By Bishop Mike Rinehart
When
Henry Melchior Muhlenberg got off the boat in Pennsylvania in 1751, he
records in his journal, “I immediately began looking for German people.”
This is what “mission” was in the early stages of our country’s history:
gathering your ethnic group and supporting one another. In Texas things
were a bit different. The story of Lutherans in Texas begins 100 years
after Muhlenberg stepped off the boat.
As
a part of my education as bishop, I’ve been reading the history of
Lutherans in Texas as recounted by Russel Vardell, H. C. Ziehe, and
William A. Flachmeier. The reading is fascinating. To the best of our
knowledge, the first two Lutheran pastors in Texas were
-
George F. Guebner
and
-
Caspar Braun.
Pastor Guebner had been sent by the Lutheran Synod of South Carolina to
Texas in 1850 to survey the mission needs of the area. He apparently
started First Lutheran in Galveston and stayed only a very short time.
Pastor Braun also arrived in 1850, organizing First Evangelical Lutheran
Church in Houston in 1851, a congregation which he would serve for 30
years.
The next two pastors came from the St. Chrischona School in Basel,
Switzerland, in 1850:
-
Theobald G. Kleis
and
-
Christoph Adam Sager.
These pastors arrived in Galveston in the fall of the 1850. They
went to Victoria where it was decided that Pastor Sager would stay.
Pastor Kleis went up to Neighborsville and Hortontown on the opposite
bank of the Guadalupe from New Braunfels. A letter went to St.
Chrischona saying that there was ample work for many more pastors.
So, in 1851, the school sent their entire graduating class of
1891 to Texas, six pastors:
These men were pietists who stressed evangelical fervor over theological
sophistication. They boarded the Franziska at Bremen on September 2,
1851 and set foot on Texas soil in Galveston on Wednesday, November 5,
1851. They were disappointed to discover that Pastor Guebner had left,
and not a soul was expecting them. They eventually found the
congregation organized by Pastor Guebner, now seven families, who
provided them lodging. Pastor Wendt was elected to stay in Galveston
to serve that congregation. The other five decided to head to Houston to
consult with Pastor Caspar Braun. They concluded that night with Holy
Communion.
Thanks to Pastor Roehm’s journal, we have the details. On the following
day, Thursday, November 6, the five left for Houston. They travelled by
boat, departing up the Bay at 8:15 a.m. and arriving in Houston at 9:00
p.m. There they were met by Pastor Caspar Braun (whom they referred to
as “Brother Braun”) and a candidate for the ministry, J. Heinrich
Braschler (Brother Braschler).
Monday through Wednesday, November 10-12, 1851 the convention was
organized, and on November 10, 1851, on Martin Luther’s 368th
birthday, the First Evangelical Lutheran Synod of Texas was born.
Six men met, with Pastor Wendt arriving on Wednesday. “The Synod” as it
was known was also referred to as “The First Synod” or “The Synod in
Texas.” At 29 years of age, Caspar Braun was now the oldest pastor in
Texas. He was elected synodical president.
Heinrich Wendt followed Pastor Guebner in Galveston. Johann Ebinger
filled Candidate Braschler’s preaching point at Spring Creek (Rose
Hill, near Tomball). The other four pastors headed west for La Grange,
San Antonio and New Braunfels.
Scandinavians
The 1850 census lists no Norwegians in Texas, but in 1846 Knud S.
Knutson writes (in a letter preserved at the University of Texas) that
Norwegians arriving in Texas in 1846 brought with them hymnals and house
postils. A group of Norwegians waited
until The Republic of Texas became a state of the union before moving
in. In July of 1845 they arrived, but their pastor did not survive the
journey. They founded Normany, later renamed Brownsboro.
