6/01/2009

Lutheran Leaders Respond to Slaying in Wichita Church

CHICAGO (ELCA) -- The Rev. Mark S. Hanson, presiding bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA), issued a statement in response to the May 31 murder of Dr. George Tiller at Reformation Lutheran Church, an ELCA congregation in Wichita, Kan.

Tiller was serving as an usher for Sunday morning worship when he was shot and killed. A suspect was arrested later in connection with the killing.

"Dr. George Tiller and his wife, Jeanne, were gathering with the people of Reformation Lutheran Church to worship and to celebrate Pentecost -- the coming of the Holy Spirit to God's people," Hanson said. "In the wake of his death we pray that the Holy Spirit will comfort his family and all who mourn."

"We pray for the courage to be peacemakers, rejecting violence as a means of resolving differences. We trust God's promise that neither death nor life nor anything in all creation will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord," Hanson said.

The Rev. Lowell R. Michelson and the Rev. Kristin M. Neitzel are pastors of Reformation Lutheran Church. The congregation is part of the ELCA Central States Synod, led by Bishop Gerald L. Mansholt.

Michelson and Neitzel posted a public statement on the congregation's Web site, noting that Tiller had been a longtime member of the congregation.

"In the wake of this tragic event, our deepest concern is for the family of George Tiller. We ask the community to join us in prayer for them as they face the difficult days ahead. Our hearts ache with them. We also ask that the family's privacy be respected," the pastors said.

They added that counselors were helping members of the congregation. "We pray for healing and peace to be restored. We offer our thanks for the many prayers of support from across the country,"

Michelson and Neitzel wrote.

In a letter to the ELCA Central States Synod, Mansholt wrote: "In this time of tragedy and sorrow we give thanks to God who comforts us in times of need and loss. In the midst of things we are unable to understand ... we continue to trust in the communion of saints, the forgiveness of sins, and the resurrection to life eternal. In that promise of God there is healing and hope for the whole world."

5 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Don't really understand how Tiller, a murderer of 50,000+ babies, could be a member of a lutheran congregation. Are we sanctioning murder, now?
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8:30 AM  
Blogger bollerud said...

I believe that if you look at the ELCA Social statement on abortion: http://www.elca.org/What-We-Believe/Social-Issues/Social-Statements/Abortion.aspx

you will see that the ELCA is a church that welcomes those on both sides of the issue as the children of God. You simplistic rendering of the work of Dr. Tiller adds little to the conversation except noise, and we get enough of that from Fox news and Rush. There are many reasons to oppose abortion rights and many reasons to favor abortion rights and the church welcomes boths sides of the conversation around the table of our Lord where dispite our differances, we find our comminality in Christ

9:03 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Abortion is murder, and against one of the commandments, right?
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11:38 PM  
Blogger bollerud said...

The debate of when life begins continues and therefore the abortion is murder statement adds nothing to the conversation. I would refer you to the ELCA social statement noted in my previous comment. The taking of Tillers life however does not fall into such a gray area. When asked, Jesus said that loving God and loving others summed up the commandments. That loving others would include considering Tiller as your brother in Christ. It is a call to conversation and caring not ideology and absolutes, of that the world already has too many barbarous adherents.

7:07 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

The Christian Church would be better off without theologians sanctioning breaking the commandment against murder.

God's law is clear.
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10:30 AM  

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