Charlie Horn: Why I support ELM

Each month we are inviting people who support Extraordinary Lutheran Ministries to share how and why they are involved with our ministry. This month we hear from ELM Board Member and treasurer Charlie Horn about when he first thought our ministry was worth supporting and why he’s continued to invest in our mission. In Charlie’s words: 

C. HornSeveral years ago, my home congregation was in the midst of a search for a new pastor.  A few members were pushing for us to consider candidates from the Extraordinary Candidacy Project and, after lots of discussion, the decision was made to authorize the call committee to do so. I chaired that call committee and I can tell you that “breaking the rules” only made things more difficult (especially for someone like me who isn’t comfortable being a rules-breaker). Considering the results of that call process – we have a great pastor who fits well with our congregation – I’m glad to have been a part of breaking those rules, as uncomfortable as it might have been.

Breaking the rules is what led to the formation of Extraordinary Lutheran Ministries and its predecessor organizations. When Lutheran Lesbian & Gay Ministries was founded, its purpose was to fund ministries led by LGBTQ folk, usually leaders not recognized by the “official” church bodies of the ELCA, LCMS, ELCIC, and others.  The  Extraordinary Candidacy Project broke the rules in a more direct way – it approved candidates for ordination who otherwise could not be approved because of their sexual orientation and/or gender identity. As I said, I’m not comfortable with breaking rules, and so it actually took being asked a few times before I finally agreed to be a part of ECP. Once there, though, I realized that what we were doing was the right thing.

Extraordinary Lutheran Ministries continues to “break the rules”, but in a different way. While the ELCA has changed its policies regarding rostering LGBTQ leaders, that doesn’t mean that the church has fully embraced these leaders. ELM helps to expand the opportunities for ministry for those leaders, providing support to candidates through our Candidacy Accompaniment program and internship grants, facilitating peer support through Proclaim, and assisting rostered leaders in their calls by making grants to some of the ministries they lead. We do this to make sure that great LGBTQ leaders are not lost or left behind because of barriers that may get in the way. I am happy to support these efforts through my financial giving, because the results are so tangible and needed by the church. Just as importantly, these efforts take time and commitment, which I gladly give by serving as Treasurer of ELM – and I’m proud to work with some really great people in doing so. And, as uncomfortable as it may make me, I have come to appreciate being challenged to break the rules – over the years I’ve learned that sometimes that is the approach needed to make things right.

Charlie Horn serves on the Board of Directors for ELM and is also ELM’s treasurer. He  lives in Pitman, New Jersey with his partner.

Save the Date: 2013 Proclaim Retreat!

Retreat-ad-colorSave the date for the 2013 Proclaim Retreat at Bishop’s Ranch in Sonoma, CA from April 12-15, 2013. 

This is a beautiful retreat center about 90 minutes north of San Francisco. The center includes a spacious pavilion for our plenary sessions and break out groups. It also has a chapel space that Proclaim can use exclusively for worship. There will be a variety of housing options. Children are welcome, and kids 2 and under are free.

Go to elm.org/retreat for information over the coming months. On that page you are able to sign up for email and text alerts about the retreat.

You support this work through your contributions to Extraordinary Lutheran Ministries. Every dollar makes experiences like the Proclaim retreat a reality–and in turn you  are affecting ministry throughout the church.  Thank you to our wonderful supporters for making this happen! We give thanks especially to the E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation and the Advent Lutheran (New York City) Mission Fund for their generous support of the Proclaim program. Learn more about Proclaim by visiting www.elm.org/proclaim.

