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ELCANEWS  May 1997

ELCANEWS May 1997

Subject:

Lutheran Social Ministries Cross Bridge

From:

Brenda Williams <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

ElcaNews <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Fri, 9 May 1997 14:58:48 -0500

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (101 lines)

Title: Lutheran Social Ministries Cross Bridge
ELCA NEWS SERVICE

May 12, 1997

LUTHERAN SOCIAL MINISTRIES CROSS BRIDGE
97-18-053-FI

     MILWAUKEE (ELCA) -- "Transitions: Bridges of Hope" was a
theme that speakers found easy to address during the 1997 spring
conference of the Association of Lutheran Social Ministry
Organizations (ALSMO) here April 17-20.  At that conference 350
people saw ALSMO become Lutheran Services in America (LSA).
     "ALSMO was and is a bridge," said Joanne Negstad, LSA's
president and CEO, St. Paul, Minn.  ALSMO was formed in 1995 by
the National Association of Lutheran Ministries with the Aging
and the Coalition of Executives.  The design of LSA was a
priority of ALSMO's two-year history.
     Lutheran Services in America is one of the largest
organizations of housing, counseling, child care, adoption,
refugee resettlement, health care, nursing home and AIDS
ministries in the United States and Caribbean.  About 280 social
ministry organizations operating in about 3,000 locations joined
the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and The Lutheran
Church-Missouri Synod in the partnership.
     "I'm really excited about the possibilities of gathering
into one alliance the Lutheran social ministries that the LCMS
and ELCA provide across the country," said ELCA Presiding Bishop
H. George Anderson, Chicago.  "It is such a large ministry ...
much larger than most of our congregations realize."
     "The Bible is about transitions ... into the garden, out of
the garden ... into Egypt, out of Egypt ... into the wilderness,
out of the wilderness," said Dr. Sarah Henrich, Luther Seminary,
St. Paul, Minn., as she led the conference Bible studies.  "How
we handle transitions depends on hope."
     "The church is going to change in the next century.  Who is
going to define that change?" asked Chris Grumm, executive
director, Chicago Foundation for Women.  She invited Lutheran
social ministry organizations to define the church as "a home for
the homeless where resources are in abundance."
     "We are not defined by our needs" but by "the one resource
for which there will never be a shortage," Grumm said.  "The
risen Jesus is that resource."
     "We are living in a molten society" that will crystallize
again, Anderson said.  "The question is whether or not it will
crystallize again around some of the values that we have to
offer."
     "We need to focus the church's resources on the weakest of
our society -- children, children at risk, children in poverty,"
said the bishop.  "If the task is so big, then our ministry must
be so broad."
     "The challenges facing social ministry organizations force
them to cooperate with each other and with other church bodies,"
Anderson said. "You are a premiere example of what our ministry
can be, not just to ourselves but to the whole society."
     "Life is a paradox" where contradictory things are true at
the same time, said Robert Terry, consultant and social ethicist,
Terry Group, St. Paul, Minn.  Identifying paradoxes is helpful in
a time of transition, he said.
     "To work for change, stress stability," said Terry.  You
will discover your basic values and be more willing to change the
rest.
     "If we are mission-focused, that is, if we are really
serving a need that exists in the community and we are competent
and do that well, then there will be a place for us in the
community," said the Rev. Nelson C. Meyer, LSA chair and
president of Lutheran Social Services of Central Ohio, Columbus,
Ohio.  "Our major concern in coming together in LSA is to
struggle together so that we can find a more clear focus."
     "In your packets you have a blue-print for a new future," he
told the participants.  "We did not ignore self interest, but we
put it in its place -- behind Jesus Christ."
     "The tone of the conference is that the fullness of time is
here," said Meyer.  "How can we be constructive and move on into
the future?"
     "Visualizing the future is the key to transformation," said
the Rev. Kenneth L. Bakken, a physician specializing in
preventive medicine and pain, HealthVision International,
Seattle.  "There must be a conspiracy among health care providers
to give up competition for cooperation and balance."
     "During these days in Milwaukee we have celebrated the birth
of LSA appropriately and well.  Now the work begins," said the
Rev. Charles S. Miller, executive director of the ELCA Division
for Church in Society, Chicago.
     "Confidence has given us an immensely good start," said
Miller.  "The future now beckons us."
     "Our LSA journey has begun," said Bernice Karstensen,
president of Lutheran Social Services of Kansas-Oklahoma.  "Our
bridge of hope is the good news of Jesus Christ."
     "Jesus is our bridge from hopelessness to hope," said the
Rev. Roger Heintz, Brookfield Lutheran Church, Brookfield, Wis.
"LSA is a Jesus organization."
     The transition is not over, said the Rev. Carl H. Toelke
Jr., LCMS director of social ministry organizations, St. Louis.
"This is a process.  It is not yet what it shall be, and when it
gets there it's going to change to what it will become again.
So, I'm looking forward to it."

For information contact:
Ann Hafften, Director (773) 380-2958 or [log in to unmask]
http://www.elca.org/co/news/current.html

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