Nevada’s AAPI communities are an essential part of the story of our state. They enrich our neighborhoods, businesses, schools, faith communities, and public life.
At the same time, many AAPI communities continue to face discrimination, language barriers, and inequities in healthcare, housing, and economic opportunity.
As people of faith, we are called to reject racism, celebrate diversity, and build communities rooted in dignity and belonging for all people.
At LEAN, we give thanks for the leadership, cultures, and contributions of AAPI Nevadans.
Understanding How ELCA Social Statements Are Formed
A Resource for Congregations, Leaders, and Public Witness Ministries
What Is an ELCA Social Statement?
A social statement is the teaching document of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America on a major social issue. These statements help guide the church’s understanding, discernment, advocacy, and public witness.
They are not political platforms or partisan documents. Instead, they are theological and ethical teaching resources rooted in:
Scripture
Lutheran theology
Worship and prayer
Human experience
Scientific and social analysis
Broad churchwide conversation
Social statements are intended to help Lutherans think faithfully and act responsibly in public life.
Examples include:
Human Sexuality: Gift and Trust
Faith, Sexism, and Justice
Caring for Creation
Faith and Civic Life
Sufficient, Sustainable Livelihood for All
Freed in Christ: Race, Ethnicity, and Culture
Why Do Social Statements Matter?
Social statements:
Shape the church’s public witness
Guide advocacy ministries like Lutheran state public policy offices
Offer ethical guidance for congregations and members
Help the church speak collectively on complex issues
Encourage faithful conversation across difference
Importantly, social statements are not meant to end discussion. They are meant to deepen discernment.
The ELCA often describes itself as a “community of moral deliberation,” meaning the church studies, listens, debates, prays, and discerns together before speaking publicly.
How Is an ELCA Social Statement Formed?
The process usually takes several years and involves the whole church.
Step 1: A Need Is Identified
A social issue emerges that the church believes requires deeper theological reflection.
This can happen through:
Churchwide Assembly actions
Requests from synods or congregations
Social changes or crises
Advocacy concerns
Emerging ethical questions
The Churchwide Assembly authorizes work to begin.
Step 2: A Task Force Is Formed
The ELCA appoints a diverse task force that may include:
Pastors and deacons
Lay leaders
Scholars
Advocates
People with lived experience
Representatives from across regions and demographics
The goal is broad representation of the church.
Step 3: Research, Listening, and Study
The task force begins extensive work that includes:
Biblical study
Lutheran theological reflection
Historical analysis
Social science research
Listening sessions
Stories from impacted communities
This stage often includes:
Surveys
Synod listening events
Congregational engagement
Public feedback opportunities
The church intentionally invites disagreement and dialogue during this phase.
Step 4: A Draft Is Released
A draft statement is published for churchwide feedback.
Congregations, synods, advocacy groups, seminaries, and individuals are invited to:
Read the draft
Discuss it
Submit comments
Recommend changes
This is one of the most important parts of the process because it reflects the ELCA’s commitment to communal discernment rather than top-down declarations.
Questions often asked during this phase:
Is this faithful to Scripture?
Is this pastorally sensitive?
Does this reflect Lutheran theology?
Who is missing from the conversation?
What unintended consequences could emerge?
Step 5: Revisions Are Made
The task force reviews thousands of comments and revises the draft.
This can lead to:
Major theological clarification
Language changes
Additional nuance
Expanded pastoral guidance
Stronger grounding in lived experience
Some drafts go through multiple revisions before final consideration.
Step 6: Churchwide Assembly Votes
The final draft goes before the biennial Churchwide Assembly.
Voting members:
Debate the document
Offer amendments
Discuss theological concerns
Vote on adoption
A two-thirds majority is required for adoption.
If adopted, the statement becomes official social teaching of the ELCA.
What Happens After Adoption?
Once adopted, social statements are used in many ways:
Congregations
Adult forums
Bible studies
Confirmation
Social ministry reflection
Public engagement discussions
Advocacy Ministries
Organizations like Lutheran state public policy offices use them as grounding documents for advocacy and public witness.
Church Leaders
Pastors and bishops may use them when addressing ethical or social issues.
Individual Lutherans
Members may use them to deepen their own discernment and civic engagement.
As Nevada’s energy demand grows, a new question is emerging: who gets priority?
NV Energy has said it plans to stop supplying power to Liberty Utilities by May 2027, affecting roughly 49,000 Lake Tahoe-area customers who will need a new power source. Reports connect this shift to rising electricity demand in Northern Nevada, especially from expanding data centers.
Data centers already used an estimated 22% of Nevada’s electricity in 2024, and that number could rise to 35% by 2030.
Supporters point to jobs, tax revenue, and economic growth. But communities are also asking faithful and practical questions:
Who pays when the grid is strained? Who bears the burden of higher utility costs? What happens to air quality, water use, noise, drought stress, and residential access to power?
At LEAN, we believe Nevada’s energy future must put residents, workers, vulnerable communities, and the common good at the center. Data centers should not come at the expense of families simply trying to keep the lights on.Read more
May is National Asthma and Allergy Awareness Month, and in Nevada, this hits close to home.
When temperatures soar, air quality suffers. Dust storms, extreme heat, and air pollution do not just make us uncomfortable; they can trigger asthma attacks, worsen allergies, and send our neighbors to the ER. A recent report by the American Lung Association ranks Las Vegas in the top 15.
And who bears the heaviest burden?
Families in under-resourced communities. Neighbors who cannot afford to keep the AC running. Households without clean indoor air. Communities that are often the last to see relief while utility bills continue to rise.
Clean energy is not just about the environment.
It is about breath. It is about health. It is about justice.
At LEAN, we are committed to a Nevada where every neighbor can live with dignity, equity, and clean air to breathe.