Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod (WELS) is a United States religious denomination belonging to the Lutheran tradition within Christianity. Characterized as theologically conservative, it was founded in 1850 in Wisconsin. Currently (2004), it has congregations in all 50 states and 24 other countries and a membership of over 400,000 in more than 1,200 congregations and is the third largest Lutheran denomination in the U.S. (see Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) and Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod (LCMS)).
WELS is in fellowship with the Evangelical Lutheran Synod (ELS) and is a member of the Confessional Evangelical Lutheran Conference (CELC), a worldwide organization of Lutheran church bodies. The WELS is its own independent denomination and is not to be confused with the synods of the ELCA. The term "synod" used by the ELCA refers to administrative districts in different regions of the United States. (example: Illinois Synod of the ELCA)
Beneath the president are numerous administrative divisions addressing various areas of ministries. Among these are ministerial education, world missions, home missions, parish services, and fiscal services.
Synod conventions are held biennially in odd-numbered years and consist of elected male lay members, ordained pastors and certified male teachers. Half of all delegates are to be lay members while the remaining half is divided between pastors and teachers. Synod conventions elect synodical leaders, and discuss and vote on synodical business.
The WELS is divided into 12 geographical districts in the United States and Canada, each headed by a district president elected in district conventions held during even-numbered years. District presidents serve terms of two years.
Wisconsin Lutheran College, a liberal arts college in Milwaukee, is affiliated with, though not run by, the WELS, and there are numerous area Lutheran high schools, Lutheran elementary schools, and early childhood education centers maintained by WELS congregations.
Northwestern Publishing House(*) is the official publishing house for the WELS. It is devoted to publishing Christian literature and WELS related religious materials, as well as several WELS periodicals.
Main WELS periodicals include:
In 1871 the Wisconsin Synod formally declared fellowship (in this context, an agreement recognizing doctrinal unity) with the Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod to form the Evangelical Lutheran Synodical Conference of North America, commonly called the "Synodical Conference." The Synodical Conference was later joined by the ELS in 1917. The fellowship union included full communion among members, the sharing of educational facilities, joint mission and benevolence work, and open pulpit between pastors of the different synods. This fellowship relationship would last for 90 years.
In 1917 the Wisconsin Synod joined with several sister synods in neighboring states, including the Minnesota, Michigan, and Nebraska Synods, to become the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod. By 1930, the merger and other factors had pushed the WELS to become a primarily English-speaking synod.
From 1926-29, a small group of persons and congregations were expelled or voluntarily left the WELS in an incident known as the "Protes'tant Controversy." They formed the Protes'tant Conference.
Doctrinal differences among the synods of the Synodical Conference, especially concerning the doctrine and practice of church fellowship, surfaced during the 1940s and '50s. Charging the LCMS with changing its position on church fellowship, the ELS severed its fellowship relations with the LCMS in 1955 and withdrew from the Synodical Conference. Two years later the WELS publicly recognized the same doctrinal disagreements with the LCMS, but did not break fellowship with the LCMS. Instead, the WELS decided to "admonish" the LCMS to return to its former doctrine and practice. Dissatisfaction over this decision led about 70 pastors and a similar number of congregations to leave the WELS and to form the Church of the Lutheran Confession (CLC). Their chief complaint was that the WELS misapplied the principles of Christian fellowship by not breaking immediately with the Synodical Conference and the LCMS after it had publicly recognized doctrinal disagreements. To this day the CLC and the WELS remain at odds regarding this issue.
In 1960, the LCMS declared itself to be in fellowship with the American Lutheran Church, which the synods of the Synodical Conference had always considered to be more "liberal." For this reason and the ongoing fellowship issues, the WELS in 1961 declared its 90-year fellowship with the LCMS to be over.
After the break, the WELS and the ELS retained fellowship with one another and continue to maintain it today. In 1993 the ELS and WELS, working with a number of other Lutheran synods around the world -- some of which had been founded through mission work by both synods -- founded a new fellowship organization, the Confessional Evangelical Lutheran Conference (CELC). The major purpose of this organization is to function as the theological successor to the Synodical Conference.
The WELS is in fellowship with the members of the Confessional Evangelical Lutheran Conference, all of which meet this requirement.
Christian denominations of North America | Christian denominations | Christian evangelicalism | Lutheranism | Religion in Wisconsin | German American history
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