Wisconsin vs. Missouri: Which Side Adhered to the Original Synodical Conference Position in regard to Church Fellowship?
Abstract
Ronald F. Zindler’s 1979 paper examines the doctrinal conflict over church fellowship that led to the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod’s (WELS) withdrawal from the Synodical Conference in 1963. Zindler traces the Synodical Conference’s founding in 1872 under C. F. W. Walther, emphasizing its insistence on doctrinal unity grounded in Scripture and the Lutheran Confessions. Walther and later Francis Pieper stressed that fellowship could only exist where full agreement in doctrine and practice prevailed, rejecting “agree to disagree” approaches. Zindler contrasts this confessional foundation with later developments in the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod (LCMS), which gradually adopted more unionistic practices. While WELS maintained the historic position, Missouri tolerated doctrinal divergence, particularly in the areas of pulpit and altar fellowship. Zindler concludes that WELS, not Missouri, preserved the original Synodical Conference stance. The study highlights the tension between historical confessional commitments and evolving practices within American Lutheranism.
Summary prepared with the assistance of OpenAI’s ChatGPT (GPT-5).
