Showing posts with label Weldon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Weldon. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Open Letter to Mennonite Church USA

An Open Letter to Mennonite Church USA
Passion Sunday 2009


We are writing as pastors and people who have ministered in the Mennonite Church. We are distressed by our Church’s exclusion of sisters and brothers who are lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT). Our hope for a Church guided by the radical hospitality of Jesus compels us to invite us all to confession and healing.

Our vocation as ministers is to proclaim and embody the Good News of Jesus Christ, which is the Gospel of radical hospitality and extravagant love (Luke 15, John 4). We are all sinners in need of God’s grace. We believe that we can not deny that grace to anyone seeking to be part of the Body of Christ. We are each called to faithfulness to Christ, accountability in the Church, and integrity in human relationships. We believe that all people are invited to faithful fellowship in this Body, blessing for our deepest relationships of love and care, a spiritual home for ourselves and our children, and the opportunity to fully express the gifts for ministry that God has given us.

Through our unwillingness to extend full hospitality to LGBT people, we believe the Church has lost sight of this Gospel vision and, in so doing, has seriously compromised its witness. Jesus often confronted religious people with their spiritual blindness and offered healing so that they could see not only with their eyes but with their hearts (Matthew 23, John 9). Jesus offers the same challenge and healing to us today.

We believe that now is the time for us to confess and be healed of this spiritual
blindness. Some of us, out of love for the Church, have remained silent for the sake of unity. However, we must acknowledge that the Church is already divided. We have been willing to sacrifice our LGBT brothers and sisters, their families and friends to preserve a presumed unity. While some of us may caution to “go slow,” we are reminded by prophets such as Martin Luther King, Jr. that going slow only perpetuates the injustice. We are also reminded by Jesus and our Anabaptist forebears that the faithful path is not easy or without pain.

As ministers in Mennonite Church USA, we invite all members of Christ’s body in MC USA to join us in this call to confession and healing. If you desire a Church that offers Christ’s radical hospitality and extravagant love to everyone, please sign on to this letter by going to the web site, http://www.openlettertomcusa.org/.

Let us seek a new unity where all are welcome and all are called to an abiding “faith, hope and love…and the greatest of these is love” (1 Corinthians 13:13).

For the healing of Christ’s Body and the sake of the Church,

Sheri Hostetler, Cynthia Lapp and Weldon Nisly

Our Story

The idea for the Open Letter originated in July 2007 at a conference sponsored by the Brethren Mennonite Council for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Interests. There, a number of Mennonite pastors started talking about how to move the movement for LGBT inclusion forward. Some pastors agreed to go on retreat together in November 2007 at a Benedictine monastery in Minnesota to pray and discern a pastoral response. The Open Letter grew out of that retreat.

The letter’s authors – Sheri Hostetler, Cynthia Lapp and Weldon Nisly -- worked on the letter for almost a year before inviting other pastors to sign it in November 2008. (Click here to read the letter they sent out inviting pastors to sign.)

Sheri Hostetler is pastor at First Mennonite Church of San Francisco; Cynthia Lapp is pastor at Hyattsville Mennonite in Hyattsville, Maryland; and Weldon Nisly is pastor at Seattle Mennonite Church.

By March 2009, 106 pastors and others who have ministered in Mennonite Church USA had signed the letter. The letter was released on April 5, 2009, via this web site. At that point, everyone in Mennonite Church USA was invited to sign the letter. Click here if you wish to join this movement for inclusion by signing the letter.