Posts in Letters
Called to Common Mission: the Lutheran-Episcopal Full Communion Partnership at 20

What has this full communion agreement meant for our churches over these twenty years?

We’ve worshipped together in joint celebrations and shared liturgies and developed a deep familiarity and appreciation for each other’s liturgies and confession of the faith.

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Commemoration at the Gettysburg Crossroads

Rev. Stephen Herr writes about the Lament and Repent Prayer Vigil sponsored by the Gettysburg Area Ministerium, which corresponded with the commemoration of the 5th anniversary of the shooting at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina.

Gettysburg is home to a number of Lutheran institutions, including two congregations.

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Language around Disability: An Invitation to Conversation

When we come before God in worship, we bring our whole selves. What does that actually mean? For many people in the ELCA it means coming to worship with the assistance of a mobility, audio, visual, or sensory device.

Unfortunately, in many of our churches or places of worship, it is our siblings in Christ who have disabilities and need such devices who feel the least welcome at the table.

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In Memory of Rev. George Johnson

To celebrate Pr. Johnson’s life and service to ELCA World Hunger, we share words from his book, No Time for Silence:

I have Alzheimer’s disease. Nothing to brag about, nothing to be ashamed about, and I see no reason to be silent about it. My brain served me well for eighty-five years … I want to give people resources that will help them think and act critically in an age of confusion and conflicting voices.

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Allie Papke-Larson: A change of seasons

I am ready for a new season, one to comfort and cool our nation’s hot wounds. A season for allowing the swelling to go down long enough for us to feel something besides the pain and see something besides the red blisters.

I am praying for a season change that will be long enough for us to put a balm on our wounds. I am longing for a cold, quiet winter.

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Bishop Hutterer: Welcoming Uncertainty

As Bishop, one of my main goals is to work with all of you to change and grow our church. The year 2020 has been wildly successful in implementing change, far more than anything we could have initiated on our own.

As church and people of faith, we have a huge advantage over most organizations and individuals. Our “product” is eternal and unwavering. The love of God, the good news of Jesus Christ, and the fruits of the Holy Spirit do not cease with the seasons of the world or the actions of humankind.

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