In 1954 a theological student named Anders Emil Fridrichsen
arrived. He served congregations at Brownsboro and Four Mile, but
after three years moved to Minnesota. It would not be until 1868
that a permanent pastor would be secured for Bosque County in the form
of Pastor Ole. O Estrem, who intended to stay for a short time,
but in the Spring sent for his wife. The first Norwegian congregation
was organized in Norse in 1869. Four congregations would eventually
develop into what the Norwegians called The Texas Circuit.
At about the same time Swedes were organizing churches as well. The
church at Palm Valley (1870) grew, and even helped support the church in
Waco, which was served by (get this) both a Norwegian (the pastor
at Norse) and a Swede (the pastor at Palm Valley). Swedes founded Zion
Galveston (1892), Trinity Houston, First El Campo (1893), Eden Olivia
and Augustana Houston.
The Danish church at Danevang (1895) was one of a very few Danish
settlements, the church grew and even hosted a national convention of
Danish Lutherans. With the influx of Swedes, Norwegians, Fins, and
Danes, the Texas Synod was constantly plagued with pastoral shortage.
Merger
In 1853 the Texas Synod voted to affiliate with the General
Synod, which represented about two thirds of all Lutherans in the
U.S. “This prominent body gave the Texans (nine pastors and eleven
congregations) a sense of solidarity with a national movement as they
struggled with disappointments and only moderate gains.” (Vardell, p.
5).
The Missouri Synod arrived in Texas in 1855 when the Wends settled
Serbin. At a time when Schmucker was trying to alter the Augsburg
Confession, the Missouri Synod positioned itself as a counterpoint to
the American Lutheran movement and the defender of confessional
Lutheranism.
During the Civil War and in the years following it, the Texas Synod did
not take sides in the Civil War. They did not join the General Synod
South, as did the Lutheran churches of other Confederate states. They
remained neutral and loyal to all Lutherans, North and South. But in
1868 the Texas Synod left the General Synod for the more conservative
General Council, formed to oppose Schmucker’s “American Rescension.”
In the 1890’s the Iowa Synod showed Texas a lot of attention, especially
with the arrival of Pastor George J. Fritschel to serve at a new
Lutheran college in Brenham. In 1895 Texas left the General Council and
affiliated with the Iowa Synod, not because of any conflict, but because
of the hope of more pastoral prospects. This ended an era. The Texas
Synod became the Texas District of the Iowa Synod. The Iowa Synod did
not approve of pastors from Europe. A few congregations, unhappy with
the new alliance, broke off and formed the Old German Evangelical
Lutheran Synod of Texas of the Unaltered Augsburg Confession. They
consisted of eight pastors, as compared to the 29 of the Texas District
– Iowa Synod.
1900-1950
By 1900 there were now 10 million Lutherans in the U.S. That year, on
September 8, a Category 4 hurricane landed on Galveston Island, leveling
the island and killing somewhere between 6,000 and 8,000 people. The
worst natural disaster to ever hit the U.S, this hurricane continued
inland and devastated crops and destroyed church buildings of
southeastern Texas as far inland as Brenham. Following this disaster
many Lutherans went north and west to start new congregations.
In 1915 the Old German Lutheran Synod joined the General Council, and
1917 saw a merger of the General Council, the General Synod and the
United Synod of the South to from the United Lutheran Church in
America (ULCA).
At the outset of World War I all things German were met with hostility.
The Lutheran church in Texas was officially a bilingual church, English
and German. Churches and their members received harsh treatment at
times. Congregations began to slowly introduce English. ULCA documents
and minutes were all in English. Many congregations began using English
in Sunday school, even while worship was still in German, Swedish,
Danish, etc.
In the 1920’s the population of Texas increased 24.9% while the
population of the U.S. increased 16.1%. The church was growing
considerably faster than the population. That growth slowed in 1925 due
to hardships caused by floods and droughts and the cessation of
immigration into Texas. By 1926 Lutherans comprised the fourth largest
denomination in Texas. The Texas Synod had 5705 members (30
congregations), the LCMS had 22,292 members, and the soon to be merged
Iowa and Ohio synods had 44,495 members. In all, about 72,000 Lutherans.
