We church people are flawed, stumbling, redeemed saints. But can we handle that fact? What do we do when our church has deeply hurt people or creation? Apologize? Admit that we’re missing something?
We should take an honest look at the difficult realities of the church’s complicity in slavery, segregation, and racism. If you have any doubts that this was also a reality for Lutheran churches in North America, a closer look at church history and a visit to the ELCA Archives may be helpful.
Family history
What do we really know about our history? For example, growing up I enjoyed learning about my own family history, despite some of the wrongs that had affected us and those we loved. One relative had experienced domestic violence; another had survived childhood sexual abuse. My grandmother’s grandmother, a slave in the South, was cruelly beaten by a slave-mistress. Other relatives had faced painful family and financial challenges in Norway and Denmark that caused them to immigrate to the U.S.

The White House photostream, public domain | Barak Obama visiting the castle
But I was a little shaken a few months ago when a Lutheran pastor happened to tell me about a castle on the southern coast of Ghana that is quite popular with tourists. From this pastor, I learned that it wasn’t just the Portuguese, Dutch, and British who led the transatlantic slave trade. With a sinking heart, I absorbed (and confirmed via Google) that the Danes (at that pre-independence point in time, Denmark-Norway) had also built slave castles (using slave labor) and from 1671 to 1803 trafficked and enslaved people who looked like me.
In other words, my people were hurt by my people.
Church history
It gets worse. The pastor described how some of my people were locked in the pitch-dark, damp lower levels of the castle, subject to torture and rape before being shipped off to enslavement across a vast ocean. At the same time, in the upper levels of the castle, where light streamed in, some of my people held worship, sang hymns, and said prayers.
History matters, as author Meghan Johnston Aelabouni writes, “not only to us who call ourselves Lutheran Christians today, but to our neighbors who have suffered because of the sins of the church, and those who have looked to the church for hope and help only to find a closed door.”
Turn back to God
Some aren’t afraid to apologize. In 1994, the ELCA apologized for the anti-Semitic writings of Martin Luther, which contributed to the Holocaust, as well as the complicity of most German Lutheran churches during the Nazi regime.
And at its 2019 Churchwide Assembly, ELCA voting members took several reparative measures, including adopting a strategy toward authentic diversity, adopting a resolution to commemorate June 17 as a day of repentance in the ELCA for the martyrdom of the nine people who were shot and killed June 17, 2015, and adopting a resolution to condemn white supremacy.
Grounded in God’s word and the work of repentance, we as church people can turn away from everything that is not love and turn back to God. In learning to walk with God and each other, we open the way for healing and reconciliation in the world. Because it’s entirely possible that what we’re really missing is simply this: each other.
The blog first ran as a Welcome column by Elizabeth Hunter in the November 2018 issue of Gather magazine which she edits. The references to the 2019 ELCA Churchwide Assembly were added later.