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Gerald B. Kieschnick

Gerald Bryan Kieschnick (born January 29, 1943, in Houston, Texas) is the Chief Executive Officer of Legacy Deo (formerly known as the Lutheran Foundation of Texas). Kieschnick served as the 12th president of The Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod (LCMS), being elected to three terms in 2001, 2004, and 2007. He was defeated in his bid for a fourth term by the Rev. Matthew C. Harrison on July 13, 2010, at the 64th Regular Convention of the LCMS, and his presidency ended on August 31, 2010.

Gerald B. Kieschnick
Kieschnick at the 2004 LCMS National Youth Gathering in Orlando, Florida
Born (1943-01-29) January 29, 1943 (age 81)
Houston, Texas
EducationTexas A&M University (1964)
Concordia Theological Seminary, Springfield (1970)
Concordia Theological Seminary, Fort Wayne (1977)
SpouseTerry Lee Kieschnick ('nee Roos)
ChildrenTwo
ChurchLutheran Church–Missouri Synod
Ordained1970
Congregations served
Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, Biloxi, Mississippi
Redeemer Lutheran Church, Beaumont, Texas
Faith Lutheran Church, Georgetown, Texas

Kieschnick and his wife, Terry, have two grown children and two grandchildren, all of whom live in Texas.[1][2]

Early career edit

Kieschnick attended Texas A&M University, graduating with a bachelor of science in 1964. He is a 1970 graduate of Concordia Theological Seminary in Springfield, Illinois (now located in Fort Wayne, Indiana), obtained his Master of Divinity in 1977 from Concordia in Fort Wayne, and received an honorary doctor of laws degree in 1996 from Concordia University in Austin, Texas.[3]

After his ordination in 1970, Kieschnick served as pastor at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church in Biloxi, Mississippi, until 1973; at Redeemer Lutheran Church in Beaumont, Texas, from 1973 to 1981; and at Faith Lutheran Church in Georgetown, Texas, from 1981 to 1986.[4]

He served the Texas District of the LCMS as a circuit counselor from 1978 to1981 and as director of public relations from 1977 to 1986. Kieschnick was director of development at Lutheran Foundation of Texas from 1986 to 1988 and then served as its executive director from 1988 to 1991.[5]

In 1991, Kieschnick was elected president of the LCMS's Texas District and served in that position until 2001. In addition, from 1998 until his election as LCMS president, Kieschnick chaired the LCMS Commission on Theology and Church Relations and served on the program committee of the LCMS Council of Presidents.[3]

LCMS presidential election and first term edit

At the LCMS' 2001 convention in St. Louis, Kieschnick was elected to his first three-year term as president of the 2.6-million-member church. He won by 18 votes out of 1,182 total votes cast in the fourth round of balloting over Dean O. Wenthe, then president of Concordia Theological Seminary, Fort Wayne, Indiana. Three other candidates had dropped off in the first three ballots. One of those candidates, Daniel Preus, subsequently was elected to be the church body's first vice president.[6]

Kieschnick's first presidential term was almost immediately beset by controversy (see "Interfaith issues," below). He faced opposition within the church hierarchy, including from four of the Synod's five vice-presidents and a majority of the board of directors. Polarization in the LCMS dated back at least to the Seminex controversy in the early 1970s that centered on the faculty of Concordia Seminary, St. Louis.[7] But by the 1990s, members of the LCMS' more conservative wing (who often dub themselves "confessional Lutherans") and its more mission-oriented wing had both established internal caucuses, organizations, and news services to promote their viewpoints and to campaign for Synod leadership candidates.

Interfaith issues edit

Kieschnick spent much of his first term under fire for his support of Atlantic District president David Benke. On September 23, 2001, Benke took part in an interfaith prayer event at Yankee Stadium sponsored by the City of New York to commemorate the victims of the September 11, 2001, attacks on the World Trade Center. Daniel Preus and others argued that Benke, by participating alongside non-Lutheran clergy and leaders of non-Christian faiths, had engaged in practices that the Synod condemns as "unionism" and "syncretism", respectively.[8]

