Mennonite-Lutheran Dialogue

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The Lutheran Church
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Founder

Martin Luther

Membership

Millions worldwide

ELCA - MCUSA Conversations, 2002-2004

Representatives of the Mennonite Church USA (MCUSA) and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) met in Goshen, Indiana February 21-24, 2002, beginning the first in a series of dialogues between the two denominations. Included in this round of conversation were reflections upon the Protestant Reformation, the experience of each church in the North American context, and the role and authority of confessional writings. A key element in the dialogue was an examination of the persecution of Anabaptists by Lutherans and others, and the healing of those painful memories. In the course of this first round, the dialogue explored each church’s hermeneutic for interpreting Scripture, the role and authority of Church structures, and the relationship between Church and state.

From February of 2002 until March of 2004, topics included baptism, the Lord’s Supper, nonresistance and non-violence, pacifism and the Gospel of peace, anthropology and free will, and others. Throughout the dialogue, members of congregations were given opportunities to meet with and discuss these issues as the group sought to deepen levels of trust and cooperation between our two church bodies. Their continued hope is that our deepening fellowship will strengthen both faith communities for mission in the world.[1]

At the conclusion of the dialogues in 2004, the ELCA-MCUSA Liason Committee issued a summary report titled Right Remembering in Anabaptist-Lutheran Relations (.pdf), which included recommendations for future relations between the two denominations. In November 2006, the ELCA Church Council followed up on these recommendations by adopting the Declaration of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in American on the Condemnation of the Anabaptists (.pdf).

Stuttgart 2010

On July 22, 2010, delegates at the Eleventh Lutheran World Fellowship Assembly in Stuttgart unanimously approved a statement expressing remorse and asking forgiveness for Lutheran persecution of Anabaptists. The statement, titled “Action on the Legacy of Lutheran Persecution of Anabaptists” (.pdf), was endorsed by the Assembly as an act of repentance for "past wrongdoings and the ways in which Lutherans subsequently forgot or ignored this persecution and have continued to describe Anabaptists in misleading and damaging ways," and included commitments to interpreting Lutheran Confessions in light of this history of persecution, and to ongoing dialogue and cooperative action between Lutherans and Anabaptists.[2][3]

The LWF Assembly's approval of the statement was the church's formal response to long-term work by the Lutheran-Mennonite International Study Commission, which worked from 2005-2009 on a report titled "Healing Memories: Reconciling in Christ," (.pdf). The report detailed Anabaptist-Lutheran relations in the sixteenth century, reflected theologically on the Lutheran condemnations of the Anabaptists and other present theological tensions, and suggested paths toward "moving beyond the condemnations." It was approved by the LWF Council in 2009. The Assembly's actions in Stuttgart the following July represented the broader Lutheran Church's commitments to act on the information and recommendations provided by the Study Commission's report.

Rev. Dr Danisa Ndlovu, President of Mennonite World Conference (MWC), addressed the LWF assembly and presented Bishop Mark S. Hanson, LWF President, with a wooden foot-washing tub as a symbol of reconciliation and mutual service. The Assembly also included a service of repentance, sharing, story-telling and "envisioning the future together" in which Mennonites joined the LWF delegates to reflect on the past and commit to a more cooperative future.[4]

Ongoing Dialogue

See also Ecumenical Dialogue, Stuttgart 2010