The Rev. Dawn Roginski

The Rev. Dawn Roginski

Rev. Dawn Roginski was ordained extra ordinem at St. Francis Lutheran (SF) on June 16. Pr. Ruth Frost was celebrant; Bishop Paul Egertson (retired) and Pr. Dan Solberg, Dean of the San Francisco Conference conducted the rite of ordination; Pr. Donna Simon preached. Pr Roginski was installed as pastor of parish programs at St. Francis on June 17 (Pr. Erik Christensen preaching).

Rev. Dawn Roginski grew up Catholic in Minneapolis, Minnesota. She earned an undergraduate psychology degree from the University of Minnesota and began a career in counseling. Dawn then earned an M.A. in Counseling Psychology from St. Mary’s University of Minnesota. Dawn was promoted to program director at a residential treatment facility for seriously mentally ill patients at Boston Health Care in Minneapolis. After nearly 10 years of full-time employment at Boston Health Care, Dawn was called to ministry after presiding at a prayer service and further exploration.

Following a discernment process, Dawn became Lutheran because she felt a deep connection with the theology of Martin Luther and the way he envisioned the Gospel, and because of the Lutheran church’s strong theological grounding. She also did research, read materials and talked to other Lutherans and pastors.

Dawn transferred to Luther Seminary in St. Paul, MN, and came out while attending there. Despite obstacles due to her sexual orientation, Dawn received her Master of Divinity degree at Luther Seminary December in 2002, completing her internship at Lord of Light Lutheran Campus Ministry in Ann Arbor, MI. As the only out M.Div. student she was aware of in her first year at Luther, other closeted students actively avoided her, leaving her isolated from their support. She gained strength from Pr. Anita Hill and the congregation of St. Paul-Reformation, where she became a member. In 2002, Dawn embarked on the course of eventual indefinite postponement of her approval for ordination in the ELCA. Her approval committee has never followed-up. Dawn joined the ELM Roster in 2002.

In 2003, Dawn became a part-time chaplain and part-time youth care worker at a residential treatment center for children in Kansas City, MO, providing care for seriously emotionally disturbed children and youth. Dawn developed a youth ministry program from the ground up, including groups and worship. As her programs grew, she was offered the position of full-time chaplain.

As a volunteer, Dawn’s service includes having served in leadership roles on the Lutherans Concerned/North America board.  Dawn loves music and plays in the Mid-America Freedom Band. Dawn serves on the Roster Council for ELM.  Rev. Dawn Roginski was received onto the ELCA clergy roster in 2010.

The Rev. Megan Rohrer

The Rev. Megan Rohrer

Megan Rohrer, is a native of Sioux Falls, SD. A graduate of Augustana College in Sioux Falls, Megan received a master of divinity at Pacific School of Religion in Berkeley, California where Megan is currently a candidate for the Doctorate of Ministry degree.

The first openly transgender pastor to be ordained in the Lutheran church, Megan has been the Executive Director of Welcome (a ministry to the homeless and hungry in the Polk Gultch District of San Francisco, CA) at Old First Presbyterian Church since June of 2002 – and has been called to this ministry by a joint call from herchurch (Ebenezer Lutheran), Christ Church Lutheran, St. Francis Lutheran and Sts. Mary and Martha Lutheran. Megan was ordained extraordinarily on November 18, 2006.

Known for creative leadership and ministry, Megan has worked with congregations across the Bay Area to transform unused land into community gardens. The most notable of these gardens is the Free Farm, a 1/3 acre farm on the former site of St. Paulus Lutheran Church which is expected to harvest 12,000 pounds of free food that will be given away to local residents.

Preaching and teaching across the country, an author for the Human Rights Campaign’s (HRC) Out In Season: A Transgender Encounter With the Church Year and as a facilitator of HRC’s Gender Identity and Our Faith Communities– A Congregational Guide for Transgender Advocacy, Megan is known as a leader in transgender theology.

