Rape Charges at ELCA Youth Conference

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Christianity Today August 1, 2003

Three teens charged with rape at Lutheran youth conferenceChurch youth retreats are often fondly remembered as times of getting close to God, committing one’s life to Christian service, and the occasional crush. But attendees of last week’s concurrent “Rainbow of Gifts” and “Holy Commotion” retreats at Trinity Lutheran College in Issaquah, Washington, will remember it as a time of horrific violation.

According to King County prosecutors, three local boys, ages 16 and 17, raped three young Alaskan girls (two 14-year-old cousins and a 15-year-old) during the conference.

“The boys invited the three to a dorm room late Sunday night to talk,” says the Associated Press. “One boy grabbed one of the girls and pulled her into another bedroom, while the other two pinned down the other two girls in that room and raped them, court papers allege.”

Initially, reports the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, the girls were not going to report the rapes out of “fear of humiliation,” but changed their minds when one of the girls was raped again the following day.

Dave Ellingson, ELCA’s local Congregational Ministries Coordinator, downplayed the crime. “We all make mistakes and this was a big mistake,” he told Seattle’s KOMO-TV (video). “And young people are probably prone to mistakes more than many people. But there’s forgiveness and new possibilities and hopefully everybody will learn from this. … [Students at the retreat will] learn to be trustworthy by being trusted. … So, an unfortunate thing happened here and we’ll learn from it and go on.”

Weblog doesn’t do original reporting for this feature, so we haven’t talked to Ellingson. There’s a chance he was misquoted, or incompletely quoted. Still, his comments seem blasé about these rapes under his watch.

“You do your best to make sure all the kids are in their rooms by midnight, and we have hall monitors who walk the halls for at least an hour (after curfew), but you can’t watch every kid 24 hours a day,” he told The Seattle Times. “We deeply regret what’s happened.”

Weblog is not linking to this story simply because it’s horrific. This isn’t tabloid journalism here. This is important to talk about because in Protestant churches, one out of five cases of sexual misconduct are committed by youth.

Rape happens in youth groups, and churches and denominations need to have better systems in place to prevent it from happening. Simply having students promise not to go to the opposite sex’s dorm room, then looking the other way at “youthful indiscretions” isn’t going to cut it. If the Roman Catholic clergy sex-abuse scandals have taught us anything, it’s that church leaders can be held accountable for abuse. According to the Post-Intelligencer, an adult warned a group of girls to be careful around these three boys. If the church leaders knew there was a danger, they could be liable.

So far, Weblog hasn’t seen a statement on the case at the ELCA website or at ELCA’s Region 1 site. If one is posted, we’ll let you know.

More articles

Episcopal Church USA General Convention:

Gay marriage:

Catholics respond to Canada same-sex marriage:

Church life:

  • Church to pay white visitors | Official wants to increase diversity (The Times, Shreveport, La.)
  • Churches launch $1 million ad blitz | Campaign invites people to “explore the meaning of life” over dinner (CanWest News Service)
  • Faith, hope, and charity | The Fort Worth congregation of about 300 at St. Augustine Catholic Church is exposed to a mix of Roman Catholic, conservative evangelical and Pentecostal/charismatic theology and practices (Ft. Worth Star-Telegram)
  • Women seek higher church roles | Even the most closed doors may be cracking (The Shreveport Times, La.)
  • Thou shalt laugh | Church fills void in G-rated fun at its comedy night (The San Diego Union-Tribune)
  • U.S. Lutheran bishop to represent church | Delegates to the Lutheran World Federation chose the Rev. Mark Hanson to be president of the organization in the first round of voting (Associated Press)
  • Married Catholic priests still committed to calling | Philip Cerrato is among hundreds of priests who resigned from the Catholic Church in order to get married but decided to remain involved in active sacramental ministry, presiding at the Eucharist, weddings, funerals and baptisms (The Washington Post)
  • Adapting the ways of worship | Immigrants of many faiths seek growth by heeding Christian culture (The Washington Post)
  • ‘One lively church’ | Merging African culture and Christian faith, The Village Church aims to change Nashville as it puts its faith in motion (The Tennessean)
  • Church votes to secede | Cathedral of Hope overwhelmingly OKs leaving denomination (The Dallas Morning News)
  • Also: Cathedral’s embattled dean gives resignation | Piazza takes sabbatical; church will hold letter, see if conflict subsides (The Dallas Morning News)

Iraq:

  • Troops given another cross to bear | A row has broken out in Spain after the country sent its first troops to patrol Iraq wearing on their shoulders the Cross of St James of Compostela—popularly known in Spain as the Moor Killer (The Sydney Morning Herald)
  • Message of hope | One of Iraq’s most senior archbishops used a recent visit to Croydon to pass on letters and messages to worried relatives, who have been unable to contact their loved ones in Iraq (Croydon Guardian, England)
  • Bishop tells of looting at Iraq church | Baghdad’s only Anglican church is trying to re-establish itself in the wake of the Iraq conflict with the help of the Diocese of Exeter (Express & Echo, Exeter, England)

Crime:

Israel and Palestine:

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