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Concordia Lutheran Church (Frohna, Missouri), built in 1839 in the United States; Concordia German Evangelical Church and Rectory, formerly the Concordia Lutheran Evangelical Church, Washington, D.C., United States
The Association of Free Lutheran Congregations (AFLC) is the sixth largest Lutheran church body in the United States. The AFLC includes congregations from the former Lutheran Free Church in 27 different U.S. states and four Canadian provinces. The AFLC is not an incorporated synod, but a free association. Each local congregation is a separate ...
The Evangelical Lutheran Tennessee Synod (1820–1920), commonly known as just the Tennessee Synod, was a Lutheran church body known for its staunch adherence to the Augsburg Confession and commitment to confessional Lutheranism. The synod began with six ministers in 1820 and had forty by 1919, plus ten students and candidates for ministry.
By 1896, Sverdrup, Oftedal, and others felt their beliefs of a "free church in a free land" were being compromised and broke away from the UNLC, forming the Lutheran Free Church in 1897. The LFC's publishing house was the Messenger Press and its official English language magazine was the Lutheran Messenger started in 1918.
The Concordia Lutheran Conference (CLC) is a small organization of Lutheran churches in the United States which formed in 1956. [1] It was a reorganization of some of the churches of the Orthodox Lutheran Conference (OLC), which had been formed in September 1951, in Okabena, Minnesota, [2] following a break with Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod (LCMS).
Association of Free Lutheran Congregations (AFLC): Free Lutheran Bible College and Seminary (Plymouth, Minnesota) Church of the Lutheran Brethren of America (CLBA): Lutheran Brethren Seminary (Fergus Falls, Minnesota) Church of the Lutheran Confession (CLC): Immanuel Lutheran College (Eau Claire, Wisconsin)
The Lutheran Churches of the Reformation hold to Brief Statement of 1932, [23] which confirms the long-held traditional beliefs of the Lutheran Church as documented in the Book of Concord, including: inerrancy of Scripture, divine creation in six days, a young earth, the divine institution of the local congregation and of the local office of ...
Hymnal and Prayer Book: compiled by the Lutheran Church Board for Army and Navy, Concordia Publishing House (1918) [301] The Lutheran Hymnal, Concordia Publishing House (1941) [342] Sampler: New Hymns and Liturgy, Northwestern Publishing House (1986) [343] Christian Worship: A Lutheran Hymnal, Northwestern Publishing House (1993) [344] [345]