The Lutheran Confessional Synod (LCS) was a Confessional Lutheran church, characterized by a strict interpretation of the Lutheran Confessions and a historical liturgy. Organized in 1994, when Christ Lutheran Church in Decatur, Illinois, broke away from the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, it initially declared doctrinal agreement with the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod and the Evangelical Lutheran Synod,[1][2][3] but broke fellowship with those two synods on June 14, 1997, because of differences in the doctrine of the ministry and the Lord's Supper.[1][4] The LCS organized the Johann Gerhard Institute (a denominational publishing house) and St. Anselm Theological Seminary in 1996.[1]
^Moldstad, John A. (June–September 2011). "Public Ministry: ELS Perspective"(PDF). Lutheran Synod Quarterly. 51 (2–3): 143–206. Retrieved January 8, 2020.
^"The Bishop's Page". The Lutheran Confessional Synod. Archived from the original on February 8, 2005. Retrieved January 8, 2020.
DeJaynes, Randy Lee. "Come out from among them ...' : a journey out of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. Decatur, IL: Johann Gerhard Institute, 1996.