Kieschnick and his supporters replied that the event was not a worship service, as Preus maintained, but a civic event, and that Benke had given Christian witness in a permissible manner. In the Synod's official newspaper, Reporter, which reported on the controversy, Kieschnick said that his support for Benke's participation was based on a document titled "The Lutheran Understanding of Church Fellowship". That document had been prepared by a predecessor LCMS president (Alvin L. Barry) and the Synod's Commission on Theology and Church Relations, chaired by Kieschnick, and then commended for use and guidance by the Synod's 2001 convention. In a section under "civic events", the document states that "offering prayers, speaking, and reading Scripture at events sponsored by governments, schools and volunteer organizations would be a problem if the organization in charge restricted a Christian witness.... Without such a restriction, a Lutheran pastor may for valid and good reason participate in civic affairs such as an inauguration, a graduation, or a right-to-life activity. These occasions may provide opportunity to witness to the Gospel. Pastors may have honest differences of opinion about whether or to what extent it is appropriate or helpful to participate in these or similar civic events. In these cases, charity must prevail."[8] The document continues, “There are also ‘once in a lifetime’ situations. It is virtually impossible to anticipate all such situations or to establish rules in advance. Specific answers cannot be given to cover every type of situation pastors and congregations face. These situations can be evaluated only on a case-by-case basis and may evoke different responses from different pastors who may be equally committed to LCMS fellowship principles. The LCMS has always recognized this.”[9]

Two LCMS ministers sought to bring charges against Kieschnick that, if upheld, would have led to his removal from the clergy roster of the Synod.[10] The matter ended with the charges against Kieschnick being voided by a ruling of the synod's Commission on Constitutional Matters[11] and Benke being cleared of charges that also had been brought against him.[12] For several years, the Benke controversy left some LCMS members speaking of a "crisis in the Synod" and warning openly of the possibilities for a schism.[13][14]

Worldwide mission effort edit

During Kieschnick's first term in office, the Synod's board of directors approved a proposal from the Board for Mission Services for a 15-year initiative to reach 100 million non-Christians worldwide with the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Mark Weinrich, senior director for LCMS World Mission Support, said that the plan, subsequently titled "Ablaze!", was consistent with a mission emphasis for the Synod that Kieschnick had promoted. "President Kieschnick set the vision in his acceptance speech because he talked about shaking the earth with the Gospel," Weinrich said.[15]

The 2004 Synod convention took note of the Ablaze! initiative by adopting a number of mission-oriented resolutions. Among those was Res. 1-04 to accept the challenge to reach 100 million people with the Gospel by 2017 (the 500th anniversary of the Reformation) and to seek to raise $100 million over and above the current mission budget for additional mission support by 2010.[16] The fund-raising effort, subsequently titled "Fan Into Flame," had raised $58,900,172 as of July 1, 2010.[17] An additional $40 million in major gift requests were pending at the time of the 2010 Synod convention.[18]

Only one passing reference to the Ablaze! initiative[19] and no references to "Fan Into Flame" appeared in the Synod's Convention Proceedings for its national conventions in 2013, 2016, and 2019 after the election of Matthew Harrison as Synod president in 2010.

Reelection and second term edit

In 2004, Kieschnick won reelection to the presidency on the first ballot with 653 votes (53 percent of 1,237 votes cast for five nominees). First Vice President Daniel Preus was second among the five nominees with 391 votes (32% of ballots cast). William R. Diekelman, president of the Synod's Oklahoma District, subsequently defeated Preus on the second ballot for first vice president with 52% of the votes cast.[20]

Blue Ribbon Task Force on Synod Structure and Governance edit

On June 10, 2005, Kieschnick sent a memo to selected leaders in the LCMS who had agreed to serve on a newly created panel titled the "Blue Ribbon Task Force on Synodical Structure and Governance" (the word "synodical" in the title was later changed to "synod"), also to be known as the BRTFSSG. Kieschnick wrote to the BRTFSSG members, "I am asking the task force to do a thorough, zero-based assessment of the entirety of the system of governance and organizational structure of The Lutheran ChurchMissouri Synod and to make recommendations for improvements in the form of a report to the 2007 Synodical [sic] convention. Your recommended improvements should suggest a form of structure and governance for the decades ahead that is appropriately representative, incorporating sufficient checks and balances of authority without being cumbersome, clumsy, or excessively complex. It should facilitate maximum operating efficiency in behalf of and in support of members of our Synod in accomplishing the mission of our Lord and HIs church."[21]

In a March 1, 2005, pastoral letter to the synod, Kieschnick had written, "There is a great need for a thorough and fundamental review of what our Synod is, how it is organized, and how it functions. What was first created as an organizational system for a Synod made up of a small number of congregations now struggles to serve more than 6,150 congregations."[21]

The work of the BRTFSSG extended beyond the 2007 convention, and its final report would not be issued until October 2009, about nine months prior to the 2010 convention (see under "Reelection and third term," below).

