In the Prayer forum I had requested prayer for those assembling in the Columbus, Ohio area for a week of conferences and convocations culminating in the formation of the North American Lutheran Church on Friday August 27.
It has been requested that I write more about the events of the week in this section.
First, some links.
For those desiring a blow-by-blow account of all that transpired I would refer you to the truly excellent reporting by Forum Letter Editor Rev. Richard Johnson in the discussion forum of the American Lutheran Publicity Bureau on-line forum
Columbus Happenings [
alpb.org]. Any post under his authorship is well worth the read.
For those desiring to know more about the North American Lutheran Church, there is a newly launched web site
www.thenalc.org [
thenalc.org]
For those desiring to know more about LutheranCORE (Coalition for Reform/Renewal):
www.lutherancore.org [
lutherancore.org]
The week began with the assembly of about sixty, mostly clergy, for the first meeting of the
Seven Marks Society [
sevenmarks.org]. This Society was conceived during the 2009 General Retreat of the
Society of the Holy Trinity [
societyholytrinity.org](STS), a pastoral society of Lutheran clergy from at least five different Lutheran bodies who have committed to following the Rule--a rule which among other things calls for praying the Daily Office, frequent use of private Confession, and gathering for Retreats four times per year.
In that vein, the Seven Marks gathering closely resembled an STS retreat in that we prayed the offices and celebrated the Eucharist.
Initially, Seven Marks was proposed as a possible Lutheran body which would select a Bishop and uphold the three-fold. ministerial office of Bishop, Presbyter, and Deacon.
But during the discussion between the Offices it became increasingly clear that the earlies vision had been abandoned for simply becoming a resouce bank for clergy and congregations both within and beyond the fracturing Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. I am doubtful that this Society will have a lengthy existence.
During the Seven Marks proceedings--and staying throughout the week--were four Bishops of the Anglican Church in North America.
The second of the events of the week was the Theological Conference sponsored by LutheranCORE. This was a gathering of the most orthodox teaching theologians of the ELCA, including Dr. Carl Braaten, Dr. Robert Benne, and Dr. Robert Jenson. Their presentations were forceful statements that the church remain true to the faith once delivered to the saints, including upholding the exclusivity of the joining of one man and one woman in marriage, and naming God by the Name He has revealed to us: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
On Wednesday evening nearly 500 enjoyed a fine banquet at the Maccoy Center in Hilliard, where a fiery Tanazanian Pastor delived a speech/sermon on Matthew 16:13-19 challenging the listeners to confess Christ boldly in world which cannot be assumed to be accepting of the Christian faith. He went on to explicitly name Islam as the main enemy of the Church and denounced the proposal for buiding a mosque near ground zero. That drew loud applause, "Amen"s, and even an "OOH-RAH!".
The conclusion of the Theological Conferene dovetailed into the beginning of the COREConvention/Constituting Convention of the NALC. The cavernous venue of the Grove City Church of the Nazarene was used for the final days because some anticpated an attendance of 1500-2000. In reality the attendance wsa closer to 1000, but that would have exceeded the capacity of the first venue.
It was strange to hold an orthodox Lutheran Eucharist in a megachurch's "Worship Center"...particularly since this megachurch had no liturgical furnishings whatsoever. Everything--and I do mean EVERYTHING--Altar, Ambo, Candles, Crosses had to be brought to the site from other congregations. Of course this megachurch's "gathering place" boasts a food court (complete with cash registers), a bookstore (complete with cash register) and a beauty salon (also with cash register. But we had to bring our own offering plates and baskets since at Grove City Church of the Nazarene you make your donations through a "Giving Kiosk" which closely resembles an ATM machine. I now have a new illustration for preaching on John 2, the cleansing of the temple.
The evangelical catholic component of CORE had been given responsibility for all the liturgies (apart from Seven Marks) and they fulfilled their task wondefully. There was no "inclusive language"--God was named as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Many rendered deep bows at the Sanctus. Indeed, some CORE sympathizers from "low church" traditions were heard complaining that "the catholics have taken over." So be it.
But how much an influence the evangelical catholic will have on NALC remains to be seen. The constitution birthing this new Lutheran body is only a provisional constitution (all up for revision a year from now, with only NALC members voting) and this document affirms only the office of Bishop and Presbyter--nothing about Deacons. A CORE member from the far west suggested that the Constitution committee consider adding an Ordained Diaconate--we'll just have to wait and see.
The highlight of the week was the closing worship service at which the first Bishop of the new North American Lutheran Church was "Installed"--the quote marks because we sang "Veni, Creator" as he knelt, followed by prayer and the laying of hands, among those laying hands a Tanzanian Bishop who is in the apostolic succession. So this was more than a mere Installation but less than episcopal consecration.
That same Bishop, The Rev. Benson Bangonza, Karagwe Diocese, Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania, preached from 1 Timothy 4. When he expounded on the word "rebuke" he thundered, "If you will not rebuke, then YOU SHALL BE REBUKED!".
It was like sitting at the 7th Ecumenical Council as it decreed "let him who will not say, 'anathema' to heresy be himself an anathema!".