09/2009 LWF Council Unanimously Adopts Statement Asking Forgiveness from Mennonites
Tuesday, October 27th, 2009 at 10:20 am
LWI Council Press Release No. 09/2009
Mennonites Welcome this Move toward Reconciliation, Says MWC General Secretary Miller.
GENEVA, 26 October 2009 (LWI) - The Council of the Lutheran World Federation (LWF) has approved a statement that prepares for a significant action of reconciliation with churches of the Anabaptist family.
With this endorsement, the statement “Action on the Legacy of Lutheran Persecution of ‘Anabaptists’” is recommended for adoption at the July 2010 LWF Eleventh Assembly in Stuttgart, Germany. The statement expresses “deep regret and sorrow” for the legacy of violent persecution of Anabaptists, and especially for the ways in which Lutheran reformers supported this persecution with theological arguments. It asks forgiveness, “from God and from our Mennonite sisters and brothers,” for these past wrongs and also for the ways in which later Lutherans have forgotten or ignored this persecution and have continued to describe Anabaptists in misleading and damaging ways.
The statement then makes commitments with respect to how the violent history of persecution by Lutherans will be remembered, and how the Lutheran confessional legacy will be interpreted from now on in light of this action.
This LWF action was based upon the work done by the Lutheran-Mennonite Study Commission, 2005-2009. Their report “Healing of Memories: Reconciling in Christ,” was received by the Council, which commended the Commission for “its thorough and important work.”
Receiving recommendations from the Program Committee for Ecumenical Affairs today, the Council also agreed that the International Lutheran Council (ILC) is informed about the report and statement, and that ILC’s participation is invited in
affirming regret and sorrow over the Lutheran persecution of Anabaptists.
The Council requested the LWF General Secretary to send this report and statement to the LWF member churches for information, study and discussion, and possible responses. Both documents would also be made available to pre-assembly delegates for discussion at their meetings.
After the unanimous vote, Rev. Dr Larry Miller, general secretary of the Mennonite World Conference (MWC), welcomed the action in a spirit of celebration and prayer. The July 2009 MWC Assembly meeting in Asuncion, Paraguay, had warmly received the news that Lutherans might take such an action and had promised to “walk with” Lutherans in their process. Miller said that this request for forgiveness would require that Mennonites also would change.”You are not applauding for yourselves,” said Miller. “You are applauding for the grace of God in our midst. Mennonites have learned from Lutherans that we are justified by faith alone, because we know that justification produces not only relations between oneself and God but also communion between the churches.”
LWF General Secretary Rev. Dr Ishmael Noko congratulated the Commission for its work, and expressed his hope that the Stuttgart Assembly “would be a landmark,” in view of the anticipated action. “Our children will be proud of this day,” Noko remarked. He noted that Lutherans and Mennonites already are
working together around the world; this action would move such cooperation to a new level.
Referring to the MWC global conference in Asuncion, attended by the LWF general secretary and his assistant for ecumenical affairs Dr Kathryn Johnson, Noko added, “[We] wept like children in Paraguay when we saw how the Mennonites would embrace us.”
The dialogue reconciliation process began in 1980 during the 450th anniversary of the Augsburg Confession, when representatives of Mennonite churches raised questions about how they could join in celebrations of a document which explicitly
condemned Anabaptists and their teachings.
In 1980, the LWF Executive Committee expressed sorrow for the pain and suffering caused by the condemnations and called on member churches “to celebrate our common Lutheran heritage with a spirit both of gratitude and penitence.”
In 2002, the LWF Council established the Lutheran-Mennonite International Study Commission in partnership with the MWC. During its work, the Commission had discovered that the history of persecution consistently intervened in their efforts at theological discussion. Telling the history together would in itself be an act of reconciliation.
The LWF Council is meeting at Chavannes-de-Bogis near Geneva, Switzerland. Its sessions conclude tomorrow, with further actions on recommendations from the respective program committees.
More information on the 2009 LWF Council meeting is available on the LWF Web site at: www.lutheranworld.org
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Around 75 representatives from LWF member churches and partner organizations are attending this year’s Council meeting at Chavannes de Bogis near Geneva, Switzerland. An additional 90 registered participants include invited guests, stewards, interpreters and translators, media persons and LWF staff.
The 49-member Council is the LWF’s governing body, meeting every 12-18 months between Assemblies held every six years. The current Council was appointed at the July 2003 Tenth Assembly in Winnipeg, Canada. It comprises the President, Treasurer as well as lay and ordained persons, representing the different LWF regions.
The Council host church, the Federation of Evangelical Lutheran Churches in Switzerland and the Principality of Liechtenstein has 6,818 members, and has been an LWF member church since 1979. It is headed by Ms Dagmar Magold.
For media related queries, please contact:
LUTHERAN WORLD INFORMATION
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Editor’s E-Mail: pmu@lutheranworld.org
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Further information about the 2009 LWF Council meeting is
available on the LWF Web site at: www.lutheranworld.org
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