In Clariton, Pennsylvania, during the...
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In Clariton, Pennsylvania, during the Pentecost and Advent seasons of 1984, the day-by-day unfolding crisis at a local Lutheran congregation was chronicled in the local and the national media. The pastor, supported by a significant portion of his membership, had led a controversial campaign to prod the Pittsburgh banking community to come to the aid of unemployed laborers facing mortgage foreclosures and starvation. The synod bishop declared the pastorate of that parish vacant. The pastor, supported physically by his partisans, refused to leave the parish or to stop preaching and promoting what he believed to be a righteous cause. At last he was arrested, in the chancel, by sheriff's deputies.
The issue has not yet been resolved. Tempers and opinions are hot on both sides.
Nobody can become involved with the drama of the Clariton situation without coming to conclusions that stir the blood and trouble the conscience. It was much like that when Jesus interrupted "business as usual" in the Jerusalem Temple and set religious folk against religious folk. We need to recapture the drama -- and the cutting-edge nature -- of that moment.
The issue has not yet been resolved. Tempers and opinions are hot on both sides.
Nobody can become involved with the drama of the Clariton situation without coming to conclusions that stir the blood and trouble the conscience. It was much like that when Jesus interrupted "business as usual" in the Jerusalem Temple and set religious folk against religious folk. We need to recapture the drama -- and the cutting-edge nature -- of that moment.
