Posts in Letters
Bishop Eaton: Our call to advocate for the hungry

ELCA Presiding Bishop Elizabeth Eaton’s weekly message talks about the effect COVID-19 will have on the ability to feed our struggling neighbors, and implores us to act now.

You can help by letting your elected leaders know the importance of including funding for critical feeding programs in the $1 trillion COVID response bill in congress. https://ELCA.org/COVIDaction

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Bishop Hutterer: Awaiting the Spirit

It has been a while since I wrote about in-person gathering for worship. I was waiting for certainty before I grabbed my pen. I was waiting for clarity from the federal government and the CDC, from health scientists, and from our state health departments and governors. I waited for a common-sense consensus amongst the citizens of our nation. I turned to the books of wisdom in the Old Testament, hoping for a revelation.

I am still waiting.

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Rev. Dr. Carl E. Braaten: Faith Active In Love During This Deadly Pandemic

Rev. Dr. Carl E. Braaten shares this letter, Faith Active In Love During This Deadly Pandemic. Braaten also recently published a book, The Christian Faith: Ecumenical Dogmatics.

How should we as believers in Christ and members of his church act during this deadly pandemic? I have heard people say this pandemic is unprecedented; we’ve never encountered anything like this before. It’s true, we haven’t, those of us living here and now. But history tells us that plagues and epidemics have been around since time immemorial.

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Cry for Hope

On July 1 Kairos Palestine and Global Kairos for Justice, a worldwide coalition born in response to the Kairos Palestine “Moment of Truth: a word of faith, hope, and love from the heart of Palestinian suffering,” issued an urgent call to Christians, churches and ecumenical institutions: “Cry for Hope”.

We share this with you as an authentic voice of Palestinian Christians and encourage you to read and study it.

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Kathryn Mary Lohre: Amplifying the Message in Word and Deed, Liberation not Annexation

Kathryn Mary Lohre writes: “500 years ago, Martin Luther wrote the treatise ‘The Freedom of a Christian.’ Our freedom in Christ is not a freedom for ourselves, but for the sake of our neighbors, lived out in love. As an expression of the liberating love we share in Jesus Christ, we join our Palestinian family, and our partner Bishop Azar, in calling for ‘liberation not annexation.’

Please join in ELCA advocacy through Peace Not Walls: June action alert

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June 29 marks 50 years!

Bishop Eaton writes: “Words matter. Words matter in our Scripture, in our hymns, in our governing documents, and beyond. Fifty years ago, on June 29, 1970, the Lutheran Church in America voted to change the word “man” to “person” in its bylaws and opened the door for the ordination of women. The American Lutheran Church achieved the same thing by resolution a few months later. The church was led by the Spirit to change. At the time it was scary for some. Fifty years later, it is now part of our heritage.”

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Regina Banks: When I Broke

When I announced my intention to go to law school my mother’s family became suspiciously excited. My grandfather was the first Black Genesee County (MI) deputy in the 1950’s. He studied law then finished his career as a magistrate. His only daughter (my mother) was a probation officer briefly. 3 of his 4 sons are, to this day, sworn law enforcement officers. One of them even married a state trooper! Adding a prosecutor to the family would complete the set.

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Joe Davis: Juneteenth, We Will Breathe

Juneteenth commemorates a day when my ancestors could breath a little more freely. On June 19, 1865, in Galveston, Texas, enslaved Africans were read federal orders that they were freed, even though the Emancipation Proclamation was signed over two years prior. They didn’t know they were free because, in spite of the law, they were still brutalized by those who weaponized power.

Today, families of African descent throughout the United States celebrate this Freedom Day, which gave us a brief moment to inhale deeper than before.

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