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ELCA NEWS SERVICE

May 12, 2006  

Goal of Incorporation Within Sight for Lutheran Men in Mission
06-068-FI

     CHICAGO (ELCA) -- The "founding fathers" of Lutheran Men in
Mission (LMM) wanted the organization to be more than the men's
organization of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
(ELCA).  They wanted it to be a financially independent ministry
that would help men in the ELCA grow in their relationships with
Jesus Christ, their families, women and other men.
     Since it was organized in 1988 the intent of LMM has been to
"stand on its own two feet" and be in a position to support the
ELCA, said Heber Rast, Cameron, S.C., LMM president.  "We think
self-incorporation is what our men have long had in mind," he
said.
     LMM was housed in the ELCA's former Division for
Congregational Life and Division for Congregational Ministries.
"What that has meant financially is that those units have
supplied LMM office space," program money, and salary and
benefits for a support staff position, said Doug Haugen, LMM
director, who serves also as men's ministry specialist for ELCA
Evangelical Outreach and Congregational Mission.
     "Evangelical Outreach and Congregational Mission is a very
natural place for men to relate (to the ELCA) because we are
dealing with churchmen who deal in all the areas of mission,
congregational development, education and evangelism," Haugen
said.
     In April the ELCA Church Council supported LMM's desire to
become "a separately incorporated 501(c)(3) organization with a
strong relationship to the church structure through a
relationship with the Evangelical Outreach and Congregational
Mission unit and engagement with all units of the church."  The
council referred the matter to its legal and constitutional
review committee.
     LMM being separately incorporated while maintaining its
relationship with the ELCA through a churchwide unit "gives us a
greater identity within the church, and it allows us to more
fully devote our energies to men's ministry," Haugen said.
     Most people will not notice a change in LMM's relationship
with the ELCA, Rast said.  "We will still go about supporting the
church and all units of the church.  This will give us a little
more freedom to choose how that support may be," he said.
     "For the guy who commits his gifts to LMM and then comes to
our assembly and votes as a delegate on the direction of the
organization, ownership is going to be a big part of that,"
Haugen said.  "It's a sense of ownership on the part of those who
give direction to the ministry and who benefit from the
ministry," he said.
     When the ELCA was formed in 1987 from the merger of three
Lutheran church bodies, some men felt that the men's
organizations of those churches had been abandoned, Rast said.
"They don't want that to happen again, and being in charge of our
own destiny will make it up to us and not up to anyone else," he
said.
     The 2005 LMM Assembly passed a resolution that the LMM board
"pursue a structure of incorporation that would allow for optimal
ministry to men in the congregations and communities that
surround them."
     "We trust that in 2008, when we have our next triennial
meeting, there will be a great celebration," Haugen said.  "It
will be a celebration of the 20th anniversary of Lutheran Men in
Mission and yet the rebirth of it as well with a whole new energy
and emphasis."
-- -- --
     The homepage for Lutheran Men in Mission is at
http://www.ELCA.org/lmm/ on the ELCA Web site.

For information contact:
John Brooks, Director (773) 380-2958 or [log in to unmask]
http://www.elca.org/news
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