1930
brought a merger that formed the American Lutheran Church
out of a union of the German Iowa Synod, the Buffalo Synod (mostly
Prussian immigrants) and the Joint Synod of Ohio (which had formerly
welcomed the Augsburg Synod, the Concordia Synod, the Evangelical
Lutheran Conference, the Indianapolis Synod and the Tennessee Synod).
For an exhaustive diagram visit
http://www.elca.org/archives/churchbodykey.html.
Texas Synod forwarded to the ULCA in 1936 a resolution advocating
a more biblical title for the presiding officer of synods: bishop.
The resolution stated that the term “president” was a “secular term, and
has neither scriptural nor historical basis.” The Texan’s resolution of
course failed. It would not be until 1980 that the LCA adopted the title
of bishop and 1988 when the ELCA adopted it.
Texas churches tended to be small and rural. In 1936, the average Texan
congregation was 225 members, while the ULC national average was 369.
Americanization continued. In 1935 Danevang discontinued the exclusive
use of Danish in Sunday morning worship. The 1935 constitution of the
Texas Synod affirmed German and English as the official languages of the
Texas Synod and provided for a recording secretary for each language.
There was great concern about whether English sermons would be
understood by all. Some churches provided an English service and a
German service. Others alternated languages on a weekly basis.
Periodicals of this era continued to be bilingual until May of 1939,
coincidentally the same year Germany invaded Poland. From then on
English would predominate.
Texas Lutherans wholly supported the declaration of war in December of
1941, and no mention of harassment of German Texans is mentioned.
Lutherans mobilized to provide ministry to the many servicemen and women
coming to Texas military bases. Many pastors felt called to serve as
well. For example, Pastor Oelke, formerly at Schroeder, Kilgore and
Ander, returned to Nebraska to serve as a military chaplain and provide
services for German prisoners of war.
After the war, a boom of church planting began. Only in the 1940’s did
the majority of Texans become urban dwellers. St. Mark’s in Corpus
Christi and Faith in San Antonio were planted. Zion Galveston became
self-sufficient. Augustana Houston became self-sufficient and assisted
in developing Christ the King Lutheran Church near Rice Institute. Texas
churches grew 4% a year between 1941 and 1951. Again the growth rate
exceeded that of the population growth. Between 1940 and 1950 the church
grew about 30% while the population of Texas grew 20%.
1950-1987
In February of 1950 the Texas Synod began its third Houston mission: St.
James Evangelical Lutheran Church, started by Pastor Delmar Dolton, who
just died this past Christmas. His funeral was held at St. Paul’s
Brenham. Pastor Lawrence Bade officiated and I said a few words. Pastor
Phil Wahlberg arrived in Corpus Christi to pastor a faltering St. Mark’s
in 1947. The situation had been so bad that the executive committee had
recommended closing the church and disposing of the property.
Between 1950 and 1960 Texas and Louisiana churches tripled their
budgets. The U.S. population grew 18.4%. Texas population grew 24.3%.
The Texas Synod grew 35.3%. The Texas-Louisiana Synod grew 88.2%. The
ALC reported 53.4% increase. The LCMS 70.3%. And the ULCA reported 80.1%
growth in Texas (1952-1961). Increasingly, Texas and Louisiana started
to grow together.
In 1952, the Texas-Louisiana Synod moved to a full-time president,
citing the frustrations of serving a parish full-time as well as
maintaining the schedule of a part-time president. Pastor Royal E.
Lescher became the first full-time president.
Phillips Petroleum announced in 1954 plans to sell 25 acres in Fayette
County that was formerly an oil-pumping station, with a broad field and
wooded hillside. The executive committee authorized $10,000 for
purchase. When the bids were opened, the synod’s offer was too low. The
highest bid was $13,000. When officials contacted President Lescher to
give him the bad news, he immediately countered (without authorization)
with a bid of $13,001. It was accepted. The synod now had a camp that
would also serve as a central meeting place for synod activities. Today
that camp is Luther Hill.
