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What we Believe
With the universal Christian Church, The Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod teaches and
responds to the love of the Triune God: the Father, creator of all that exists; Jesus Christ, the Son,
who became human to suffer and die for the sins of all human beings and to rise to life again in the
ultimate victory over death and Satan; and the Holy Spirit, who creates faith through God's Word
and Sacraments. The three persons of the Trinity are coequal and coeternal, one God.
Being "Lutheran," our congregations accept and teach Bible-based teachings of Martin Luther
that inspired the reformation of the Christian Church in the 16th century. The teaching of Luther
and the reformers can be summarized in three short phrases: Grace alone, Scripture alone, Faith
alone.
Grace alone
Scripture alone
Faith alone
The word "Synod" in The Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod comes from the Greek words that
mean "walking together." It has rich meaning in our church body,because the congregations
voluntarily choose to belong to the Synod. Diverse in their service, these congregations hold to a
shared confession of Jesus Christ as taught in Holy Scripture and the Lutheran Confessions.
The congregations of the Synod are "confessional." They hold to the Lutheran Confessions as the
correct interpretation and presentation of Biblical doctrine. Contained in The Book of Concord:
The Confessions of the Evangelical Lutheran Church, these statements of belief were put into
writing by church leaders during the 16th century. (The simplest of these is Luther's Small
Catechism. The Augsburg Confession gives more detail on what Lutherans believe. Links to the
full text of all the Lutheran Confessions are listed below.
Adapted from A Week in the Life of The Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod, copyright 1996,
Concordia Publishing House.
Lutheran Confessions
The
Three Ecumenical Creeds
These texts are in the public domain and may be copied and distributed freely. The source of
these translations is Triglot Concordia: The Symbolical Books of the Evangelical Lutheran
Church (St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921).
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