11/02/2020
Editor’s Introduction
October/November 2019: The Ethics of Dialogue and Debate (Volume 19 Issue 5)
[1] In an age of conflict and division between political parties and within political parties, between churches and within churches, American Christians often mourn disagreement, regret the diversity of opinion, and sigh for unity. This issue looks into the reality of disagreement in our nation and in our churches without rebuke. Disagreement, even radical and […]
For Congregational Discussion: The Ethics of Dialogue and Debate
October/November 2019: The Ethics of Dialogue and Debate (Volume 19 Issue 5)
[1] The Journal of Lutheran Ethics hopes to provide reading material to stimulate thinking and conversation among academics, clergy, and laity. To this end, this new section will be included in each issue of JLE in order to encourage constructive discussion within congregations about the topics discussed in JLE. Consider using this section in formal […]
Theological Touchstones for Disagreeing in the Body of Christ
October/November 2019: The Ethics of Dialogue and Debate (Volume 19 Issue 5)
[1] Martin Luther wrote his Small Catechism after traveling and observing how little of Christian teaching most people knew. Four hundred years later, one of us (Amy) had a Missouri Synod Lutheran grandmother who was not permitted to move from lower to upper Michigan with the rest of her family until she had finished memorizing the Small […]
A Different Way of Talking
October/November 2019: The Ethics of Dialogue and Debate (Volume 19 Issue 5)
[1] “For we are God’s servants, working together; you are God’s field, God’s building.”[i] [2] The Lutheran doctrine of the “two kingdoms” has real-life import when it comes to churches engaging in public issues. Because Lutherans believe that God’s realm meets the earthly realm, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America has a history of helping […]
Preaching Across the Political Red-Blue Divide: Using the Sermon-Dialogue-Sermon Method in the Purple Zone
October/November 2019: The Ethics of Dialogue and Debate (Volume 19 Issue 5)
[1] Parts of this article are adapted from Schade’s book Preaching in the Purple Zone: Ministry in the Red-Blue Divide (Rowman & Littlefield, 2019). [2] In the first two months of 2017, I conducted a survey of mainline Protestant clergy in the United States to assess how preachers were approaching their sermons during this divisive time in our […]
The Ethics of Dialogue and Debate Book Review Editor’s Introduction
October/November 2019: The Ethics of Dialogue and Debate (Volume 19 Issue 5)
The book reviews in this issue carry forward the theme of dialogue found in the essays. First, Sarah Bereza reviews Preaching in the Purple Zone: Ministry in the Red-Blue Divide by Leah D. Schade. Schade proposes a sermon-dialogue-sermon model for eliciting grace-filled conversations about divisive topics. Next, we pioneer a new format for a Journal of Lutheran Ethics […]
Review: Preaching in the Purple Zone: Ministry in the Red-Blue Divide. by Leah D. Schade.
October/November 2019: The Ethics of Dialogue and Debate (Volume 19 Issue 5)
9 [1] Good morning congregation, let’s talk about women’s reproductive rights! Or maybe gun control? How about immigration? [2] If a sermon or adult forum on these topics doesn’t elicit some nervousness for you as a pastor or layperson, I bet you can think of several other topics that would be controversial—and likely divisive—in […]
Dear Church: A Love Letter from a Black Preacher to the Whitest Denomination in the United States by Lenny Duncan
October/November 2019: The Ethics of Dialogue and Debate (Volume 19 Issue 5)
Angela Khabeb, Ingrid Rasmussen
Dear Church: A Love Letter from a Black Preacher to the Whitest Denomination in the United States is written by Lenny Duncan, a pastor in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA). Duncan was a “free-agent Christian” until he met the ELCA through an open communion table. This revolutionary symbol of grace and welcome later led […]