Carolyne Schultz: Why I support ELM

Each month we are inviting people who support Extraordinary Lutheran Ministries to share how and why they are involved with our ministry. This month we hear from ELM Board Member Carolyne Schultz about when she first thought our ministry was worth supporting and why she’s continued to invest in our mission. In Carolyne’s words: 

Carolyne Schultz

 I like to jokingly refer to myself as an ELCA “lifer.” Growing up a pastor’s kid, I was surrounded by opportunities to be involved in church both within my congregation and at the national level. These led me to an active role in Youth Ministries.  Often, my attention was drawn to the realities of dual oppressions as the interconnectedness of individual struggles within the dominant structures of the ELCA. While I often felt comfortable and safe within my church community a part of me also felt the tensions of being a multiracial, lesbian young woman.

What initially drew me to ELM is the organization’s commitment to anti-oppression work and social justice on all levels of the church body—a call to not leave behind our brothers and sisters in Christ after policy change—a recognition that our church, just like each of us, remains imperfect.

As a social worker at a non-profit in Denver, CO I often dialogue with colleagues and clients who believe that “the church”, that religion, is hostile toward LGBTQ identified people. There are too many examples of “the church” not exemplifying the everlasting and enduring love of Christ but instead embodying shame, guilt and judgment. Sometimes, many of the times, they are right. We talk about the church, the ELCA, needing to change—needing to be more open, more accepting, needing to be more inclusive. But change is difficult, especially when you don’t know where to start. I support and I give to ELM because the organization emboldens the work of publicly identified LGBTQ seminarians, pastors and rostered lay leaders who are changing the church from the inside, one heart, one congregation and one community at a time. ELM is an investment in change and an investment in a better ELCA that welcomes and accepts us all.

Carolyne Schultz serves on the Board of Directors for ELM. She  lives in Denver and recently completed a Masters in Social Work with the University of Michigan.

On June 5 friends from Inclusive and Affirming Ministries are speaking at St. Luke’s in Chicago

Staff member Rev Retha Benade & Board member Igor Boonzaaier before the march.On Tuesday, June 5th at 7pm Judith Kotzé and Ingrid Schoonraad from Inclusive and Affirming Ministries(IAM) in South Africa will be speaking at St. Luke’s Lutheran Church of Logan Square, Chicago.

IAM advocates that South African religious communities become more welcoming and affirming towards LGBTQ people. IAM works as a catalyst, interacting both with the religious faith communities and the gay community, building bridges through its programming and projects. IAM was an Extraordinary Lutheran Ministries grant recipient for a number of years and has strong ties to the Extraordinary Lutheran Ministries community as an ally in the United States.

The evening will include a status update of the movement for inclusion and affirmation of LGBTQ people in Christian churches and general society in South Africa and elsewhere in southern Africa. The video “Created In the Image of God” will also be shown. For more information contact: office(at)stlukesLS.org.

ELM Welcomes Rev. Michael Wilker as Co-Chair

Rev. Mike WilkerWe welcome the Rev. Michael Wilker to the Extraordinary Lutheran Ministries Board of Directors, serving as Co-Chair.

Mike has been a long time supporter and leadership volunteer for ELM and its predecessor bodies. The Board and staff enthusiastically welcome him to this new role.

Mike writes, “Since 1990, my spouse Judy and I have actively supported ELM’s mission and work.  By our personal experience, prayer and study we are convinced that the ministers and ministries of ELM proclaim the gospel of Jesus Christ compassionately and courageously.” He previously served as a board member and co-chair of Lutheran Lesbian & Gay Ministries and Call Process Coordinator for ELM. Mike was elected to a three-year term on the board and will share the Co-Chair role with the Rev. Jen Nagel.

Mike currently serves as senior pastor at Lutheran Church of the Reformation on Capitol Hill and resides in Washington, D.C. with his family.  Prior to his current call, Mike served as president of Lutheran Volunteer Corps for over six years. Ordained in 1995, he also served congregations in New York and California.

