In response to your Q&A, The Difference between Fundamentalists
and Evangelicals, I would like to point out that the ELCA (Evangelical
Lutheran Church of America) would be considered more progressive than
conservative.
The name is the unfortunate result of a merger between the
Lutheran Church of America and the American Lutheran Church many years back.
Some leaders at the time were aware of the draw that "Evangelical" churches
were having and, being aware that evangelism is not traditionally a strong
trait of Lutherans, thought adding evangelical to the name would be a
reminder to Lutherans to be more vocal about their faith.
I have attended both Episcopal and Lutheran churches, and feel
at home in either setting. Although my views are more liberal than either
denomination is ready to embrace, I feel confident that, with time, the
churches will evolve.
Could you please mention that Evangelical is a word meaning 'to
teach Christianity' that has been hijacked by conservative groups? The term
seems out of place in the name of the ELcA denomination, even to Lutherans,
but I think many progressive thinkers would feel comfortable and welcomed
there.
All religious words have many sides to their meaning and
history. In England the evangelical began as the Protestant or Low Church
tradition in the Church of England. In that period of history evangelicals
lived in tension with the Anglo-Catholic or High Church party of that same
church. They also had more subtle variations within each of these 'parties.'
One could be a liberal evangelical or a scholarly evangelical.
Unfortunately, the word today has become identified with an unthinking
neo-fundamentalism. Thank you for reminding us that the word evangelical
was once a much larger word than it is today.
John Shelby Spong
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