To continue to fuel the growth, the Texas Synod evangelism committee
decided to train evangelists. During January of 1953, 535 laypersons
from 19 congregations were trained to share their faith. From this team,
150 people from 16 congregations visited over 1100 persons in their
homes. As a result the Synod saw a 10% increase in membership in just
one year.
In 1958 Pastor Phil Wahlberg was elected the second full-time president.
Wahlberg had attended Texas Lutheran College for two years (where he was
valedictorian), Lenoir-Rhyne College and Southern Seminary. In eight
years St. Mark’s in Corpus Christi had grown from 100 members to 650. He
would serve as president, then bishop, until the formation of the ELCA
in 1987, a total of 29 years. He and the executive committee chose as
his assistant Pastor Martin Yonts, who would later become the first ELCA
bishop of this synod.
In Houston, three new congregations organized between 1957 and 1961:
Gloria Dei, Resurrection and King of Glory. Gloria Dei would eventually
dissolve and join in with Resurrection. In 1957 a mission developer
began work on St. Paul’s in Baton Rouge.
Augustana Houston’s Pastor Paul Seastrand began preaching in 1955 on
Galatians 3:28, and the church as an “inclusive fellowship.” While he
was on vacation the board of deacons met and voted six to two in favor
of his desire to reach out to all people “regardless of race or
nationality.” In 1955 they held the first interracial Vacation Bible
School among Texas Lutherans. 37 of the 70 children enrolled were of
African descent. In protest, 18 adult members severed their membership
with Augustana. However, 26 adults joined in that same period, so the
church grew. The following summer there were 100 at Vacation Bible
School, 75 of which were of African descent.
The Service Book and Hymnal came out in 1958, further uniting
Texas Lutheran congregations in a traditional liturgy and reinforcing
English as the dominant language. It is also said to have increased the
frequency of Holy Communion from nine to twelve times annually.
Mergers Again
The new American Lutheran Church (ALC) was formed in 1960 from a
merger of the old ALC (1930), the Evangelical Lutheran Church,
(Norwegian), the Lutheran Free Church and the United Evangelical
Lutheran Church (Danish). Again for a diagram see
http://www.elca.org/archives/churchbodykey.html. One thousand
delegates marched in three columns from Central Lutheran Church to the
Municipal Auditorium, where three General Church Presidents joined hands
as the 3500 participants sang “A Mighty Fortress.” (As a weird twist of
history, the ALC’s former headquarters in Minneapolis now serve as the
Hennepin County Jail.) In May, Dr. Vernon Mohr was elected president of
the new Southern District of the ALC.
Unfortunately, this is where the historical account of the ALC in Texas
ends. Ziehe takes us to 1951. Flachmeier takes us from 1951 to 1961.
Vardell goes all the way to 1987 but his work is on the predecessor of
the LCA, so he doesn’t spend a lot of time on the ALC. When I spoke to
Luther Oelke about this he said, “There is a big hole in the history of
the Lutheran Church in Texas.” Anyone need a good DMin project?
In 1962 the ULCA (which had been formed from the 1918 union of the
General Synod, the General Council and the United Synod of the South)
merged with the Finnish Evangelical Lutheran Church of America, the
American Evangelical Lutheran Church (Danish) and the Augustana
Evangelical Lutheran Church (Swedish) to form the Lutheran
Church in America (LCA). Phil Wahlberg was elected president (later
renamed bishop). He would be the only bishop the Texas-Louisiana
District of the LCA would ever have, serving until 1987. Having first
been elected in 1958, Bishop Wahlberg served 29 years.
Growth in the LCA was fast, but not as fast as the ULCA. It took 25
years for the LCA to grow as much as the ULCA had grown in 10 years: 75%
(from 26,995 in 1962 to 47,437 in 1987).