Reelection and third term edit

At the 2007 convention of the LCMS, Kieschnick was reelected on the first ballot, receiving 52.3 percent of the total vote.[22]

Blue Ribbon Task Force on Synod Structure and Governance (continued) edit

Although the Blue Ribbon Task Force on Synod Structure and Governance was to have finished its work in time for the 2007 convention, it did not. Work continued throughout Kieschnick's third term.

At the end of 2007, Kieschnick discussed the task force's work in "President's Leadership News," distributed as a supplement to the Synod's Reporter newspaper. "The work of the Blue Ribbon Task Force on Synod Structure and Governance is about improving our ability, in the words of the Synod’s mission statement, 'vigorously to make known the love of Christ by word and deed within our churches, communities, and the world,'" Kieschnick wrote. He added that its work is about "doing everything humanly possible to ensure for the Synod a viable future so that it can continue to carry out this mission for years to come."[23]

Two years later, on October 15, 2009, the task force issued its final report in anticipation of the 2010 Synod convention. The report made 21 specific recommendations. One of those recommendations spoke to the structure of the "corporate Synod". When the report was written, the structure included seven program boards and six commissions, most with staff, that carried out functions outlined in the synod's bylaws. The task force said that while the boards and commissions are accountable to the synod convention, they operate independently of each other "to some extent as a series of silos". The task force wrote that this structure lacks accountability to the needs of congregations, is inefficient and expensive, and creates complications in business oversight and legal compliance. It therefore recommended a new structure that would realign national ministries around two "mission commissions", one for national mission and one for international mission. Each commission would have a staff that would be responsible to the president of the LCMS through a "chief mission officer" appointed by the president with the concurrence of the synod's board of directors.[24]

Kieschnick issued a response to the 21 task force recommendations, which he generally supported. Regarding the recommendation for major change in the structure of the corporate Synod, its newspaper reported, "Kieschnick supports the recommendation to eliminate the current boards and commissions, stating it would solve the problems of supervision and accountability within the Synod structure. But he also says that having the chief mission officer accountable to him 'could be seen as concentration of excessive authority in the office of the Synod president. That is neither the task force’s intention nor my desire.'”[25]

In a pre-convention issue of the Reporter, nominees for president responded to a question about their support for the task force's recommendations. Kieschnick wrote, "For more than four years task force members have addressed challenges in our Synod—unnecessary bureaucracy, lack of coordination, ambiguous supervisory relationships, inequitable representation, inefficient organization, insufficient accountability, etc. They have sought and responded to feedback from convention delegates and other leaders. While having expressed a few concerns, I believe task force recommendations are critical." Taking a different view was Rev. Matthew C. Harrison, executive director of LCMS World Relief and Human Care, also nominated for president, who wrote, "Part of me might like the massive increase in power proposed for the Synod President. That’s why it’s not a good idea."[26]

2010 election edit

On July 13, 2010, Kieschnick was defeated for re-election to a fourth term of office by Rev. Matthew C. Harrison. The vote was 643 to 527.[27] The same convention adopted many of the recommendations of the Blue Ribbon Task Force on Synod Structure and Governance, including the provision that nearly all Synod staff would be accountable to the Synod president through a new "chief mission officer."[28]

