Closer ties with Lutherans brings windfall to Anglicans

This content was published more than 23 years ago. Some information may no longer be current or accurate.

One happy fringe benefit of the closer ties forged by Anglicans and Lutherans is a $50,000 grant to the Anglican Church of Canada made by a Lutheran insurance company.

Lutheran Life Insurance Society of Canada, a not-for-profit fraternal benefits, or member-owned insurance company, announced the grant at a luncheon following the joint service held by the two churches to celebrate their vote for full communion.

The company’s president, Stephen Taylor, made the announcement.

That service, attended by some 3,400 worshippers from area Lutheran and Anglican churches (many of which cancelled their regular Sunday services to encourage their congregations to attend the joint service) was the culmination of years of dialogue between the two denominations. There, Archbishop Michael Peers, the Anglican primate, and Bishop Telmor Sartison, national bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada, signed an agreement enshrining full communion between the churches. Now, Anglican and Lutheran clergy can move freely between the two churches and church members may receive sacraments in either church.

Anticipating the full communion agreement, Lutheran Life members voted last spring to open their membership beyond Lutherans, said Jim Widdecombe, vice president of communications with the insurance company. That will open the doors for Anglicans wishing membership in the society, currently numbering 30,000. Membership is automatic to anybody purchasing the company’s products, for instance, life or disability insurance.

The company will also donate $50,000 each to the two Lutheran denominations in Canada: the ELCIC and Lutheran Church-Canada LCC.

Lutheran Life has asked the Anglican Church of Canada for its recommendations on the destination for the money, but the church has not yet decided. Lutheran Life’s board of directors will have final approval on where the money goes; Mr. Taylor said the donation is not intended to help the Anglican Church with its litigation costs due to residential schools.


Interested in keeping up-to-date on news, opinion, events and resources from the Anglican Church of Canada? Sign up for our email alerts .