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
Image Resource: Religion: Help or Hindrance to Development? Authors from Africa, Asia, Europe, Latin and North America reflect on the many ways in which religion has positively influenced development and ass
Image Seeking Conviviality | Re-forming Community Diakonia in Europe This resource, produced by an international solidarity group engaged in diakonia locally, identifies the most important challenges to the church an
Image Theological Practices That Matter Theological reflections on such diverse practices as reading the Bible; worship; baptism; forgiveness of sin; church discipline; inclusion of child
Image Being the Church in the Midst of Empire: Trinitarian Reflections Many of us have lived under various kinds of political and economic empires, and directly experienced some of the positive but also the oppressive
Image Deepening Faith, Hope and Love in Relations with Neighbors of Other Faiths The intent is to deepen commitment to and theological discernment within interreligious relations.
Image Identity, Survival, Witness. Reconfiguring Theological Agendas These articles provide glimpses into the complex, intertwined struggles for identity and witness that the churches face in Asia.
Image Lutherans Respond to Pentecostalism These articles seek to further deeper ongoing theological conversations about how Pentecostalism is influencing practices in Lutheran churches, esp
Image Transformative Theological Perspectives The final volume in the TLC series brings together some papers presented at the concluding 2009 consultation in Augsburg, Germany
Image “You have the Words of Eternal Life” | Transformative Readings of the Gospel from a Lutheran Perspective A collection of essays seeking to attend to such questions as, How can the Bible be read in ways that strengthen the community of readers and their
Image A Common Word. Buddhists and Christians Engage Structural Greed Exploring questions of economic justice, spirituality and morality, the authors recognize that structural greed is at the core of the current crisi