I noted that the ecumenical agreements did not envision dual-rostered congregations.
Richard wrote:
Tell it to the good people of Truckee Lutheran-Presbyterian Church in Truckee, CA.
I comment:
I did not say it could not happen, in a particular setting, with particular permission. I said it was not in the documents.
I also noted that at the formation of the ELCA, there had been congregations that, prior to the merger, considered themselves both ELCA and LCMS.
Richard wrote:
Which means that the ELCA was fine with it back then.
I comment:
Maybe. Maybe not. Or maybe later we decided it wasn't a good idea. (The LCMS certainly did.)
Mr. Gale writes, re ELCA bylaw 13.41.04, disputing what Pastor Stoffregen wrote about the ELCA secretary's "authority":
Specifically, it provides that the "secretary shall prepare interpretations, as necessary, of the Constitutions, Bylaws, and Continuing Resolutions of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America." The secretary has no power to proclaim any act to be legal or illegal. And he has no authority to issue authoritative interpretations of synod or congregational governing documents.
I comment:
If, Mr. Gale, by "legal or illegal," you are referring to status vis a vis U.S. civil law, you may be correct. But the constitution says (at least this is how we have interpreted it up to now) that the ELCA secretary has the authority to issue interpretations which are understood as authoritative within the ELCA, how the ELCA officially sees the matter at hand and how the ELCA interprets its documents.
I believe that for a civil court to rule contrary to the ELCA secretary's interpretation of our constitution would be to have the courts meddle in the internal affairs of a church body, and you have noted that they are reluctant to do so.