Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
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The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America or ELCA is a mainline Protestant denomination headquarted in Chicago, Illinois. With more than 5 million members, it is the largest and most liberal of the three main Lutheran denominations in the US. The next two largest Lutheran denominations are the Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod and the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod. There are many smaller ones. The ELCA is one of the largest Christian demominations in the United States.
The headquarters of the Church are at 8765 West Higgins Road, Chicago IL 60631.
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Organization and structure
The ELCA is headed by a presiding bishop, elected by the Churchwide Assembly for a term of six years. The Churchwide Assembly meets in odd-numbered years and consists of elected lay and ordained voting members. Between meetings of the Churchwide Assembly, the ELCA Church Council governs the Church. Presiding Bishop Mark Hanson was elected in 2001.
The Church is divided into one special and 64 regional synods, or dioceses in the United States and the Caribbean each headed by a synodical bishop and council. The ELCA uses the term synod differently than the Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod or the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod, which are separate denominations.
Within the church structure are divisions addressing many programs and ministries. Among these are support for missions, outdoor ministries, campus ministries, social ministries, and education. There are twenty-eight colleges and universities affiliated with the ELCA throughout the United States.
See List of ELCA colleges and universities, List of ELCA seminaries
Predecessor Churches
The ELCA was formed on January 1, 1988, creating the largest Lutheran church body in the United States. The Church is a result of a merger between the Lutheran Church in America, The American Lutheran Church and the Association of Evangelical Lutheran Churches.
The three churches that formed the ELCA were results of previous mergers and splits in Lutheran synods.
- The Lutheran Church in America
- In 1962 the United Lutheran Church in America , the Augustana Evangelical Lutheran Church , Finnish Evangelical Lutheran Church and American Evangelical Lutheran Church formed the Lutheran Church in America .
- The Association of Evangelical Lutheran Churches
- In 1976 the AELC was formed from congregations that left the Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod over issues of biblical literacy, academic freedom and ecumenism.
Presiding Bishops of the ELCA
Herbert W. Chilstrom 1988-1995
H. George Anderson 1995-2001
Mark S. Hanson 2001-
Ecumenical relations
The Church maintains full communion relationships with the Lutheran World Federation (which includes many automomous national/regional Lutheran church bodies throughout the world), The Episcopal Church, the Moravian Church in America, the Presbyterian Church (USA), the Reformed Church in America, and the United Church of Christ.
Beliefs and Practice
The ELCA is a Christian church body holding to the teachings of Protestant reformer Martin Luther. The ELCA's doctrine and requirements for entry are less conservative than those of the Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod (LCMS) or Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod (WELS), the second and third largest Lutheran bodies in the United States.
Like other Lutheran church bodies, the ELCA practices two Sacraments, communion (or the eucharist) and baptism (including infant baptism). ELCA congregations practice open communion, inviting all baptized persons to receive communion in their congregations.
Worship styles can vary. The ELCA is a liturgical church, and its services would be familiar to a Roman Catholic or Episcopalian. Lutherans believe in the true presence of Christ in the sacrament of communion through what is sometimes called "consubstantiation", whereas Roman Catholics and eastern Orthodox believe in transubstantiation and many other Protestants doubt the true presence.
Pastors are trained at one of eight ELCA seminaries located throughout the United States, and generally hold a Bachelors of Arts degree or equivalent, as well as a masters degree in divinity, and are required to learn biblical Hebrew and Greek. ELCA seminaries and colleges generally teach the historical-critical method of biblical analysis. Pastors are ordained by bishops under terms of Called to Common Mission, the full communion agreement between the ELCA and The Episcopal Church which calls for the ELCA to adopt apostolic succession in its ordained ministers.
On October 31, 1999 in Augsburg, Germany, the Lutheran World Federation, of which the ELCA is a member, signed the Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification with the Roman Catholic Church. The statement is an attempt to narrow the theological divide between the two faiths. The Declaration also states that the mutual condemnations between 16th century Lutherans and the Roman Catholic Church no longer apply.
Social issues
Unlike the other Lutheran denominations in the United States, the ELCA ordains women as pastors. Generally speaking, ELCA clergy are less likely to take the Bible literally than those in the LCMS or WELS. The ELCA does not have an official position on creationism versus evolution. In addition, the ELCA takes a more moderate stance on social issues such as abortion and homosexuality.
Controversies
The ELCA was ordered to pay the largest per capita settlement in a church sexual abuse case in the United States by a jury in Marshall, Texas on April 22, 2004.