Lutheran church to release sexuality study

The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America this week is expected to announce results from a three-year study on sexuality, including recommendations on whether the church should change its policies on the blessing of homosexual unions and ordination of gay ministers.

Leaders from the 5 million-member denomination will announce on Thursday the recommendations from a 14-member task force. Church members will act on the proposals at their Churchwide Assembly in August.

The Chicago-based church now has no official policy on blessing same-sex relationships. It allows members who identify themselves as gay or lesbian to be ordained but expects them to remain celibate.

The study included surveys of more than 28,000 Lutherans, and members from across the church attended voluntary hearings.

``The task force has, since its beginning, represented a spectrum of the views one can hear from within our church,'' the Rev. James M. Childs Jr., director of the study, said in a statement.

Greg Egertson, co-chairman of Lutheran Lesbian & Gay Ministries in San Francisco, said the church's current stance on ordination of gay ministers is a ``don't ask, don't tell'' policy that leads to ambiguity.

``The church is very uneven in the application of the current policy,'' Egertson said.