Post-presidency edit

On March 1, 2011, Concordia University Texas announced that it had engaged Kieschnick to fill the newly created position of Presidential Ambassador for Mission Advancement, a position he held through 2015.[29] In January 2016, Kieschnick returned to the Lutheran Foundation of Texas, becoming its CEO on January 1, 2017.[1][2] In January 2017, the Lutheran Foundation of Texas changed its name to Legacy Deo. Legacy Deo encourages estate planning and charitable giving, with a mission to "inspire giving that impacts life forever".[30]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Staff". Legacy Deo. Retrieved September 7, 2019.
  2. ^ a b "Rev. Dr. Jerry Kieschnick". Mission of Christ. Retrieved September 7, 2019.
  3. ^ a b . The Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod. July 2007. Archived from the original on July 22, 2010. Retrieved July 1, 2022.
  4. ^ "Gerald B. Kieschnick". Concordia Historical Institute. Retrieved October 26, 2021.
  5. ^ "Synod re-elects Kieschnick, elects Diekelman first vice president". Reporter Online. Retrieved May 28, 2015.
  6. ^ Convention Proceedings, 61st Regular Convention, July 14–20, 2001,The Lutheran ChurchMissouri Synod, p. 49.
  7. ^ Meilaender, Gilbert (June 1991). "How Churches Crack Up: The Case of The Lutheran Church--Missouri Synod". First Things. Retrieved July 1, 2022.
  8. ^ a b Mahsman, David L. (October 2001). "District begins 'digging out' those 'buried' by anger, grief". Reporter. pp. 1, 9.
  9. ^ "The Lutheran Understanding of Church Fellowship," 2001 Convention Workbook, 61st Regular Convention, July 14–20, 2001, The Lutheran Church--Missouri Synod, p. 50.
  10. ^ "Events prompt two to bring charges against Kieschnick". Reporter. November 2001. p. 5.
  11. ^ "Ruling voids charges against Kieschnick". Reporter. January 2002. p. 1.
  12. ^ "Unanimous panel lifts suspension of Benke". Reporter. June 2003. p. 1.
  13. ^ . Crisis in the LCMS. Archived from the original on February 7, 2005. Retrieved May 29, 2015.
  14. ^ Plowman, Edward E. (July 31, 2004). . World Magazine. Archived from the original on October 12, 2004. Retrieved May 29, 2015.
  15. ^ "Mission goal: reach 100 million people". Reporter. February 2002. p. 1.
  16. ^ Convention Proceedings, 62nd Regular Convention, July 1015, 2004,The Lutheran ChurchMissouri Synod, pp. 120121.
  17. ^ Convention Proceedings, 64th Regular Convention, July 1017, 2010,The Lutheran ChurchMissouri Synod, p. 37.
  18. ^ Convention Proceedings, 64th Regular Convention, July 1017, 2010,The Lutheran ChurchMissouri Synod, p. 103.
  19. ^ Convention Proceedings, 65th Regular Convention, July 2025, 2013, The Lutheran ChurchMissouri Synod, p. 120.
  20. ^ Convention Proceedings, 62nd Regular Convention, July 1015, 2004, The Lutheran ChurchMissouri Synod, p. 45.
  21. ^ a b . Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod. October 15, 2009. pp. 5–8. Archived from the original on November 6, 2009. Retrieved July 5, 2022.
  22. ^ Heine, James. "2007 LCMS Convention: One Message—Christ!". The Lutheran Witness. Retrieved May 29, 2015.
  23. ^ "The keyword is 'mission,'" "President's Leadership News," supplement to Reporter, December 2007.
  24. ^ . Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod. October 15, 2009. pp. 40–41. Archived from the original on November 6, 2009. Retrieved July 5, 2022.
  25. ^ Hoops, Linda (December 16, 2009). "Kieschnick responds to Blue Ribbon Task Force report". Reporter. Retrieved July 4, 2022.
  26. ^ . Reporter. June 2, 2010. Archived from the original on July 31, 2021. Retrieved July 4, 2022.
  27. ^ . LCMS. Archived from the original on December 30, 2010. Retrieved May 28, 2015.
  28. ^ "Convention approves Synod structure changes," Reporter, August 2010, p. 3.
  29. ^ "Concordia University Texas Names Rev. Dr. Jerry Kieschnick Presidential Ambassador for Mission Advancement". PR Newswire. Retrieved May 28, 2015.
  30. ^ "Our Story". Legacy Deo. Retrieved September 7, 2019.

