European Regional CELC Conference
Originally appears in the Confessional Evangelical Lutheran Conference (CELC) newsletter. Subscribe to future updates from the CELC at celc.info/signup.
āThe creation of manāWonderful news for the world.ā This was the topic of our European Regional CELC Conference hosted by the Evangelical Lutheran Free Church (ELFK) in Nerchau, Germany, on May 22-25, 2025. Nerchau is close to Grimma, the place of the ninth triennial convention of the CELC in 2017. St. Johnās Congregation in Nerchau is currently vacant, but a group of volunteers supported the preparation of this regional CELC conference.
Approximately 50 guests from different countries attended the conference. We were especially thankful that Bishop Horpynchuk from the Ukrainian Lutheran Church and Dmytro Maksymenko were among them. The latter serves as the Director of the āGift of Lifeā International Charitable Foundation in Ukraine. Our Russian brothers sent a video message, and our brother Iliyan Itsov (Bulgaria) wrote greetings, since he was not able to attend our conference. Dr. Ugis Sildegs (Latvia), who had prepared one of the four papers, could not attend the conference because of problems with his car. As guests from outside of Europe, we welcomed Prof. Tim Schmeling (ELS) as guest presenter, Rev. Larry Schlomer (WELS World Missions administrator), Rev. Jonathan Schroeder (WELS Board for World Missions chairman), and Rev. Tom Heyn (ELS).
We enjoyed a blessed time together with four excellent papers. Two of the papers were prepared by Prof. Tim Schmeling. His first lecture was titled, āManāCreated by God.ā His second lecture was our last and titled, āManāCreated in the Image of God.ā Our second lecture was prepared by Rev. Nikolla Bishka from Albania, together with Rev. Luke Wolfgramm, the WELS World Missionary and Pastoral Studies Institute adjunct instructor for Europe. āManāCreated as Male and Femaleā was the topic of their paper. The third lecture was prepared by Dr. Ugis Sildegs. His paper was titled: āManāCreation with Body and Soul: Todayās Challengesā and was presented by Rev. Holger WeiĆ, the chairman of CELC European Region.
Rev. Jonathan Schroeder gave a short overview of the WELS worldwide mission work. Rev. Tom Heyn gave some information about the ELS work, especially in Europe, but also worldwide. Larry Schlomer introduced the WELS call for Jennifer Wolfgramm as WELS mobile ministry partner for women in Europe. He explained her tasks and offered her help for all the work among women in the European CELC churches.
The conference ended with a closing worship service including the Lordās Supper. The liturgy was conducted in German by myself, and Rev. Holger WeiĆ preached the sermon on Isaiah 55:6-11 under the topic āSeek the Lord!ā After the sermon, Jennifer Wolfgramm was installed by Rev. Larry Schlomer. You can watch the video of the closing service on YouTube.
God willing, the next European Regional CELC conference will be hosted by the LBK Sweden on June 18-20, 2027. But before that, we are looking forward to the next triennial CELC Convention in Zambia on May 29āJune 1, 2026.
Written by Rev. Michael Herbst, president of the Evangelical Lutheran Free Church (ELFK) in Germany
WELS Missions
Learn about the ministry work of WELS Missions.
SUPPORT MISSIONS
Support the ministry work of WELS Missions.




































Missionaries Rev. Dr. Matthew Doebler and Rev. Peter Janke, both members of the Asia-Oceania Team, are leading this effort. While they continue to work with contacts throughout Asia, their physical presence in Australia allows them to establish a firm foundation for ministry within local communities. They are collaborating with two existing churches in Australia: Our Redeemer Lutheran Church in Brisbane and Fountain of Life in Maryborough. These congregations, members of the Confessional Evangelical Lutheran Conference, provide vital connections and a foundation for expanding ministry efforts. This partnership strengthens the mission by providing existing worship spaces, local insights, and a community of believers eager to spread the gospel.















With the generosity of faithful donors, we built a sturdy buildingācomplete with classrooms, sleeping quarters, and a kitchenāmeant to house 60 students at a time and train pastors for Christās service. Almost two years ago at the dedication, it stood ready, a beacon of hope. But government regulations have kept us from using it for now. The paperwork continues, and the delay has a story of its own. A local church body that once supported us began demanding practices contrary to Scriptureāinsisting we stop baptizing babies and allow non-Lutheran teachers to train our pastors. In a Martin Luther-esque stand, our partner church broke away, choosing faithfulness over compromise. Since then, theyāve lost government recognition, which has slowed the process for gaining occupancy of the theological education center. Yet we trust that access could come any day, because Godās timing is not ours.
Some might see this as a delay, a plan stalled. But God has provided paths we never expected. Since we began, our sister church has grown to over 160,000 souls, hungry for the Word. 