Currently, Megan is working in partnership with the GLBT Historical Society in San Francisco on the Vanguard Project. Tenderloin street youth founded the organization Vanguard in 1966 with the support of liberal ministers, and in the context of a federal anti-poverty campaign. It is considered to be the nation’s first gay liberation organization and first gay/transgender youth organization. This project creates a series of opportunities for people living in poverty and those working on anti-poverty campaigns, to consider their place in the city vis-à-vis creative engagement with Vanguard Magazine, published from 1966-68.

Megan also served as the Director of Candidacy for Extraordinary Lutheran Ministries, on the board of Soujourn Chaplaincy at San Francisco General Hospital is an associate of the Franciscan Sisters of Little Falls, MN.

Rev. Megan Rohrer was received onto the ELCA clergy roster in 2010.

The Rev. Arlo Peterson

Inside the office of Pastor Arlo Peterson is an array of flying pigs. Not just pigs. Flying pink pigs. According to Pastor Peterson it has been said that “there will be a gay Lutheran pastor when pigs fly.” Well, on Sunday, November 11, 2001 the pink oinkers got their take off orders as Arlo David Peterson was installed as pastor of Holy Trinity Lutheran Church in Key West, Florida.

Ordained as a Lutheran pastor in 1974, Arlo David Peterson served congregations on Long Island, New York, and in the New York City borough of Queens until moving to Key West in 1994 to become a case manager for AIDS Help, the local organization that has a multi-faceted response to the AIDS epidemic in the Florida Keys.

“I came down here because I had friends who had suffered from HIV disease and I wanted to do something to help. I have a gift of being able to get close to people, then back away at their death and not be destroyed by it. It’s a very difficult thing to do. But I felt God was calling me to do this work.”

So Arlo and his partner, Michael Cilento, sold everything they had in New York and moved to Key West. Peterson remained on the ELCA clergy roster until he was removed without his knowledge in 1999.

He only became aware of his removal when the ELCA Board of Pensions contacted him two years later, inquiring about his status as he was still being covered by the ELCA pension and medical plans. It was only in April of 2001 that he received official word that he was off the ELCA clergy roster.

The Rev. Jen Nagel

The Rev. Jen Nagel

Pastor Jen began serving Salem English Lutheran Church in Minneapolis, MN in 2003 and was ordained on January 19, 2008.  She combines urban ministry experience, a love for working with congregations in the midst of transformation and change, and a deep care for the people of Salem and the neighborhood. Her work includes the usual pastoral duties (preaching, teaching, worship leadership, pastoral care) as well as walking with Salem in this time of re-development and partnership–a challenging balancing act and yet one that gives Jen energy. Jen is trained in intentional interim ministry.

She holds an M.Div. from University of Chicago-Divinity School, completed work at Lutheran School of Theology in Chicago and earned a B.A. at Concordia College, Moorhead Minnesota. She’s served at Central Lutheran Church and Hennepin County Medical Center in Minneapolis, in Africa, Chicago, Michigan, and outdoor ministry settings.

Jen has served on the Central Committee of the World Council of Churches.  She is a leader in the Minneapolis Area Synod and currently serves as the Co-Chair of the Extraordinary Lutheran Ministries Board of Directors.  Jen’s spouse, Rev. Jane McBride, is a pastor in the United Church of Christ and they have a young daughter.

Rev. Jen Nagel was received onto the ELCA clergy roster in 2010.

The Rev. Craig Minich

The Rev. Craig Minich

On February 18, 2001 Craig Minich was ordained as Pastor of Youth Ministries for the then named Oakland-Berkeley Lutheran Youth Program (OBLYP). Pastor Minich was called by three Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) congregations — St. Paul Lutheran, Oakland, United Lutheran, Oakland, and University Lutheran Chapel, Berkeley.  Pr. Minich is a 1999 graduate of Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary (PLTS) in Berkeley, California.  Pr. Minich established OBLYP in September of 1999 and served as a lay director until his ordination.

In 2005, with the joining of Trinity Lutheran Church in Alameda, a name change was necessitated,we changed the name to East Bay Lutheran Youth Program (EBLYP).  This ministry celebrated its 10th anniversary and serves five congregations in Oakland and Alameda in the Bay Area (Resurrection Lutheran, St. Paul Lutheran, Trinity Lutheran in Oakland, Trinity Lutheran in Alameda, and United Lutheran) and provides opportunities for children from toddler through college age.

