The reader should refer to CCM for the details of the process
through which the ELCA and the Episcopal Church would work together to complete
this essential feature of their coming into full communion.
We say “essential” with trepidity for
around that word swirls the storm! For
Episcopalians, the historic episcopate is essential to their self-understanding
and to unity with other church bodies.
It binds together the worldwide Anglican Communion. The historic episcopate is one side of a
“quadrilateral,” the other three sides being the canon of Scripture, the
Apostles’ and Nicene Creeds, and the Sacraments of Baptism and the Lord’s Supper. Through these means the church from ancient
times to the present has preserved the apostolic witness.
For Lutherans, the historic episcopate
is an option for ordering ministry but it is not essential. Lutherans have preserved the apostolic witness
through the same means as Episcopalians except that faithfulness to
doctrine, validated by subscription to the sixteenth century Confessions, has
played a role analogous to the historic episcopate. The Lutheran reformers in Germany articulated this alternative
when the German bishops refused to ordain evangelical priests. The Lutheran Churches of the world are bound
together by common subscription to the Confessions.
Lutheran proponents of the historic
episcopate have a range of arguments.
Some are passive: “It does no
harm and enables us to achieve full communion with the Episcopalians which is
good for mission, sharing of resources, etc.”
Active arguments assert that receiving the historic episcopate is a good
thing, even beyond the present CCM context.”
“The historic episcopate is a sign of continuity in faith and mission
with the whole church. It was the
preferred polity of the reformers. An
evangelical episcopate is an important ecumenical breakthrough with
implications beyond Lutherans and Episcopalians. Adopting CCM is a step toward evaluation and continual reform of
the office of bishop in the service of the gospel.”
These arguments do not persuade
Lutheran opponents of the historic episcopate, who tend to see the matter in
terms of a loss of freedom. They argue that CCM forces Lutherans to relinquish
a confessional principle (Augsburg Confession, Article VII), which assumes that
gathering around Word and Sacrament is enough for the true unity of the church. Episcopalians, they say, are adding another
condition to what is already sufficient.
The “Mahtomedi Resolution,” a proposal for unity with the Episcopal
Church without the requirement of the historic episcopate incorporates this
argument, as did the dissent to the earlier Concordat.
These brief remarks do not convey the
full scope and force of the debate but they suggest why it was important to
have the Workshop and why Let’s Talk
is publishing the proceedings. The Workshop
was planned to supply background, to provide an opportunity for both sides to
state their case, and to invite audience response. This was a tall order for two hours but the exchange was well
presented and well received.
The panel consisted of Professor
Cynthia Jürisson, Father William Roberts, Pastor Frank Senn, and Bishop Steven
Ullestad. Cynthia Jürisson is Associate
Professor of Church History at the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago. William Roberts is the Ecumenical Officer of
the Episcopal Diocese of Chicago, Frank Senn is the Ecumenical Representative
for the Metropolitan Chicago Synod. He
was a member of one of the official Lutheran/Episcopal dialogues that led to
the Concordat. Steven Ullestad is the
bishop of the Northeast Iowa Synod of the ELCA. The first two presentations provided background for debate. Senn led with a history of
Lutheran/Episcopal relations followed by Roberts who expressed why Anglicans
are committed to the historic episcopate.
The second two presentations together were an epitome of the
debate: Jürisson expressed opposition
to CCM and support for the alternative Mahtomedi Resolution. Ullestad answered with support for CCM. Following the presentations the four
panelists fielded written comments and questions from the audience. The four presentations and a summary or the
comments/questions are in this issue.
We are aware of the timeliness of
talking about CCM and intend to have this issue of Let’s Talk in your hands before the Churchwide Assembly meets in
Denver. However, the questions raised
in this debate are more than questions about our relationship with the
Episcopalians, as important as that is.
An unidentified comment writer, opposed to CCM, asked “Is [CCM] not an
attempt to define something about ourselves, namely our own sense of
magisterium?” She/he goes on: “CCM seems to move in subtle and
not-so-subtle ways to change our polity.
We will become more episcopal and less
congregational. Prior to an agreement
with the Episcopalians in which this is asserted, would it not be preferable
for us, the ELCA, to discuss our own polity, to debate this on the floor apart
from a discussion of ecumenism?
Perhaps, we could first assert our own commitments and define our own
distinctions between congregational and episcopal structures before trying to
determine whether our structures can function in cooperation with other church
bodies.” (See Comments and
Questions: The Dialogue Extended in
this issue).
It is unlikely that the order of
business in Denver will change as this writer suggests but he/she is on to
something important. This debate raises
basic questions about who we are as Lutherans.
When both opponents and proponents of CCM support their arguments from
the same confessional documents, they are obviously reading those documents in
different ways. It is fair to ask if
they are thinking and speaking from different senses of Lutheran identity. Whichever way the vote goes in Denver some
very disappointed Lutherans who love their Church will be convinced that it is
headed in the wrong direction. It will
be a time for joy and sadness. It will
be a time for study, reflection, dialogue and prayer.
[1] “Called to Common Mission: A Lutheran Proposal for a Revision of the
Concordat of Agreement” Report of the Drafting Team.” Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, 8765 W. Higgins Road,
Chicago, IL 60631 (1998).and “