History of Synodical Conference
The Synodical Conference
Founded on Fundamental Unity
150th Anniversary of the Founding of the Evangelical Lutheran Synodical Conference
150th Anniversary of the Founding of the Evangelical Lutheran Synodical Conference of North America — Worship Service & Presentation —View: The Synodical Conference: Founded on Fundamental Unity
Presenter: Pastor Peter Prange
A worship service and presentation commemorating the 150th anniversary of the Synodical Conference.
On July 10, 1872, Professor Carl Ferdinand Wilhelm Walther stepped into the pulpit at Pastor Johann Bading’s church, St. John, Milwaukee, and exclaimed, “O blessed and holy day!” He was preaching the opening sermon at the inaugural convention of the Evangelical Lutheran Synodical Conference of North America and expressing his unmitigated joy that he had lived to see this day. With the Spirit’s help, six confessional Lutheran church bodies in the American Midwest had forged a gospel ministry partnership that could and would have a profound impact on American and world Lutheranism for decades.
But had these synods discovered complete doctrinal agreement? They hadn’t, nor did they expect to find it. Instead, the Synodical Conference was founded on what Walther described as “fundamental unity,” as Pastor Peter M. Prange explains in this presentation to mark the 150th anniversary of the Synodical Conference’s first convention.
View PDF: The Synodical Conference: Founded on Fundamental Unity