Between 1963 and 1967 15 new congregations were organized, five of them
in Louisiana. These five doubled the LCA presence in Louisiana. In 1964
Pastor Paul Youngdahl started Love in New Orleans before going on to
pastor the LCA’s largest congregation, Mt. Olivet in Minneapolis.
During those years, some of the congregations that were formed were
House of Prayer Houston (1965), St. Timothy New Orleans, Messiah Monroe
(1966), Nativity (later Holy Trinity) Shreveport. In 1967 the LCA had
their convention in New Orleans. By the end of 1967, the LCA had grown
to an even 100 congregations.
The sixties began a trend that was seen throughout the Protestant Church
in America. At the beginning of the 70’s, there was a decline in
membership that caused the weakening of some congregations and the
closing of others. Because of declining benevolence,
“mission interpreters” (mostly lay)
were trained to go to congregations and interpret the mission of the
LCA. By 1973 the LCA was back below 100 congregations.
Efforts were renewed to start new congregations. In the next 14 years,
the synod would add 31 new congregations, increasing the synod’s
membership by more than 40%. In 1980 Our Savior in Baton Rouge was
organized, and in 1982 Galilean La Place. Vardell says a sense of
“chaplaincy” to northern transplants existed, but slowly they began to
reach out to indigenous Louisianans.
In February of 1984 Covenant Houston became the synod’s 123rd
congregation. And in 1986 the last three LCA congregations were planted:
Joy Richmond, Shepherd of the Woods Humble, and Tree of Life Conroe.
Summary
Someone once told me that congregations are most mission-effective in
their first 10 years. Think about it. A mission developer arrives, and a
small worshipping community is formed. Doors are knocked on. Fliers
passed out. The mission of the church is clear: Grow! And they do. Then
they organize. In a few years they build a building. And then the
mission seems to be to pay for the building, and the parking lot, and
the budget. The congregation turns from an outward focus to an inward
focus.
Could the same be true for synods?
It is time for renewed energy in mission work. Perhaps in our
congregations we need classes on sharing our faith. Congregations that
are outwardly focused take on a different feel. Instead of feeling like
a nursing home, an outwardly-focused congregation feels like a rock
concert. There is joy, laughter, energy, and a sense of shared mission:
to proclaim the Good News, to welcome sinners, and to serve the world in
Jesus’ name.
In every period that the church grew, there was aggressive church
planting going on. People are moving in and moving around all the time.
If we are going to make disciples, we will have to constantly plant
churches where those people are. And in this day of competing resources,
we will have to figure out how to do it less expensively.
Consequently, where people are moving out, congregations will decline.
We will have to help them band together, merge with other congregations,
or share pastors like they did in the late 1800’s. In short, we’re going
to need a frontier mentality.
And finally, one last thought: Given that half of New Orleans is
African-American and half of Houston is Latin-American, the
mission-minded church in this day will have to go beyond Muhlenberg’s
strategy of “looking for German people.”
Bibliography
Vardell, Russell, Striving to Gather the Scattered, The
Texas-Louisiana Synod and its Predecessor Bodies, 1851-1987. © 1988.
Ziehe, H. C, A Centennial Story of The Lutheran Church in Texas,
1851-1951, Section One “The Church was Planted, 1851-1876. © 1950.
Ziehe, H. C. A Centennial Story of The Lutheran Church in Texas,
1851-1951, Section Two “The Church did Grow, 1876-1951.” © 1954.
Flachmeier, William A. Lutherans of Texas in Confluence, With
Emphasis on the Decade 1951-1961.
Addendum
The holes in this history are threefold:
1.
We need more information about the early stages of the Lutheran Church
in Louisiana.
2.
We need a history of the ALC in Texas.
3.
We need a history from the 1987 merger on.
If you have the time or passion to do some work in these areas, let me
know. MWR

Copyright ©2008
TX-LA Gulf Coast Synod, ELCA
12707 I-45 North, Suite 580
Houston, TX 77060
Voice:
281-873-5665
Fax: 281-875-4716
Website: www.gulfcoastsynod.org
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