 

Vance Blackfox: Why I support ELM

Each month we are inviting people who support Extraordinary Lutheran Ministries to share how and why they are involved with our ministry. This month we hear from ELM Board Member Vance Blackfox about when he first thought our ministry was worth supporting and why he’s continued to invest in our mission. In Vance’s words: 

Vance BlackfoxI have had the privilege of working with and for youth and young adults in the church for most of my professional career. It was my ministry and devotion to caring and advocating for youth that kept me from being more fully engaged in working with organizations that were focused on justice issues related to the welcome and inclusion of LGBTQ people in the church, the ELCA specifically. My call to youth ministry kept me too busy, so I felt.  I worked very hard to stay focused on the youth groups and young leaders that I had the privilege of journeying with in ministry.

Of course, I knew there were organizations like Lutheran Lesbian & Gay Ministries and the Extraordinary Candidacy Project who were working on behalf of the excluded, myself included, and who were making it possible for LGBTQ voices to be represented at the table.  It was not long after the merger and creation of Extraordinary Lutheran Ministries that I began to realize that some of the LGBTQ youth that I had journeyed with into their adulthood and who were now discerning vocational calls as adults, might be called to ordained ministry and wouldn’t be able to be fully themselves, as God intended, and be a pastor in the ELCA at the same time.

While I am not called to ordained ministry, I had come to realize that my passion for youth justice meant that I needed to offer myself to the work that would help open the door for their journey to ordained ministry and for a greater welcome in the ELCA. I was invited soon after this epiphany to serve on the board of directors for Extraordinary Lutheran Ministries, and have been blessed to be a part of a ministry and movement that has changed the Church and has changed me, for the better.

“It is a privilege to serve with all of the folks who have been doing this work for many, many years.  I do this work and support  ELM to honor them and to prepare for those who will come after us.  Wado (Thank you).

Vance Blackfox serves on the Board of Directors for ELM and is the Chair of the Diversity and Inclusion Committee.  Vance, a citizen of the Cherokee Nation, lives in Chicago and is a student at the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago.

Joel R. Workin Memorial Scholarship for LGBTQ Seminarians Available Now

Joel Workin (left) and Paul Jenkins
Joel Workin (left) and Paul Jenkins

The 2012 application for the Joel Workin Scholarship is now available. This award comes with a scholarship for LGBTQ seminarians who embody Joel’s passion for justice and faith in their lives and ministry. In addition, the Scholar may be invited throughout the year to be involved with various ELM activities. This award is open to all LGBTQ seminarians who are members of Proclaim.  Click here for a Proclaim membership form.  It comes with a $1,000 scholarship which may be used for tuition, educational costs, spiritual and professional development, and candidacy expenses.

The Joel R. Working Memorial Scholarship Endowment Committee includes Joel’s friends and former classmates, the Rev. Jeff R. Johnson and Greg Egertson; friend and former co-worker, Michael Nelson;  first Workin recipient, the Rev. Jen Rude; and ELM Executive Director, Amalia Vagts.  We warmly invite you to apply or encourage eligible persons to do so.  Go here for the application.

The application deadline is Friday, May 4 and all materials must be submitted electronically this year to Director@elm.org. We will announce the recipients May 29th (on Joel’s birthday).

For more information about Joel go here.

If you would like to make a gift designated for the Joel R. Workin Endowment Fund, please contact Amalia  Vagts, ELM Executive Director at director@elm.org or 563-382-6277.  Please consider making a planned gift from your estate to this fund.

Rev. Anita Hill joining LC/NA staff

Anita in El Salvador 2010Rev. Anita Hill will join the staff of Lutherans Concerned/North America (LC/NA) as Regional Director for Minnesota and the Dakotas on May 1, 2012. LC/NA advocates and organizes for the acceptance and full participation of people of all sexual orientations and gender identities within the Lutheran communion and its ecumenical and global partners. Anita will be working on the LC/NA effort to educate Minnesota Lutherans toward the defeat of the proposed anti-LGBT marriage amendment to the state constitution which will come before the people on November 6, 2012. She will also co-chair LC/NA’s committee working at the intersection of oppressions. Anita is a member of Proclaim, the professional community for publicly-identified LGBTQ Lutheran rostered leaders and seminarians.

