Lutheranism Lutheranism is associated with the
theology of Martin Luther, with its official confessional writings found in the
Book of Concord. The ELCA accepts the unaltered
Augsburg Confession (not the
variata) as a true witness to the
Gospel. The ELCA is less
conservative than the
Lutheran Church – Missouri Synod (LCMS) and the
Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod (WELS), the second and third largest Lutheran bodies in the United States, respectively. Most ELCA Lutherans are theologically moderate-to-liberal, although there is a sizable conservative minority. Other Lutheran bodies in the U.S. tend to hold more strictly to
Confessional Lutheranism.
Differences within the ELCA Constituent congregations of the ELCA hold many differences of opinion, and have had disputes over social and doctrinal issues. In part, this is related to the history of having assimilated three different Lutheran church bodies, each with its own factions and divisions, but also to responses to changing social conditions in the United States. Old intra-group conflicts were inherited and new inter-group ones were created. Differences on issues usually reflect theological disputes between various parties. The ELCA is a very broad denomination. It contains groups of socially and/or theologically conservative or liberal factions with differing emphases on various topics such as
liturgical renewal, confessional Lutheranism, charismatic revivalism, moderate to liberal theology, and liberal activism. The socially liberal segment of the ELCA is represented by independent organizations such as
ReconcilingWorks,
Extraordinary Lutheran Ministries, and the
Evangelical and Ecumenical Women's Caucus. What is now known as the
Lutheran Coalition For Renewal (Lutheran CORE) is made up ELCA congregations as well as socially conservative congregations that left the ELCA after it (the ELCA) decided to accept openly gay clergy for ordination and calling. Adherents of
Evangelical Catholicism practice
High Church Lutheranism and include the members of the
Society of the Holy Trinity. Those oriented toward Confessional Lutheranism,
Evangelicalism, or an admixture of the two include the
WordAlone network. Members of the
Charismatic Movement include congregations and pastors associated with the Alliance of Renewal Churches and some ethnic congregations. Additionally, there has been a recent growth in Franciscan spirituality in the ELCA through the
Order of Lutheran Franciscans.
Scripture The ELCA constitution states: "This church accepts the canonical Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments as the inspired Word of God and the authoritative source and norm of its proclamation, faith, and life." ELCA clergy tend not to subscribe to a doctrine of
biblical inerrancy, but see validity in various
scholarly methods of analysis to help in understanding the Bible, a process sometimes called Higher Criticism.
Sacraments Like other Lutheran church bodies, the ELCA confesses two
sacraments:
Communion (or the
Eucharist) and
Holy Baptism (including
infant baptism). Guidance on sacramental practices in the ELCA is provided in
The Use of the Means of Grace, a statement adopted by the 1997 Churchwide Assembly. In addition to the two sacraments, ELCA churches also practice acts which are orders. These include
confirmation,
ordination,
anointing the sick,
confession and absolution, and
marriage. With respect to the Eucharist or the Lord's Supper, the ELCA holds to the Lutheran doctrine of the
sacramental union, that is, that Christ's body and blood is truly present "in, with and under" the
bread and wine. All communicants
orally receive not only bread and wine, but also the same body and blood of Christ that was given for them on the cross. Members of other denominations sometimes refer to this as a belief in
consubstantiation. Lutherans, however,
reject the philosophical explanation of consubstantiation, preferring to consider the presence of the Lord's body and blood as mysterious rather than explainable by human philosophy. The Lutheran belief in the holy mystery character of the consecrated bread and wine is more similar to that of
Catholic and
Eastern Orthodox belief than to the views of other Protestants. Unlike certain other American Lutheran church bodies, the ELCA practices
open communion, permitting all persons baptized in the name of the Trinity with water to receive communion. Some congregations also
commune baptized infants, similarly to Eastern Orthodox practice. The ELCA encourages its churches to celebrate the Eucharist at all services, although some churches alternate between non-eucharistic services and those containing the Lord's Supper.
Social issues The ELCA's stances on social issues are outlined in its Social Statements and Messages. Social Statements, which are usually, but not always, adopted by a two-thirds majority of a Churchwide Assembly, have been adopted on the following topics: • Abortion (1991) • Church in Society (1991) • Civic Life (2025) • Death Penalty (1991) • Economic Life (1999) • Education (2007) • Environment (1993) • Genetics (2011) • Health and Health Care (2003) •
Human Sexuality (2009) • Peace (1995) • Race, Ethnicity & Culture (1993) • Migrant Crisis (2019)
Role of women The ELCA
ordains women as pastors, a practice that all three of its predecessor churches adopted in the 1970s (The
ALC and
LCA in 1970, the
AELC in 1976). Some women have become bishops. The first female bishop,
April Ulring Larson, was elected in the
La Crosse area synod in 1992. In 2013,
Elizabeth Eaton became the first woman to be elected presiding bishop of the ELCA. On May 13, 2025,
Katrina D. Foster became the first woman and the first openly gay person to serve as bishop of the Metropolitan New York Synod. In 2018, the ELCA elected its first African-American female bishops: Patricia Davenport in the
Southeastern Pennsylvania Synod and Viviane Thomas-Breitfeld in the
South-Central Synod of Wisconsin. The most recent ELCA hymnal,
Evangelical Lutheran Worship, includes alternate gender-neutral invocations and benedictions in all settings. All of the psalms and many of the hymns and parts of the liturgy have been altered to remove masculine pronouns referring to God. In 2000, the Cooperative Clergy Study Project surveyed 681 ELCA pastors and found that 95 percent of ELCA clergy thought that all clergy positions should be open to women, while 2 percent disagreed. , is a "
Reconciling in Christ" congregation, meaning they welcome all people, regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity.