Pr. Craig, or PC as he is known by his youth, is also adult chair of the Sierra Pacific Synod Youth Committee.  He was elected in 2007 and before that served on the committee for 6 years over terms as an adult representative for District C and the assistant to the chair.  This youth-led, adult-guided team plans and puts on 4 youth retreats in the Sierra Pacific Synod (SPS) each year.  The SPS is, geographically speaking, a vast synod and takes much effort to pull together.  He and the youth are dedicated to engaging the youth across the synod and to helping create community in places where Lutherans merely dot the map.  “We are spread out, but when we gather, we have a loud voice!”

On the day of his ordination, PC was interviewed by a local news station. On that day he said:

“I have always felt an affinity for teaching and working with kids. We have a strong emphasis on Christian education, building relationships, service and fun!” He goes on, “I have been called to be pastor of Youth Ministries by three strong justice-minded congregations who believe that God’s love is more powerful than outdated church law which is discriminatory and degrading to gay people. The gospel calls us to be whole people and to live with integrity.”

Highlights of PC’s ministry include:

1.Uniting youth from disparate ethnicity’s, social, and economic realities into a unified group.

2.Leading youth in a variety of local service projects to help youth get invested in their communities and to see the wide-ranging realities of people living there.

3. Leading youth to get outside their communities by traveling to synodical, regional and international spiritual development retreats.

4. Leading youth to experience the larger world around them. PC has led groups to Tijuana, Mexico; South Africa; El Salvador; and Rwanda.

Craig was born and raised in Land O’ Lakes, FL (near Tampa).  Raised outside the church, he attended Lenior-Rhyne College and was an adult convert to Lutheran Christianity.  He was baptized on April 15th, 1993 at a campus ministry service just one month prior to his graduation. After graduation, Craig worked as a camp counselor at Lutheridge summer camp in Arden, NC and went through confirmation of sorts with his campers each week that summer.

He began to feel the call to ministry by the end of that summer and worked again at Lutheridge the following summer. He entered PLTS the following fall.  He came out to himself as a gay man his second year at PLTS and thrived as he reconciled his sexuality with his call.  He lives with his partner Bruce in San Carlos and loves snow-boarding, supporting the San Jose Earthquakes MLS soccer team, going to theater and concerts, and playing the video game, Rock Band.

Rev. Craig Minich was received onto the ELCA clergy roster in 2010.

Vince Lavieri

The Rev.Vince Lavieri

Vince was ordained in 1977 by the Michigan Synod of the Lutheran Church of America. He served three LCA congregations as pastor in Michigan, in Dearborn (assistant pastor), Albion, and Greenville. In the Michigan Synod he served on the Stewardship, Youth Ministry, and Peacemaking committees.

Because of ELCA’s former policies, Vince was unable to continue on the ELCA roster. He continued in service to Christ’s Church on the Stewardship Commission of the Episcopal Diocese of Western Michigan. Under the auspices of an American Old Catholic church body, he served as pastor in adult foster care home ministry in Greenville, Michigan.

In the United Church of Christ, Vince served as an associate pastor in Muskegon, Michigan. For the Michigan Conference UCC, he served on the Conference Board of Directors, and on the Grand West Association’s Council and New Church Start committee. He currently serves as a pastor in the Ohio Conference UCC.

Vince, a native of Chicago, graduated from North Park College (Chicago) and the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago. He did his Clinical Pastoral Education at the University of Michigan Medical Center. He is also a member of the State Bar of Michigan’s Legal Assistant’s Section.

The Rev. Lionel Ketola

The Rev. Lionel Ketola

The first openly gay seminary student in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada, Lionel’s openness regarding his sexual orientation resulted in the removal of his endorsement as a candidate for ordination by the ELCIC in 1988. For the next fourteen years, Lionel worked in the non-profit sector with a variety of church-related and social service organizations and trained as an expressive arts therapist.

