EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH IN AMERICA


Meaning of EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH IN AMERICA in English

(ELCA) the largest Lutheran church in North America. The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America was formed in 1988 by the merger of two major Lutheran denominations, the American Lutheran Church and the Lutheran Church in America, along with the much smaller Association of Evangelical Lutheran Churches. The new church cut across ethnic lines and was designed to give Lutherans a more coherent voice in ecumenical discussions with other Christian churches in the United States. At its founding the church had more than 5,000,000 members and comprised about two-thirds of the Lutherans in the United States. Its headquarters is in Chicago. The constituent churches that formed the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America had themselves a long history of growth, mergers, and consolidations. The Lutheran Church in America, for example, was created in 1962 by the merger of four Lutheran churches. The four were the American Evangelical Lutheran Church, the Augustana Evangelical Lutheran Church, the Finnish Evangelical Lutheran Church (Suomi Synod; organized by Finnish immigrants in 1890), and the United Lutheran Church in America. Lutheran immigrants to the United States in the 17th and 18th centuries organized congregations that combined in various synodical organizations. In 1820 several of them met to draw up a constitution for a confederation to be known as the General Synod. As Lutheranism expanded, additional synods were formed, and by 1860 the General Synod had a membership of about 164,000, or two-thirds of the Lutherans in the United States. Cooperative efforts were limited, however, by the slavery question and the American Civil War, which caused the Southern synods to leave the General Synod and establish their own General Synod in 1863. Further disruption was caused by controversy over the Lutheran confessions. Some of the more conservative synods left the General Synod in 1866 and organized in 1867 the General Council, a federation of 11 synods that accepted the Unaltered Augsburg Confession. Animosities among the three groups gradually subsided, and cooperative activities increased. In 1917 a joint committee of the three general synods, meeting to plan a 400th anniversary celebration of the Reformation, also took up the possibility of organizing a United Lutheran Church in America (ULCA). To this end, a constitution was prepared and accepted in 1918 by all three groups. The Augustana Synod left the General Council, however, and refused to enter the union. From the time of its founding the ULCA worked for the union of all Lutheran groups in the United States and cooperated with other Lutherans and with ecumenical groups, such as the World Council of Churches. In 1962 it merged with the three other Lutheran groups to form the Lutheran Church in America. The American Lutheran Church also arose from various mergers. It was created in 1961 by the merger of three churches: the (original) American Lutheran Church, the Evangelical Lutheran Church, and the United Evangelical Lutheran Church. On Feb. 1, 1963, the ALC was joined by the Lutheran Free Church (organized in 1897 by a group that left the United Norwegian Lutheran Church). The original American Lutheran Church (193060) had been organized in Toledo, Ohio, by the merger of three Lutheran synods composed primarily of members of German descent. These were (1) the Evangelical Lutheran Joint Synod of Ohio and Other States, organized in 1818; (2) the Lutheran Synod of Buffalo, organized in 1845 in Milwaukee, Wis., by German immigrants settled primarily around Buffalo, N.Y., and Milwaukee, who began leaving Prussia in 1838 because they refused to take part in a union of Lutheran and Reformed churches ordered by the King of Prussia in 1817; and (3) the Evangelical Lutheran Synod of Iowa and Other States, organized in 1854 in Iowa by Lutheran missionary pastors from Germany who wished to serve the German immigrants in the Middle West. The Evangelical Lutheran Church was organized in the United States in 1917 as the Norwegian Lutheran Church by the merger of three synods composed of members of Norwegian descent. The United Evangelical Lutheran Church originated in 1896 in Minneapolis, Minn., from the merger of two American churches whose members were largely of Danish descent. After years of discussions with the United Lutheran Church in America and the Lutheran ChurchMissouri Synod, the American Lutheran Church merged with the Evangelical Lutheran Church and the United Evangelical Lutheran Church to form the American Lutheran Church. The Association of Evangelical Lutheran Churches began in 1976 when a group of ecumenical-minded church leaders broke away from the relatively conservative Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod to form their own association.

Britannica English vocabulary.      Английский словарь Британика.