Sources edit

Newspaper articles edit

External links edit

  • formerly on the LCMS website
  • LCMS homepage
  • Concordia Historical Institute biography
Religious titles
Preceded by President
Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod

2001–2010
Succeeded by

gerald, kieschnick, gerald, bryan, kieschnick, born, january, 1943, houston, texas, chief, executive, officer, legacy, formerly, known, lutheran, foundation, texas, kieschnick, served, 12th, president, lutheran, church, missouri, synod, lcms, being, elected, t. Gerald Bryan Kieschnick born January 29 1943 in Houston Texas is the Chief Executive Officer of Legacy Deo formerly known as the Lutheran Foundation of Texas Kieschnick served as the 12th president of The Lutheran Church Missouri Synod LCMS being elected to three terms in 2001 2004 and 2007 He was defeated in his bid for a fourth term by the Rev Matthew C Harrison on July 13 2010 at the 64th Regular Convention of the LCMS and his presidency ended on August 31 2010 Gerald B KieschnickKieschnick at the 2004 LCMS National Youth Gathering in Orlando FloridaBorn 1943 01 29 January 29 1943 age 81 Houston TexasEducationTexas A amp M University 1964 Concordia Theological Seminary Springfield 1970 Concordia Theological Seminary Fort Wayne 1977 SpouseTerry Lee Kieschnick nee Roos ChildrenTwoChurchLutheran Church Missouri SynodOrdained1970Congregations servedGood Shepherd Lutheran Church Biloxi MississippiRedeemer Lutheran Church Beaumont TexasFaith Lutheran Church Georgetown Texas Kieschnick and his wife Terry have two grown children and two grandchildren all of whom live in Texas 1 2 Contents 1 Early career 2 LCMS presidential election and first term 2 1 Interfaith issues 2 2 Worldwide mission effort 3 Reelection and second term 3 1 Blue Ribbon Task Force on Synod Structure and Governance 4 Reelection and third term 4 1 Blue Ribbon Task Force on Synod Structure and Governance continued 5 2010 election 6 Post presidency 7 References 8 Sources 8 1 Newspaper articles 9 External linksEarly career editKieschnick attended Texas A amp M University graduating with a bachelor of science in 1964 He is a 1970 graduate of Concordia Theological Seminary in Springfield Illinois now located in Fort Wayne Indiana obtained his Master of Divinity in 1977 from Concordia in Fort Wayne and received an honorary doctor of laws degree in 1996 from Concordia University in Austin Texas 3 After his ordination in 1970 Kieschnick served as pastor at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church in Biloxi Mississippi until 1973 at Redeemer Lutheran Church in Beaumont Texas from 1973 to 1981 and at Faith Lutheran Church in Georgetown Texas from 1981 to 1986 4 He served the Texas District of the LCMS as a circuit counselor from 1978 to1981 and as director of public relations from 1977 to 1986 Kieschnick was director of development at Lutheran Foundation of Texas from 1986 to 1988 and then served as its executive director from 1988 to 1991 5 In 1991 Kieschnick was elected president of the LCMS s Texas District and served in that position until 2001 In addition from 1998 until his election as LCMS president Kieschnick chaired the LCMS Commission on Theology and Church Relations and served on the program committee of the LCMS Council of Presidents 3 LCMS presidential election and first term editAt the LCMS 2001 convention in St Louis Kieschnick was elected to his first three year term as president of the 2 6 million member church He won by 18 votes out of 1 182 total votes cast in the fourth round of balloting over Dean O Wenthe then president of Concordia Theological Seminary Fort Wayne Indiana Three other candidates had dropped off in the first three ballots One of those candidates Daniel Preus subsequently was elected to be the church body s first vice president 6 Kieschnick s first presidential term was almost immediately beset by controversy see Interfaith issues below He faced opposition within the church hierarchy including from four of the Synod s five vice presidents and a majority of the board of directors Polarization in the LCMS dated back at least to the Seminex controversy in the early 1970s that centered on the faculty of Concordia Seminary St Louis 7 But by the 1990s members of the LCMS more conservative wing who often dub themselves confessional Lutherans and its more mission oriented wing had both established internal caucuses organizations and news services to promote their viewpoints and to campaign for Synod leadership candidates Interfaith issues edit Kieschnick spent much of his first term under fire for his support of Atlantic District president David Benke On September 23 2001 Benke took part in an interfaith prayer event at Yankee Stadium sponsored by the City of New York to commemorate the victims of the September 11 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center Daniel Preus and others argued that Benke by participating alongside