Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Northwestern Publishing House (NPH) [93] is the official publishing house for the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod. Located in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, it produces a wide variety of materials including curriculum, periodicals, books, and worship resources. The publications are mainly for use of churches, schools, pastors, and members of the WELS.
(The WELS severed its fellowship relations with the LCMS in 1961, and also withdrew from the Synodical Conference in 1963.) In 1993, the ELS and WELS, working with a number of other worldwide Lutheran churches, some of which had been founded through mission work by both synods, founded the Confessional Evangelical Lutheran Conference (CELC).
Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary (WLS) is a post-secondary school that trains men to become pastors for the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod (WELS). It is located in Mequon, Wisconsin. The campus consists of 22 buildings, including a library that has over 58,000 volumes and a collection of rare pre-18th century theological books.
Other denominations such as the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod, Evangelical Lutheran Synod, Church of the Lutheran Brethren, also have their own colleges and universities. Valparaiso University is a Lutheran university that is not affiliated directly with a single denomination but shares ties to the ELCA and LCMS.
Historic Designation Study Report: St. John’s Evangelical Lutheran Church Complex (PDF) The Early Years of St. John's, 8th and Vliet, Milwaukee, WI (PDF) Half Century Mark Reached. St. Johannes’ Lutheran Church Will Celebrate Its Semicentennial; Pastor Bading's Jubilee; St. John's Lutheran Group to Honor Its Founders
Martin Luther College (MLC) is a private Lutheran college in New Ulm, Minnesota.It is operated by the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod (WELS). Martin Luther College was established in 1995, when Northwestern College (NWC) of Watertown, Wisconsin, combined with Dr. Martin Luther College (DMLC) of New Ulm on the latter's campus.
It was published in 2021 by Northwestern Publishing House (NPH), the official publisher of the WELS, and intended to replace Christian Worship: A Lutheran Hymnal. The WELS Hymnal Project Executive Committee began preparations for the hymnal in 2013; [ 1 ] the project chairman was Jon Zabell and the project director was Michael Schultz.
In 2003, the WELS began work on Christian Worship: Supplement. It was published in 2008, 15 years after Christian Worship , and contains 88 hymns numbered from 701 to 788. [ 6 ] The hymnal was intended to be used alongside Christian Worship , providing a newer and broader range of hymns, psalms, and liturgical materials.