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The Minnesota South District includes approximately 246 congregations and missions, subdivided into 24 circuits, as well as 49 preschools, 45 elementary schools, and 7 high schools. Baptized membership in district congregations is approximately 127,000. [1] The Minnesota South District was formed in 1963 when the Minnesota District was divided.
The South Dakota district was split out in 1905/1906, and the North Dakota and Montana district in 1910. The district was renamed the Minnesota district in 1912, and the Alberta and British Columbia and the Manitoba and Saskatchewan districts were split off in 1920.
New England District of the Lutheran Church – Missouri Synod; New Jersey District of the Lutheran Church – Missouri Synod; North Dakota District of the Lutheran Church – Missouri Synod; North Wisconsin District of the Lutheran Church – Missouri Synod; Northern Illinois District of the Lutheran Church – Missouri Synod; Northwest ...
Minnesota North District of the Lutheran Church – Missouri Synod; Minnesota South District of the Lutheran Church – Missouri Synod; S. Saint Paul Area Synod; V.
The Missouri District is home to the synod's headquarters as well as Concordia Seminary, both of which are located in or just outside St. Louis. The district includes approximately 301 congregations and missions, subdivided into 28 circuits , as well as 52 preschools, 56 elementary schools , and 9 high schools.
The South Wisconsin District is one of the 35 districts of the Lutheran Church – Missouri Synod (LCMS), and covers the southern third of the state of Wisconsin.The northern two-thirds are in the North Wisconsin District; there are also two Wisconsin congregations in the Minnesota North District.
The Southern District is one of the 35 districts of the Lutheran Church – Missouri Synod (LCMS), and encompasses the states of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama, as well as the western portion of the Florida Panhandle; the rest of Florida is part of the Florida–Georgia District.
Likewise, the Illinois Synod merged into the Illinois District of the Missouri Synod in 1880. [3] In 1878, the Wisconsin Synod withdrew its demand that the state synods had to be independent of the Missouri or Ohio Synods. [6] The Missouri Synod needed to build a new seminary due to overcrowding at its campus in St. Louis.