General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: My daughter in Ohio is having a hard time with the results of this election [View all]mwooldri
(10,429 posts)ECUSA (Episcopal Church USA) is somewhat separated from the wider Anglican communion because they are more progressive than their African brethren and Canterbury wants to hold everyone together. ECUSA is supportive of women in ministry, accepting of homosexuality and abortions aren't always a sin. Other Anglican communion churches disagree on these stances.
ELCA (Evangelical Lutheran Church USA) is certainly the more progressive part of the Lutherans. Missouri Synod (LCMS) is definitely not as progressive as ELCA (no women priests, Bible is infallible, homosexuality and abortions are sins, etc. in LCMS). ELCA's "evangelizing" tends to be through "good works" not proselytizing so because they have "Evangelical " in their name - it's not to be seen as a bad thing. Services range from "Catholic Lite" to "Happy Clappy" - all depends on the community and Church size.
Luke 10:27 is my "litmus test". If a church community hews more in this direction it IMO is more aligned with what Jesus taught and more "liberal" in its theology and philosophy.