Ordination of LGBT clergy and blessings of same-sex marriages On August 21, 2009, the ELCA's Churchwide Assembly in Minneapolis voted to allow congregations to call and
ordain gays and lesbians in committed monogamous relationships to serve as clergy. By a vote of 559 to 451, delegates approved a resolution declaring that the church would find a way for people in "publicly accountable, lifelong, monogamous
same-gender relationships" to serve as official ministers. Congregations that do not wish to call these persons to ordained ministry are not required by these policy changes to do so. In reaction,
Lutheran CORE, which opposed the decision, stated that it would "initiate a process that we hope will lead to a reconfiguration of North American Lutheranism." In February 2010, Lutheran CORE announced that it would secede from the ELCA and form a new denomination to be named the
North American Lutheran Church (NALC). , 37 percent of ELCA pastors were found to support
same-sex marriage. The ELCA, in removing sexual orientation as a bar for candidacy in the professional ministry, joined most of its Lutheran sister churches in Europe, including in Germany, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Iceland, and Austria. The ELCA is also among a growing number of Christian churches in the United States to make this move, which include the
United Church of Christ, the
Episcopal Church, the
Presbyterian Church (USA), and the
United Methodist Church. In contrast, the board of one of the ELCA's partner churches, the
Evangelical Mekane Yesus Fellowship in North America, voted in October 2009 to declare disunity with the ELCA. A press release stated that the board was no longer "in good conscience" "able to commune and partner with ELCA Church that has willfully disobeyed the word of God and regrettably departed from the clear instructions of the Holy Scriptures" that "marriage is only between a man and a woman". This was followed by the general synod of the
Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus also breaking links with the ELCA. In April 2010, the Church Council of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America adopted revisions to ministry policy documents to bring them in line with the August 2009 vote, as well as adding sections on integrity, substance abuse and addiction. The release noted that the revised ministry policies would be posted on the church's website by the end of April 2010. Since August 2009, according to the office of the ELCA secretary, over 600 congregations have left the ELCA through January 2011. Income declined, with revenue of $66.7 million in 2010, down from $76.5 million in 2009. On May 31, 2013,
Guy Erwin became the first openly gay man to be chosen bishop in the ELCA when he was elected to a six-year term as bishop of the Southwest California Synod. In 2015, the denomination ordained, officially, the first transgender pastor. Also in 2015, after the Supreme Court legalized
same-sex marriage nationally in the US, the office of the presiding bishop released a letter informing members that each congregation is free to
bless same-sex marriages or to choose not to do so.
Creation and evolution The ELCA has not adopted an official position on
creation or
evolution, but there is general agreement on interpreting the Bible within its historical contexts and applying critical methods of research. In 2000, the Cooperative Clergy Study Project surveyed 681 ELCA pastors and found that 26 percent of ELCA clergy thought
Scientific Creationism should be taught alongside evolution in biology classes, while 57 percent disagreed. for comment and discussion. The draft statement covers a wide range of topics, from
genetic testing to
GMOs. A section in this report which has been described by an independent reviewer as "a remarkably nuanced analysis and statement regarding a very complex scientific, social, and religious issue." The task force recommends opposition to reproductive cloning, as almost all religious groups currently do. However, the main theological reasoning is unique. Lewis D. Eigen explains: the church set out its position on the matter as follows. The ELCA describes itself as "a community supportive of life", and encourages women to
explore alternatives to abortion such as
adoption. However, the Social Statement asserts that there are certain circumstances under which a decision to end a
pregnancy can be "morally responsible". These include cases where the pregnancy "presents a clear threat to the physical life of the woman", situations where "the pregnancy occurs when both parties do not participate willingly in sexual intercourse", and "circumstances of extreme fetal
abnormality, which will result in severe suffering and very early death of an infant." Regardless of the reason, the ELCA opposes abortion when "a fetus is
developed enough to live outside a uterus with the aid of
reasonable and necessary technology." The ELCA opposes "laws that deny access to safe and affordable services for morally justifiable abortions", and "laws that are primarily intended to harass those contemplating or deciding for an abortion." The statement emphasizes the prevention of circumstances leading to abortion, specifically encouraging "appropriate forms of
sex education in schools, community
pregnancy prevention programs, and
parenting preparation classes." In 2000, the Cooperative Clergy Study Project found that one fifth of ELCA clergy favored banning abortion with a constitutional amendment.
Lutheran CORE, which represents theologically conservative members of ELCA, together with the
North American Lutheran Church, through their Joint Commission an Theology and Doctrine, approved an official
anti-abortion stance in the document "The Lord Is with You" – A Word of Counsel to the Church – The Sanctity of Nascent Life", on December 14, 2012.
Euthanasia The ELCA official statement on "End of Life Decisions", adopted on November 9, 1992, disapproves euthanasia: "We oppose the legalization of
physician-assisted death, which would allow the private killing of one person by another. Public control and regulation of such actions would be extremely difficult, if not impossible. The potential for abuse, especially of people who are most vulnerable, would be substantially increased." ==Ministry==