Declaration of the Evangelical Lutheran Church
in America to the Jewish Community
The Church Council of the Evangelical Lutheran
Church in America on April 18, 1994, adopted the following document
as a statement on Lutheran-Jewish relations:
In the long history of Christianity there exists no more tragic
development than the treatment accorded the Jewish people on the
part of Christian believers. Very few Christian communities of faith
were able to escape the contagion of anti-Judaism and its modern
successor, anti-Semitism. Lutherans belonging to the Lutheran World
Federation and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America feel a
special burden in this regard because of certain elements in the
legacy of the reformer Martin Luther and the catastrophes, including
the Holocaust of the twentieth century, suffered by Jews in places
where the Lutheran churches were strongly represented.
The Lutheran communion of faith is linked by name and heritage
to the memory of Martin Luther, teacher and reformer. Honoring his
name in our own, we recall his bold stand for truth, his earthy
and sublime words of wisdom, and above all his witness to God's
saving Word. Luther proclaimed a gospel for people as we really
are, bidding us to trust a grace sufficient to reach our deepest
shames and address the most tragic truths.
In the spirit of that truth-telling, we who bear his name and heritage
must with pain acknowledge also Luther's anti-Judaic diatribes and
the violent recommendations of his later writings against the Jews.
As did many of Luther's own companions in the sixteenth century,
we reject this violent invective, and yet more do we express our
deep and abiding sorrow over its tragic effects on subsequent generations.
In concert with the Lutheran World Federation, we particularly deplore
the appropriation of Luther's words by modern anti-Semites for the
teaching of hatred toward Judaism or toward the Jewish people in
our day.
Grieving the complicity of our own tradition within this history
of hatred, moreover, we express our urgent desire to live out our
faith in Jesus Christ with love and respect for the Jewish people.
We recognize in anti-Semitism a contradiction and an affront to
the Gospel, a violation of our hope and calling, and we pledge this
church to oppose the deadly working of such bigotry, both within
our own circles and in the society around us. Finally, we pray for
the continued blessing of the Blessed One upon the increasing cooperation
and understanding between Lutheran Christians and the Jewish community.

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