non Lutheran clergy and leaders of non Christian faiths had engaged in practices that the Synod condemns as unionism and syncretism respectively 8 Kieschnick and his supporters replied that the event was not a worship service as Preus maintained but a civic event and that Benke had given Christian witness in a permissible manner In the Synod s official newspaper Reporter which reported on the controversy Kieschnick said that his support for Benke s participation was based on a document titled The Lutheran Understanding of Church Fellowship That document had been prepared by a predecessor LCMS president Alvin L Barry and the Synod s Commission on Theology and Church Relations chaired by Kieschnick and then commended for use and guidance by the Synod s 2001 convention In a section under civic events the document states that offering prayers speaking and reading Scripture at events sponsored by governments schools and volunteer organizations would be a problem if the organization in charge restricted a Christian witness Without such a restriction a Lutheran pastor may for valid and good reason participate in civic affairs such as an inauguration a graduation or a right to life activity These occasions may provide opportunity to witness to the Gospel Pastors may have honest differences of opinion about whether or to what extent it is appropriate or helpful to participate in these or similar civic events In these cases charity must prevail 8 The document continues There are also once in a lifetime situations It is virtually impossible to anticipate all such situations or to establish rules in advance Specific answers cannot be given to cover every type of situation pastors and congregations face These situations can be evaluated only on a case by case basis and may evoke different responses from different pastors who may be equally committed to LCMS fellowship principles The LCMS has always recognized this 9 Two LCMS ministers sought to bring charges against Kieschnick that if upheld would have led to his removal from the clergy roster of the Synod 10 The matter ended with the charges against Kieschnick being voided by a ruling of the synod s Commission on Constitutional Matters 11 and Benke being cleared of charges that also had been brought against him 12 For several years the Benke controversy left some LCMS members speaking of a crisis in the Synod and warning openly of the possibilities for a schism 13 14 Worldwide mission effort edit During Kieschnick s first term in office the Synod s board of directors approved a proposal from the Board for Mission Services for a 15 year initiative to reach 100 million non Christians worldwide with the Gospel of Jesus Christ Mark Weinrich senior director for LCMS World Mission Support said that the plan subsequently titled Ablaze was consistent with a mission emphasis for the Synod that Kieschnick had promoted President Kieschnick set the vision in his acceptance speech because he talked about shaking the earth with the Gospel Weinrich said 15 The 2004 Synod convention took note of the Ablaze initiative by adopting a number of mission oriented resolutions Among those was Res 1 04 to accept the challenge to reach 100 million people with the Gospel by 2017 the 500th anniversary of the Reformation and to seek to raise 100 million over and above the current mission budget for additional mission support by 2010 16 The fund raising effort subsequently titled Fan Into Flame had raised 58 900 172 as of July 1 2010 17 An additional 40 million in major gift requests were pending at the time of the 2010 Synod convention 18 Only one passing reference to the Ablaze initiative 19 and no references to Fan Into Flame appeared in the Synod s Convention Proceedings for its national conventions in 2013 2016 and 2019 after the election of Matthew Harrison as Synod president in 2010 Reelection and second term editIn 2004 Kieschnick won reelection to the presidency on the first ballot with 653 votes 53 percent of 1 237 votes cast for five nominees First Vice President Daniel Preus was second among the five nominees with 391 votes 32 of ballots cast William R Diekelman president of the Synod s Oklahoma District subsequently defeated Preus on the second ballot for first vice president with 52 of the votes cast 20 Blue Ribbon Task Force on Synod Structure and Governance edit On June 10 2005 Kieschnick sent a memo to selected leaders in the LCMS who had agreed to serve on a newly created panel titled the Blue Ribbon Task Force on Synodical Structure and Governance the word synodical in the title was later changed to synod also to be known as the BRTFSSG Kieschnick wrote to the BRTFSSG members I am asking the task force to do a thorough zero based assessment of the entirety of the system of governance and organizational structure of The Lutheran Church Missouri Synod and to make recommendations for improvements in the form of a report to the 2007 Synodical