03/31/2026
Editor’s Introduction: Ethics and Democracy
April/May 2026: Ethics and Democracy (Volume 26 Issue 2)
[1] In January, the Lutheran Ethicists Network held its annual conference in Washington D.C. before the meeting of the Society for Christian Ethics. The topic of the conference, “Ethics and Democracy,” was chosen because of the location and the times. Two of the three plenary papers are published here in this issue of JLE. The […]
For Congregational Discussion: Ethics and Democracy
April/May 2026: Ethics and Democracy (Volume 26 Issue 2)
[1] In this section, readers can find links to study guides as well as questions that will guide discussion based on the articles in this issue. [1] In August of 2025, the Churchwide Assembly of the ELCA adopted the Social Statement: Faith and Civic Life: Seeking the Well-being of All, a social statement that began, […]
Meet Rev. Dr. Laurie Jungling: Program Director for Theological Ethics and the Publisher of JLE
April/May 2026: Ethics and Democracy (Volume 26 Issue 2)
[1] I am Rev. Dr. Laurie Jungling, and I was born and raised in Great Falls, MT. I have been a Lutheran all my life, though I came close once to becoming a Presbyterian (USA). After spending a few years as a full-service gas station attendant in far-north North Dakota searching for myself, I found […]
Hope Alone: Listening to the Global Lutheran Public Witness in Times of Despair
April/May 2026: Ethics and Democracy (Volume 26 Issue 2)
A Story from Malaysia: Standing Together Against Violence [1] When I started as a church planter in the year 2000, I never set a goal to be a prophet or social activist. I do not think my Malay-Muslim friend Ali, who was a businessman, not a religious leader, saw himself as my fellow comrade for […]
Liturgy, Prayer, Power, and the Public Church
April/May 2026: Ethics and Democracy (Volume 26 Issue 2)
[1] I was invited to ponder the following questions for this essay: What might be the contours of a Lutheran liturgical ethic that shapes our civic engagement? How do worship or prayer equip Lutherans to re-define political power? What roles do liturgy, prayer, and preaching play in fostering, strengthening, or supporting justice and democracy? I […]
Cheap Grace and the Alliance between Evangelical Christianity and Authoritarianism
April/May 2026: Ethics and Democracy (Volume 26 Issue 2)
Introduction [1] Alliances between conservative religious movements and authoritarianism are not historically anomalous, nor uniquely Christian. But with democracy and its legitimacy on the wane in the West,[1] Trumpism’s overwhelming mobilisation of, and sustained appeal to, evangelical Christianity has spurred a re-examination.[2] Trumpism shows that the conservative-religious/authoritarian alliance promises moral and national restoration without the […]
On Subscribing to “Christ Alone: A Call to Faith Resistance”
April/May 2026: Ethics and Democracy (Volume 26 Issue 2)
[1] Alarmed at the perceived creep of authoritarianism in the present U.S. Administration, especially at the enforcement tactics of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, this declaration written by a California pastor and modeled on the Barmen Declaration of 1934 in Germany, aims to stiffen and clarify the Church’s public witness as a check against a creeping […]

