Report

R4.1 Rosters, