Who We Are We are a global communion of churches in the Lutheran tradition, living and working together for a just, peaceful, and reconciled world
What We Do We work with member churches, country programs and partner organizations to promote justice, peace, reconciliation and dignity for individuals and communities.
Member Churches LWF membership represents over 78 million Christians in the Lutheran tradition in 99 countries across the globe. It has 150 member churches, including two associate member churches, as well as ten recognized churches and congregations, and two recognized councils.
LWF related subsites Related Subsites LWF Thirteenth Assembly – 2023.lwfassembly.org [EN | DE | ES | FR | PL] Reformation 2017 – 2017.…
Get Involved We are a global communion of churches in the Lutheran tradition on a common journey of renewal We strive to put our faith into action within and beyond the communion, and seek God’s Word and Spirit to guide us
Donate Now Your partnership truly makes a difference.Together, a better world is possible.With Passion for the Church and for the World.
Ninety masons trained to rebuild in rural Nepal LWF and Islamic Relief Worldwide train builders in quake-proof construction
Learning to farm more efficiently in Colombia's insecure Chocó district “LWF has taught us to farm more nutritious crops"
Transforming lives of refugee children The challenge of providing primary education for all in Dadaab refugee camps
Preparing young refugees for a return to Somalia Initiative links refugee skills in Kenya to employment offers in Mogadishu
Professional and passionate service to the neighbor LWF General Secretary thanks LWF staff in Chad for their inspiring work
Together we achieve more General Secretary Junge meets UN High Commissioner for Refugees, LWF partners and government officials in Chad
Seeds for Solutions: refugees and host communities working together LWF Chad program helps farmers reap tons of fresh produce from bare farmland
LWF General Secretary visits Chad Attention and innovative solutions are needed to address a protracted crisis