Anita Hill currently serves as a pastor to St. Paul-Reformation Lutheran church in Minnesota. Anita was extraordinarily ordained in 2001 and was a member of the historic Extraordinary Lutheran Ministries roster. Her final Sunday at St. Paul-Reformation Lutheran Church will be April 29th.

New Calls for Pastors Robyn Provis & Bradley Schmeling

The Rev. Dr.  Robyn Provis has been called as pastor at Salem Evangelical Lutheran Church in north Minneapolis, MN. Robyn served at All God’s Children Metropolitan Community Church in Minneapolis and completed a one-year appointment as Interim Senior Pastor for MCC Austin in Austin, Texas. Robyn was received on to the ELCA roster in 2011. She lives in Richfield with her partner, Kathy Luebbe. Robyn is a member of Proclaim, the professional community for publicly-identified LGBTQ Lutheran rostered leaders and seminarians.

“I am forever grateful to the public ministries and activism of so many. To go from a fear that I would never see full inclusion in my lifetime, to being called to a heritage church that isn’t yet RIC, I am reminded that God has a vast capacity for joyful surprise!”

Darin & Brad
Darin & Bradley

Proclaim member the Rev. Bradley Schmeling has accepted a call to lead St. Paul’s largest ELCA congregation. On March 25th, the congregation of Gloria Dei Lutheran Church has voted overwhelmingly to call Pastor Bradley Schmeling as its new senior pastor. He will join the Gloria Dei pastoral staff in mid June. Bradley made national headlines for being put on trial by the Lutheran Church for being in a relationship with his partner Darin Easler, also a Lutheran minister. Bradley and Darin are both members of Proclaim.

Bradley shared these words about his new call,  “I always knew that God would lead the church to change the policy and open ministry to everyone with a heart to serve.  I’m just not sure I imagined that a move to Minnesota would be part of God’s plan, too.  While I’m very sad about leaving St. John’s, I’m excited about ministry at Gloria Dei.  It’s a great church with a love of tradition and a heart for social justice. ”

Gloria Dei Lutheran Church has about 2,300 members, making it the largest ELCA congregation in St. Paul. Raja David, Gloria Dei’s call committee chair said that, “The people of Gloria Dei told the committee what type of pastor we needed, and Pastor Bradley aligns with those needs in every way. We are honored by his acceptance of our congregation’s call.” The press release Gloria Dei wrote can be found here.

Rev. Jen Rude Received to ELCA Roster

Service participants gather at Jen Rude's Reception
(L-R): Tony Garcia, Rev. Daniel Ruen, Rev. Jen Rude, Rev. Deb Derylak, Tim Schannep

On Sunday, March 18, the Rev. Jen Rude was received onto the ELCA Clergy Roster in a service held at Grace Lutheran Church in Evanston, IL.   Rev. Rude was ordained extraordinarily on November 17, 2007 at Resurrection Lutheran Church in Chicago. She has received a call from the Metropolitan Chicago Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America as pastor at the Night Ministry.  Bp. Wayne Miller presided at the service.

Like the 18 other people who were extraordinarily ordained, Jen was barred from serving in the ELCA for many years because of her sexual orientation. Thanks to supporters of Extraordinary Lutheran Ministries and the members and leadership of Resurrection Lutheran, Jen was able to follow her call to ministry and continue on the path that led to her current ministry with homeless LGBTQ youth on the streets of Chicago. Read more about the historic ELM roster here. 

The Sunday afternoon service included a rousing sermon from the Rev. Dan Ruen, Pastor at Grace. You can listen to it here.   Lutheran blogger Obie Holmen attended the service and you can read his reflections on the service here. 

Many parts of the service were organized by Micah 6:8, a group at Grace that makes clear the congregation’s welcome to all people, especially the LGBTQ community.  This included a beautiful reception hosted by members Tony Garcia and Tim Schannep.