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Association of Evangelical Lutheran Churches

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495: 25: 349:, a coordinating advisory organization for the LCMS, ALC, and LCA, who had authored "A Call for Lutheran Union" in 1978. These two churches, both also more moderate than the LCMS, with the LCA more historically liberal, finally agreed with the AELC in 1982 to unite as one church. The three bodies officially completed their merger on January 1, 1988, thereby creating the current 289:
In the end, approximately 250 congregations left the LCMS. In December 1976, these congregations established the Association of Evangelical Lutheran Churches (AELC). The AELC was a disappointment in some respects, since it garnered far fewer dissident LCMS congregations than its leaders had initially
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turn in the early and mid-1970s. ELIM was formed when, in the wake of conservative victories at the 1973 convention of the LCMS, more liberal opponents had convened a conference in Chicago to chart out strategies. The conference's 800 delegates promised moral and financial support for church members
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among them, served as the catalyst for merger talks with the American Lutheran Church (formed in 1960, with approximately 2.25 million members), and the Lutheran Church in America (formed in 1962, with approximately 2.85 million members). The effort drew on the expertise of C. Thomas ("Tom") Spitz,
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were threatened with removal from office for allowing their congregations to ordain Seminex graduates who had not been certified by Concordia Seminary, and four were removed in April 1976. In the wake of the Seminex controversy and those removals, a movement to leave the LCMS took shape among
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had joined the LCMS in 1911. The departing English District leadership and congregations immediately reconstituted the pre-1911 English Synod, and a number of officials and congregations from other districts followed their lead by exiting the LCMS.
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who faced pressure due to their opposition to LCMS convention actions, and established ELIM as a network and rallying point for the moderate wing of the LCMS.
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dissident congregations and church officials, most of them members of ELIM. The largest number of departures came from the LCMS's non-geographical
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expected. With congregations totaling about 100,000 members, the AELC included less than 4% of the 2.7 million members of LCMS.
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The designation used for the AELC leader was initially "president" and the title was later changed to "presiding bishop".
82: 306: 301:. The AELC was the third U.S. Lutheran church body to ordain a woman as a minister, following similar moves by the 272:
in St. Louis, Missouri, that led to the establishment of a rival "Seminary in Exile". In 1975, presidents of eight
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In 1986, just before its merger into the ELCA, the AELC had 672 pastors, 250 congregations, and 103,263 members.
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In October 1977, the AELC ordained its first female minister, Janith Otte Murphy of
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The Doctrinal Situation of Three Merging Churches by John Baumgart
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unity in the United States. The AELC's leaders, Seminex president
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controversy, a walk-out by most of the students and faculty of
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Evangelical Lutheran Church in America predecessor churches
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The AELC played an important role in efforts toward
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Defunct Christian denomination in the United States
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"Association of Evangelical Lutheran Churches"
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JSTOR
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Lutheran
Lutheran Council in the United States of America
United States
Separated from
Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
Ministers
Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
Evangelical Lutherans in Mission
conservative
Seminex
Concordia Seminary
LCMS districts
English District
English Synod
Oakland, California
Berkeley, California
American Lutheran Church

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