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Evangelical Lutheran Synod - United States
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Brief History
The Evangelical Lutheran Synod is today typically "American," that
is, it is a "melting pot" of every nationality and background. It has
its origin, however, among the early settlers of Norwegian descent who came to
America during the 19th century. As they settled in the wilderness of Wisconsin,
Iowa, Minnesota and other states they had no churches, no pastors, no schools,
no spiritual leadership. But by God's grace help soon came. Pastors from their
homeland arrived and helped organize congregations. One of the first pastors
held services in a barn and also outdoors under two oak trees at a place called
"Koshkonong" near Madison, Wisconsin. Finally in 1853 the first church
body among these settlers was organized. It was known as the "Norwegian
Synod."
The pioneers of the synod soon came in contact with other Lutherans in this
country. Many of these were found to be very lax in doctrine and practice. In
the latter 1850's, however, they met an outstanding Lutheran leader named Dr.
C.F.W. Walther and recognized in the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod of that day
a truly Lutheran church body with whom they could safely fellowship. In July of
1872 they joined with the Wisconsin Synod, the Missouri Synod and other synods
in forming the Evangelical Lutheran Synodical Conference.
The church Militant here on earth will never find perfect peace and rest. In the
1880's a controversy over the doctrine of election divided the Synod. In 1917 a
merger brought together various groups of Norwegian churches into a new church
body without doctrinal agreement. A small group of pastors and congregations,
however, refused to enter into this merger because it was based upon the false
teaching that man could somehow cooperate in his conversion. The doctrine that
our conversion is due to God's grace alone was therefore compromised. In order
to retain the truth this little group bravely determined to reorganize the old
Synod on the basis of the clear teachings of Scripture. They therefore gathered
at Lime Creek Lutheran Church near Lake Mills, Iowa, in June of 1918 and
reorganized as the Norwegian Synod. The name was later changed to the
Evangelical Lutheran Synod.
The Lord blessed this little flock. It soon began to grown and become strong and
helthy. In 1927 it began operating Bethany Lutheran College in Mankato,
Minnesota. In 1946 it established its own theological seminary also at Bethany.
It carries on an active home mission program and now has more than 140
congregations in many states. It also has foreign missionaries laboring in Peru
and Chile in South America and in Ukraine, Latvia, and Czech Republic in Eastern
Europe.
Having left the old Synodical Conference for doctrinal reasons, the Synod in
1993 joined in establishing a new alliance known as the Confessional Evangelical
Lutheran Conference, composed of sixteen church bodies from around the world,
including the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod in the USA. The Evangelical
Lutheran Synod therefore represents conservative, confessional Lutheranism, and
its prayer is that God by grace will preserve it in its total allegiance to the
inspired and inerrant Word of God.
ELS headquarters are located in Mankato, Minnesota.
Church Body Statistics
| Members: |
20,981 |
| Established Congregations: |
140 |
| Mission Congregations: |
10 |
| National Pastors: |
170 |
| Current Church Body President: |
Rev. John Moldstad (Serving since 2002) |
Contact Information
Rev. John Moldstad
507-344-7356
E-mail: jamjr@blc.edu
Website:
http://www.evangelicallutheransynod.org
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Last modified on March 29, 2006 at 22:34:45.
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