Category: Lutheran

  • Evangelical Lutheran Church in America

    Evangelical Lutheran Church in America

    2022 Churchwide Assembly

    Follow the Live Stream Starting August 8th

    ELCA Churchwide Assembly

    The 2022 ELCA Churchwide Assembly will be held in Columbus, Ohio, Aug. 8-12, at the Greater Columbus Convention Center. We gather under the theme, Embody the Word. There’s an importance in the double meaning of the two words:

    • Embody, meaning both the incarnation of Jesus Christ and the life of the church emerging from a pandemic.
    • Word – both meaning Jesus Christ and scripture

    Luke 24:45 states, “Then he opened their minds to understand the scriptures.” We embody the Word, both Jesus and the scripture, by speaking it and proclaiming it. In 1522: Martin Luther’s translation of the New Testament made the Word accessible to the people and revolutionized the Christian movement worldwide. 500 years later, the call to make Jesus accessible to the people still exists today and as we look to the future of this church.

    The ELCA Churchwide Assembly, the primary decision-making body of the church, is a process of communal spiritual discernment. When the ELCA Churchwide Assembly convenes, its voting members meet with confidence in God’s grace around word and water, wine and bread, to carry on their work on behalf of the entire church. Over the course of the assembly, voting members:

    • Hear reports and review the work of churchwide officers, leaders and units;
    • Receive and consider proposals from synod assemblies;
    • Elect officers, board members and other leaders as specified by the constitution or bylaws;
    • Establish ELCA churchwide policy;
    • Worship together;
    • Adopt a budget; and
    • Conduct other business related to the ELCA churchwide organization.
  • Religious Liberty is at Stake

    The ELCA (Evangelical Lutheran Church in America), the United Church of Christ and BJC (Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty) File Brief

    Prayer

    Read the Brief (PDF)

    The Issue: A public high school coach demands the right to lead players and others in prayer on the field following games before his official duties have concluded. 1

    The Position: Protecting religious freedom in the public schools means ensuring that students can express their religion in ways that do not interfere with education and that public school employees in their official capacity do not advance or denigrate religion. 2

    High school football coach Joseph Kennedy, who refused to stop holding post-game prayers on the field and later sued the Bremerton, Wash., school district. Kennedy claims his 50-yard line prayers were private prayers protected by the First Amendment. 3