The Lutheran Church in America (LCA) was an American and Canadian Lutheran church body that existed from 1962 to 1987. It was headquartered in New York City and its publishing house was Fortress Press.
Theologically, the LCA was often considered the most liberal and ecumenical branch in American Lutheranism, although there were tendencies toward conservative pietism in some rural and small-town congregations. In church governance, the LCA was clerical and centralized, in contrast to the congregationalist or "low church" strain in American Protestant Christianity. With some notable exceptions, LCA churches tended to be more formalistically liturgical than their counterparts in the American Lutheran Church (ALC). Among the Lutheran churches in America, the LCA was thus the one that was most similar to the established Lutheran churches in Europe.
The LCA ordained the country's first female Lutheran pastor, Elizabeth Platz, in November 1970. In 1970, a survey of 4,745 Lutheran adults by Strommen et al., found that 75 percent of LCA Lutherans surveyed agreed that women should be ordained, compared with 66 percent of ALC members and 45 percent of Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod members.[1]
It subsequently ordained the nation's first female African-American Lutheran pastor (Earlean Miller in 1979), first Latina Lutheran pastor (Lydia Rivera Kalb in 1979), and first female Asian-American Lutheran pastor (Asha George-Guiser in 1982).
During the late 1950s and early 1960s, many of the independent US Lutheran church bodies moved progressively toward greater unity. In 1960, for example, a number of such bodies joined to form the American Lutheran Church.
The Lutheran Church in America was another product of these trends, forming in 1962 out of a merger among the following independent Lutheran denominations:
The United Lutheran Church in America (ULCA), established in 1918 with the merger of three independent German-American synods: the General Synod, the General Council and the United Synod of the South. It was later joined by several synods with Slovak and Icelandic roots, thus becoming one of the first American Lutheran bodies to cross ethnic lines. This group, the largest Lutheran church body in the United States at the time, provided the bulk of the eventual LCA's membership.
The merger was largely engineered through the efforts of Franklin Clark Fry, who had served as president of the United Lutheran Church in America since 1944 and president of the Lutheran World Federation since 1957. Fry was known by contemporaries as "Mr. Protestant", a moniker that captured his tireless work on behalf of greater ecumenical unity among Protestant church bodies.
The merger was made official and celebrated at a convention in Detroit, Michigan, on June 28, 1962.[2] Upon its inception, the LCA became the largest Lutheran church body in the United States.
Suomi College, Hancock, Michigan (2-yr.) (now 4 year Finlandia University)
Seminariesedit
Hamma School of Theology, Springfield, Ohio (Merged with Evangelical Lutheran Theological Seminary of the ALC to form Trinity Lutheran Seminary in Columbus, Ohio in 1978)[4]
^"Lutheran Church in America". American Denomination Profiles. Association of Religion Data Archives. Archived from the original on November 6, 2015. Retrieved November 1, 2015.
^"History and Mission". Trinity Lutheran Seminary. Archived from the original on 27 October 2015. Retrieved November 1, 2015.
Bibliographyedit
Gilbert, W. Kent (1988). Commitment to Unity: A History of the Lutheran Church in America. Philadelphia: Fortress Press. ISBN 978-0-8006-0891-0.
Nichol, Todd W. (1986). All These Lutherans: Three Paths Toward a New Lutheran Church. Minneapolis, Minnesota: Augsburg Publishing House. ISBN 978-0-8066-2208-8.
Wolf, Edmund Jacob (1889). The Lutherans in America: A Story of Struggle, Progress, Influence and Marvelous Growth. New York: J. A. Hill & Company. Retrieved 7 October 2017.