sic convention Your recommended improvements should suggest a form of structure and governance for the decades ahead that is appropriately representative incorporating sufficient checks and balances of authority without being cumbersome clumsy or excessively complex It should facilitate maximum operating efficiency in behalf of and in support of members of our Synod in accomplishing the mission of our Lord and HIs church 21 In a March 1 2005 pastoral letter to the synod Kieschnick had written There is a great need for a thorough and fundamental review of what our Synod is how it is organized and how it functions What was first created as an organizational system for a Synod made up of a small number of congregations now struggles to serve more than 6 150 congregations 21 The work of the BRTFSSG extended beyond the 2007 convention and its final report would not be issued until October 2009 about nine months prior to the 2010 convention see under Reelection and third term below Reelection and third term editAt the 2007 convention of the LCMS Kieschnick was reelected on the first ballot receiving 52 3 percent of the total vote 22 Blue Ribbon Task Force on Synod Structure and Governance continued edit Although the Blue Ribbon Task Force on Synod Structure and Governance was to have finished its work in time for the 2007 convention it did not Work continued throughout Kieschnick s third term At the end of 2007 Kieschnick discussed the task force s work in President s Leadership News distributed as a supplement to the Synod s Reporter newspaper The work of the Blue Ribbon Task Force on Synod Structure and Governance is about improving our ability in the words of the Synod s mission statement vigorously to make known the love of Christ by word and deed within our churches communities and the world Kieschnick wrote He added that its work is about doing everything humanly possible to ensure for the Synod a viable future so that it can continue to carry out this mission for years to come 23 Two years later on October 15 2009 the task force issued its final report in anticipation of the 2010 Synod convention The report made 21 specific recommendations One of those recommendations spoke to the structure of the corporate Synod When the report was written the structure included seven program boards and six commissions most with staff that carried out functions outlined in the synod s bylaws The task force said that while the boards and commissions are accountable to the synod convention they operate independently of each other to some extent as a series of silos The task force wrote that this structure lacks accountability to the needs of congregations is inefficient and expensive and creates complications in business oversight and legal compliance It therefore recommended a new structure that would realign national ministries around two mission commissions one for national mission and one for international mission Each commission would have a staff that would be responsible to the president of the LCMS through a chief mission officer appointed by the president with the concurrence of the synod s board of directors 24 Kieschnick issued a response to the 21 task force recommendations which he generally supported Regarding the recommendation for major change in the structure of the corporate Synod its newspaper reported Kieschnick supports the recommendation to eliminate the current boards and commissions stating it would solve the problems of supervision and accountability within the Synod structure But he also says that having the chief mission officer accountable to him could be seen as concentration of excessive authority in the office of the Synod president That is neither the task force s intention nor my desire 25 In a pre convention issue of the Reporter nominees for president responded to a question about their support for the task force s recommendations Kieschnick wrote For more than four years task force members have addressed challenges in our Synod unnecessary bureaucracy lack of coordination ambiguous supervisory relationships inequitable representation inefficient organization insufficient accountability etc They have sought and responded to feedback from convention delegates and other leaders While having expressed a few concerns I believe task force recommendations are critical Taking a different view was Rev Matthew C Harrison executive director of LCMS World Relief and Human Care also nominated for president who wrote Part of me might like the massive increase in power proposed for the Synod President That s why it s not a good idea 26 2010 election editOn July 13 2010 Kieschnick was defeated for re election to a fourth term of office by Rev Matthew C Harrison The vote was 643 to 527 27 The same convention adopted many of the recommendations of the Blue Ribbon Task Force on Synod Structure and Governance including the provision that nearly all Synod staff would be