Ohio District of the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod

The Ohio District is one of the 35 districts of the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod (LCMS), and covers the states of Ohio and West Virginia, as well as north eastern Kentucky[1] (the remainder of Kentucky is divided between the Indiana District and the Mid-South District). In addition, sixteen Ohio congregations are in the non-geographic English District,[2] and eleven are in the SELC District.[3] The Ohio District comprises 167 congregations and missions, subdivided into 16 circuits, as well as 39 preschools, 19 elementary schools, and 2 high schools. Baptized membership in Ohio District congregations is approximately 54,576.[4]

Ohio District of the LCMS
Location
CountryUnited States
TerritoryOhio, West Virginia, and northeastern Kentucky
HeadquartersOlmsted Falls, Ohio
Statistics
Congregations167
Schools
  • 39 preschool
  • 19 elementary
  • 2 secondary
Members54,576
Information
DenominationLutheran Church–Missouri Synod
Established1963
Current leadership
PresidentRev. Dr. Kevin Wilson
Map
Website
www.oh.lcms.org

The Ohio District was formed in 1963 when the Central District was divided, also creating the Indiana District. District offices are located in Olmsted Falls, Ohio, just west of Cleveland. Delegates from each congregation meet in convention every three years to elect the district president, vice presidents, circuit counselors, a board of directors, and other officers. Rev. Dr. Kenneth Wilson became the district president in September 2018.[5]

Presidents

  • Rev. Ottomar Krueger, 1963–66
  • Rev. Paul G. Single, 1966–69
  • Rev. Edgar M. Luecke, 1969–70
  • Rev. Arthur H. Ziegler, 1970–82
  • Rev. Paul A. Weber, 1982–88
  • Rev. David D. Buegler, 1988–96
  • Rev. Ronald L. Bergen, 1996–2006
  • Rev. Terry L. Cripe, 2006-2018
  • Rev. Kenneth Wilson, 2018 to present
gollark: Seems fine otherwise though.
gollark: Hmm, there seems to be no provision for file metadata.
gollark: How ycxuous.
gollark: I didn't see that.
gollark: I actually slightly dislike all existing popular archive formats → osmarksarchiveformat™?

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.