Tag Archive for: Together04012025

New WELS mission work in Australia brings the gospel to growing communities

WELS has launched a new world mission effort in Australia. With a large focus on the country’s growing immigrant communities, two WELS missionaries and their families relocated to Brisbane, Queensland, in the summer of 2024 to plant the seeds of the gospel in a region that has been described as largely post-Christian.Ā 

ā€œPeople in Australia have asked us for help,ā€ says Rev. Larry Schlomer, WELS World Missions administrator. ā€œWELS members who moved there, brothers and sisters from Hong Kong, and longtime partners in Brisbane reached out. It is a joy to meet these needs with WELS missionaries.ā€Ā 

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.Ā 

Australia is highly diverse. ā€œNearly 30 percent of people here were born overseas,ā€ Doebler explains. ā€œLast year, over 500,000 new immigrants arrived. Many are searching for community and deeper meaning.ā€ The missionaries are focusing on relationship-building as the first step in sharing the gospel. Their families have immersed themselves in the local culture, engaging in neighborhood activities, visiting community centers, and forming friendships through English-language programs. Simple interactions, like two little boys playing together, lead to ongoing relationships and opportunities to share the gospel. These small connections are how ministry begins.Ā 

In addition to local work in the greater Brisbane area, WELS’ approach to ministry will model early Christianity—small gatherings of believers meeting in homes to study God’s Word and share in fellowship. The missionaries’ goal is to train and mentor local leaders to establish and lead house churches. This grassroots approach is already bearing fruit. In Melbourne, a new group has formed, including believers from diverse backgrounds.Ā Ā 

Though still in its early stages, the mission in Australia is making an impact. Through everyday interactions and steadfast commitment, the gospel is taking root, one soul at a time. ā€œWherever the gospel is deployed, the Lord is at work,ā€ Schlomer notes. ā€œWe trust his Word will bear fruit.ā€Ā 

Look for this month’s WELS Connection at your local congregation to learn more about mission work in Australia.

Christine Doebler, wife of Missionary Doebler, shares the importance of family ties when serving in a mission field in this month’s edition of Forward in Christ magazine.

 

Continuing challenges and clear blessings

The 2024 WELS statistics have been gathered by WELS Congregational Services. We are thankful to the 95 percent of our congregations that furnished their statistics—an incredibly good level of participation. While some of the statistics indicate continuing challenges in some areas, others provide some very good news and reasons to thank God for some significant blessings. Certainly, our confidence does not rest in statistics. Our confidence and optimism rest in the hands of a gracious God who continues to work through his Word and sacrament. Following are some significant details, both positive and negative, in those statistics:Ā 

  • WELS total membership declined from 330,618 in 2023 to 327,943 at the end of 2024. That is a loss of 2,675 members (-0.8 percent), but on the positive side, it is the smallest annual decline since 2011.Ā 
  • Weekly in-person worship attendance increased from 124,042 in 2023 to 127,594, a 2.9 percent rise. The percentage of WELS members in worship each week is now close to where it was prior to COVID.Ā 
  • There were increases in adult and youth Bible study attendance. Both rose last year by 1.9 percent and 0.8 percent, respectively. This was the fourth year of annual increases.Ā 
  • Spiritual gains have been trending upward, and spiritual losses downward. In 2024, the Spirit blessed WELS congregations with 4,126 adult confirmations. That is the most adult confirmations since 2012 and the second highest total in 50 years.Ā The 4,126 confirmations is a significant increase compared to the average of 3,300 confirmations annually for the last decade. Professions of faith (those coming to WELS from other Lutheran church bodies) remained stable at around 1,700 annually.Ā 
  • Spiritual losses (those who left to join other churches not in fellowship with us or who walked away from church completely—sometimes called ā€œbackdoor lossesā€) are decreasing. In 2024, WELS had 2,315 net spiritual losses, the lowest total of net spiritual losses since WELS began keeping such records. Over the decade prior, the average annual net spiritual loss was approximately 5,300.Ā 
  • In 2024, 2,985 children were born to WELS members, while 3,345 WELS members went home to heaven. That is five straight years when total births were at or fewer than 3,000. In the decade prior, the average annual number of births was 5,700. While the number of deaths has been fairly consistent, 2024 marks the fifth straight year that WELS had more deaths than births.Ā 
  • In 2024, WELS had 3,445 youth confirmations, the lowest in WELS history (a 20-year trend that reflects the declining birth rate).Ā 

Given the demographics of our synod (an aging church population and fewer births), it seems likely that our synod will continue to decline in total membership in the next decade. But if the Lord continues to bless some of the positive trends (increased worship attendance, more spiritual gains, and fewer spiritual losses), it is possible that the losses will flatten out and possibly even be replaced by membership gains. All of this, of course, is in the Lord’s hands. We plant and water, but ultimately, he is the one who makes his church grow.

Serving with you in Christ,
WELS President Mark SchroederĀ 

NOTE: The full 2024 WELS statistical report is available on welscongregationalservices.net. A more detailed anaylsis will be available in June.Ā 

 

Connecting women around the Word

WELS Women’s Ministry exists to nurture, encourage, and equip women to faithfully use their gifts for service in God’s kingdom. One of the ways it equips Christian women is through its webinars, which are offered multiple times per year.Ā 

ā€œThe webinars continue to be a platform for women across our synod to share what they’ve been doing in their churches, homes, and communities,ā€ says Mrs. Rachel Halldorson, a member of the WELS Women’s Ministry Executive Board and host of the webinars. ā€œTheir passion and love for their Savior shines through and inspires those watching and listening to apply it to their own lives and situations.ā€

During the upcoming webinar on April 10, The Power of Connecting Women in Christ, webinar panelists will share strategies to foster deeper, genuine connections by meeting women where they are at in their seasons of life. Halldorson notes: ā€œThe loneliness epidemic is real and threatens the body of Christ mentally and spiritually. The connections made through social media can have a role but also be a facade. We need each other in real life. God has given us Christian sisters (and brothers) as gifts!ā€Ā 

During the webinars, women from throughout the country and beyond learn from panelists, connect with each other via the chat feature, ask questions in the Q&A, and have access to resources that help equip them to share Jesus with other women in their congregation and with those who may not yet know Jesus.Ā 

As a way to personally connect with others during the webinar, attendees are encouraged to set up ā€œwatch partiesā€ so small groups of women can gather in person to view the webinar together. ā€œThe webinars are not meant to be a how-to for everyone watching because each situation is unique. Our intent is that viewers will be energized by the excitement and stories of what has worked for our panelists,ā€ Halldorson says. ā€œWatch parties offer women the perfect opportunity to take that inspiration and immediately discuss how they might apply it in their own context. Plus, it’s just a lot more fun!ā€Ā 

Learn more about WELS Women’s Ministry and the April 10 webinar at wels.net/women.Ā 

Register for the upcoming webinar.

Ā 

 

Together Video – April 1, 2025

The combined choirs of Martin Luther College, New Ulm, Minn., and Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary, Mequon, Wis., recently performed two joint concerts to commemorate the 175th anniversary of WELS. The concerts were held at St. John’s on the Hillside, Milwaukee, Wis., and Martin Luther College, New Ulm, Minn.

Watch the entire concert at Martin Luther College performed Sat., March 29,Ā  in this archived livestream.

 

Photos from the concert at St. John’s on the Hillside, performed Thurs., March 20.