accountable to the Synod president through a new chief mission officer 28 Post presidency editOn March 1 2011 Concordia University Texas announced that it had engaged Kieschnick to fill the newly created position of Presidential Ambassador for Mission Advancement a position he held through 2015 29 In January 2016 Kieschnick returned to the Lutheran Foundation of Texas becoming its CEO on January 1 2017 1 2 In January 2017 the Lutheran Foundation of Texas changed its name to Legacy Deo Legacy Deo encourages estate planning and charitable giving with a mission to inspire giving that impacts life forever 30 References edit a b Staff Legacy Deo Retrieved September 7 2019 a b Rev Dr Jerry Kieschnick Mission of Christ Retrieved September 7 2019 a b A Brief Biography of Rev Dr Gerald B Kieschnick The Lutheran Church Missouri Synod July 2007 Archived from the original on July 22 2010 Retrieved July 1 2022 Gerald B Kieschnick Concordia Historical Institute Retrieved October 26 2021 Synod re elects Kieschnick elects Diekelman first vice president Reporter Online Retrieved May 28 2015 Convention Proceedings 61st Regular Convention July 14 20 2001 The Lutheran Church Missouri Synod p 49 Meilaender Gilbert June 1991 How Churches Crack Up The Case of The Lutheran Church Missouri Synod First Things Retrieved July 1 2022 a b Mahsman David L October 2001 District begins digging out those buried by anger grief Reporter pp 1 9 The Lutheran Understanding of Church Fellowship 2001 Convention Workbook 61st Regular Convention July 14 20 2001 The Lutheran Church Missouri Synod p 50 Events prompt two to bring charges against Kieschnick Reporter November 2001 p 5 Ruling voids charges against Kieschnick Reporter January 2002 p 1 Unanimous panel lifts suspension of Benke Reporter June 2003 p 1 About this site Crisis in the LCMS Archived from the original on February 7 2005 Retrieved May 29 2015 Plowman Edward E July 31 2004 Missouri motioning Conservative Lutherans lose elections and power in the LCMS World Magazine Archived from the original on October 12 2004 Retrieved May 29 2015 Mission goal reach 100 million people Reporter February 2002 p 1 Convention Proceedings 62nd Regular Convention July 10 15 2004 The Lutheran Church Missouri Synod pp 120 121 Convention Proceedings 64th Regular Convention July 10 17 2010 The Lutheran Church Missouri Synod p 37 Convention Proceedings 64th Regular Convention July 10 17 2010 The Lutheran Church Missouri Synod p 103 Convention Proceedings 65th Regular Convention July 20 25 2013 The Lutheran Church Missouri Synod p 120 Convention Proceedings 62nd Regular Convention July 10 15 2004 The Lutheran Church Missouri Synod p 45 a b The Final Report of The Blue Ribbon Task Force on Synod Structure and Governance Lutheran Church Missouri Synod October 15 2009 pp 5 8 Archived from the original on November 6 2009 Retrieved July 5 2022 Heine James 2007 LCMS Convention One Message Christ The Lutheran Witness Retrieved May 29 2015 The keyword is mission President s Leadership News supplement to Reporter December 2007 The Final Report of The Blue Ribbon Task Force on Synod Structure and Governance Lutheran Church Missouri Synod October 15 2009 pp 40 41 Archived from the original on November 6 2009 Retrieved July 5 2022 Hoops Linda December 16 2009 Kieschnick responds to Blue Ribbon Task Force report Reporter Retrieved July 4 2022 President s office nominees address issues in Synod Reporter June 2 2010 Archived from the original on July 31 2021 Retrieved July 4 2022 Election Results LCMS Archived from the original on December 30 2010 Retrieved May 28 2015 Convention approves Synod structure changes Reporter August 2010 p 3 Concordia University Texas Names Rev Dr Jerry Kieschnick Presidential Ambassador for Mission Advancement PR Newswire Retrieved May 28 2015 Our Story Legacy Deo Retrieved September 7 2019 Sources editNewspaper articles edit Patricia Rice Missouri Synod Elects Moderate as President St Louis Post Dispatch 16 July 2001 Houston native takes synod helm Houston Chronicle 21 July 2001 Tom Heinen Lutherans doctrinal clash builds Milwaukee Journal Sentinel 21 July 2001 Tim Townsend Church leader faces reelection fight St Louis Post Dispatch 11 July 2004 Adam Jadhav Embattled Lutheran president wins vote St Louis Post Dispatch 21 July 2004 Amendment A falls short of affirmation LCMS Reporter March 2005 LCMS Q amp A document on Amendment A PDF 2004 Mollie Ziegler Hemingway Radio Silence Wall Street Journal 28 March 2008 External links editOfficial Kieschnick biography formerly on the LCMS website LCMS homepage Concordia Historical Institute biography Religious titles Preceded byRobert T Kuhn PresidentLutheran Church Missouri Synod2001 2010 Succeeded byMatthew C Harrison Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gerald B Kieschnick amp oldid 1178429319, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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