In this Release:
  
  LCMS
  Congregation Invites Entire Synod to Participate in Promise Keepers
  
  
    Dear Friends in Christ:
    As you may be aware a Promise Keepers event is scheduled to happen in Portland, OR on
    July 21-22, 2000.
    The Men's Ministries of Beautiful Savior Lutheran Church, Portland, OR (9800 SE 92nd
    Ave, 788-7000) would like to invite you to stay at Beautiful Savior Church for the night
    and receive a free continental breakfast, and possibly (depending on numbers of people)
    transportation to the Rose Garden. Men who wish to stay should bring an air mattress,
    sleeping bag, etc. for sleeping on the floor, (no showers are available). If you are
    interested in this invitation please contact the BSLC church secretary at (503) 788-7000
    and give her your name and phone number and someone will contact you with necessary
    information.
    1Thes 5:11 Therefore encourage one another and build each other up, just as in fact you
    are doing. (NIV)
  
  
  Reclaim News Comment:
  We do not support Promise Keepers and other Baptist Ministries.
  
  Advent,
  Zionsville, Indiana, Growth Questioned
  Gary questions Reclaim News Report on Advent's growth as a "traditional" LCMS
  mission congregation as follows:
  
    "Perhaps the reason the Council of Presidents doesn't want to promote the kind of
    growth experienced by Advent is because it appears to be primarily transfer growth. I
    looked at the Synod web site and checked their statistics. They are way above average on
    the number of adults confirmed but the dramatic increase in numbers seems to be from
    sister congregations. Is that the kind of growth we should be looking for--moving people
    from one LCMS church to another? Just a question."
  
  Reclaim News Responds:
  Most new mission congregations on the suburban perimeter gather transfers from other
  congregations as people move out to the suburban perimeter. Gary himself said, that Advent
  is way above average in adult converts. We think the Council of Presidents and people of
  Gary's perspective find no joy in growing LCMS congregations with traditional worship,
  hymnbooks and catechisms.
  
  New
  "Traditional" Mission Congregation in Northern Michigan
  Dear Pastor Jack,
  SHALOM
  The release about Advent Lutheran Church certainly affirms Beautiful Savior Evangelical
  Lutheran Church, Wellston, Michigan approach to serving. This past Sunday (6-11-00) we
  became the very newest Michigan District LCMS congregation. We are just beginning our
  venture with Christ but are in the most traditional mode, which includes Lutheran Hymnals,
  traditional worship, instruction (via catechism), Bible study (Sunday & during the
  week) and SERVING laity. At our chartering service we actually ran out of hymnals and
  programs SOLI DEO GLORIA!
  We have about 30 souls on our current roster. Many of the attendees have been retirees,
  recreational property owners, tourists and local "unchurched" via canvassing
  activity. The area does not have potential for dynamic growth numbers wise but a fertile
  field for spiritual growth definitely exists.
  Beautiful Savior - Wellston, MI utilizes The Lutheran Hymnal out of Concordia
  Publishing House , Copyright 1941 for entire service.
  Gerald Philips
  
  Two Pointed
  Resolutions Passed at the Atlantic District Convention
  By Pastor William P. Terjesen
  At its district convention on June 9th and 10th, the Atlantic District passed two
  pointed resolutions.
  Led by task force leader Pastor John Hannah, Atlantic District liberals resolved to
  request the 2001 Synodical Convention to set aside Synodical Resolutions 7-05A and 7-06A
  and their attendant bylaw 2.272g, which give the Synodical President authority to remove
  errant district presidents.
  This of course, was the Atlantic District's reaction to Dr. Barry's treatment of
  President Benke regarding the latter's public participation in an interfaith prayer
  service several years ago. They want to take that authority (the same authority DP's
  currently have over pastors) away from the Synodical President.
  Secondly, Atlantic District liberals resolved to memorialize the Synod to affirm
  Article VII and that Synod is an advisory and not a legislative body, and to amend the
  bylaws (1.09b and 2.39b) which state that Synod's resolutions should be honored and upheld
  and considered binding if they are in accord with the word of God and applicable as far as
  the condition of the congregation is concerned. Synod should also affirm the right of its
  members to judge the validity of all Synodical resolutions in the light of Scripture, the
  ecumenical creeds and the Lutheran Confessions. The point of this, of course, is to leave
  liberals, charismatics, "Church Growthers," etc., free to do their thing within
  the Synod with impunity.
  I'd like to be able to say that there was a healthy opposition to these resolutions,
  especially from the younger, more confessionally oriented recent grads. But apart from the
  "Nays" voiced by my congregation's lay delegate and me, there were maybe only
  ten other "nays" in the room.
  One further note:
  The brief video of Dr. Barry on the Fellowship question was received coldly, with only a
  smattering of very brief, polite applause.
  The Atlantic District, in my opinion, spoke with a unified voice and said to the Synod:
  "We want to go in quite another direction altogether than the one Dr. Barry is taking
  us."
  
  Texas
  District President Kieschnick Announces That Every New "Mission Start" Is Not
  Necessarily New Mission Congregation
  Reclaim News has questioned the location of the 33 mission congregations the Texas
  District has claimed to have started in the past 10 years. At the Texas District
  Convention, President Kieschnick announced that in the past 3 years 17 new ministries were
  stated in the Texas District. Of the 17 new ministries, only 8 are actual congregations.
  Of the 8, 2 are splits of congregations caused by the "Church Growth Movement."
  Kieschnick only listed the cities in which the 8 "mission congregations" are
  located, but did not offer the Convention the addresses or the names of the ministers
  serving the mission congregations.
  Quite often, in many Districts, the new "ministries" are mission funds given
  to congregations to support staff for "outreach programs." We fear that the
  statistics for new "missions" that Dr. Robert Scudieri reports for the entire
  Synod are actually based on "ministries" and not actual congregations with
  pastors. We offer the following report by David Strand for the LCMS.
  
  
    Church-growth experts use a formula to figure out how many new congregations a North
    American church body must plant annually in order to maintain its membership. For the
    LCMS, that figure is 48 new congregations a year in order to stay even, 60 to grow.
    Last year, we planted 65 new mission congregations and preaching stations; in 1998, 85.
    Interestingly, of the 65 planted last year, only 24 were Anglo. The rest were African
    immigrant, African American, Chinese, Korean, Hispanic and several other ethnic types.
    "We now have the largest number of congregations and preaching stations that the
    LCMS has ever had," says Dr. Robert Scudieri of LCMS World Mission.
    "However," he cautions, "we are not, in my opinion, starting enough new
    congregations to grow as we should. It seems to me that we would have to start 90 new
    churches a year in order to replace those that are going out of existence and to grow
    significantly."
    For a state-by-state listing of new LCMS missions, or a listing according to ethnic
    groups, go to http://www.Pentecost2000.com/numinist.htm.
    Thank you!
    David Strand
    LCMS Director of Public Relations
  
  
  Reclaim News comment:
  If the reader checks the 2000 Lutheran Annual he will find that the LCMS lost 18,000
  baptized souls in 1998.