Sensing the Spirit’s nudge to once again pursue his call to ministry, Lionel was endorsed for candidacy by ELM in 2004. On May 16, 2008 Lionel became the first openly gay man in a same-sex marriage to be ordained extra ordinem by a congregation of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada. Lionel is presently involved in a full-time CPE residency at St Joseph’s Healthcare, Hamilton, along with a part-time chaplaincy ministry at Mackenzie Place, Newmarket ON.

Lionel and his husband Steven Loweth were married on new years’ eve 2003, and make their home north of Toronto close to family along with the beauty of Ontario’s “near north”.

The Rev. Steve Keiser

Rev. Keiser

Stephen Keiser is a co-pastor (along with Pastor Kari Hart) at the Lutheran Church of the Holy Communion in Philadelphia, where he has served in ministry since 2000.  His ministry foci include Christian education; leading the congregation in programs of advocacy and justice; evanglism; and strengthening worship leadership.  He shares the congregation’s vision as a community gathered to celebrate God’s welcome and sent to continue the life-giving ministry of Jesus Christ.

He is a graduate of Wheaton College (1981, BA in Philosophy) and the Lutheran Theological Seminary at Philadelphia (1999, M.Div; 2008, STM in Old Testament). Prior to entering seminary, he worked in branch management for fifteen years for Bell Savings Bank and Meridian Bank (now Wells Fargo).

Steve’s involvement with the larger church includes serving on the board of the Lutheran-Episcopal Campus Ministry at Temple University; serving as an admissions associate for the Lutheran Theological Seminary at Philadelphia; conducting candidacy interviews for the Southeastern Pennsylvania Synod of the ELCA; serving as a chaplain to the ELCA Region 7 First Call  Theological Education program; assisting with development for the Bear Creek Camp.

Rev. Steve Keiser was received onto the ELCA clergy roster in 2011.

Email: prkeiser(at)lc-hc.org

The Rev. James Bischoff

The Rev. James Bischoff

The Rev. James M. Bischoff was ordained in the former ALC on 27 June 1976 in Ottawa Lake, Michigan.  He is a graduate of Capital University (B.A. in music) and received the M.Div. degree from the Evangelical Lutheran Theological Seminary [now Trinity], both in Columbus, Ohio.

He served congregations in Michigan and in southern California.  While serving San Marcos Lutheran Church in San Marcos, California he met his partner, David Kroll, in 1995.  In August of 1998 Jim resigned his call to San Marcos Lutheran after some members decided that he should no longer be serving as a pastor.  In the fall of 1998 eighty former members of San Marcos Lutheran formed an independent Lutheran congregation, also in San Marcos, and called Jim to serve as their pastor.  He served The Church of All Saints for five and a half years.  Because he was no longer able to serve an ELCA congregation he was removed from the ELCA clergy roster after the three year period.  In 2004 Dave took a job relocation in Michigan and Jim resigned his call to The Church of All Saints.

Currently Jim and Dave are living in the Indianapolis area and Jim is trying to get into the candidacy program in the Pacifica Synod in order to be reinstated on the ELCA clergy roster.

Eucharist and Rite of Reception and Reinstatement


Join other supporters of the full inclusion of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people in Lutheran life and ministry for an historic worship service. The service is an opportunity for reconciliation for all who have been separated by church policies barring LGBT pastors from serving and points to a shared future of wider welcome. Seven ELM pastors will be received or reinstated to the roster of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America during the service.

Sunday, July 25

4:00-6:00 pm

St. Mark’s Lutheran Church

1111 O’Farrell St, San Francisco, CA

The pastors include:

Rev. Dawn Roginski, Rev. Paul Brenner, Rev. Sharon Stalkfleet, Rev. Megan Rohrer, Rev. Jeff Johnson, Rev. Craig Minich and Rev. Ross Merkel (not pictured).

Celebrant: Bp. Mark Holmerud, Sierra-Pacific Synod

Preacher: Rev. Nadia Bolz-Weber

The service is hosted by the Sierra Pacific Synod of the ELCA. All are invited to attend. Reception immediately following.

Service music will be presented by the Oakland East Bay Gay Men’s Chorus.

All clergy are invited to vest. The color is green. Please arrive by 3:15 if you plan to process.


Contact ELM at info(at)elm.org if you have questions.



If you cannot attend, you can watch it online! Click here.