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
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Nothing to extract from the golden oil fruit Mozambican land rights advocates seek justice for victims of risky investments deals
European church leaders call for welcome of migrants in Christmas statement LWF Vice-Presidents endorse document reaffirming asylum policy principles that protect human life
COP24: Global church bodies urge transformative action to protect the most vulnerable Press Release: LWF, WCC and ACT Alliance reiterate calls for just implementation of Paris Agreement
Participation of women and men is a theological issue Evangelical Lutheran Church of Saxony takes up message of Twelfth Assembly
From silent humiliation to advocacy for social change LWF work with Nepal’s Haliya community targets women’s rights and education
LWF’s invitation to “Walk our Talk” and end violence against women and girls Program executive Rev. Judith VanOsdol talks about 16-days campaign and gender justice
Working together, growing friendships Interview with the Namibian pastors Isak Malua and Klaus-Peter Tietz
Act now to avoid climate catastrophe, faith groups urge Press Release on "Limiting Global Warming to 1.5°C" report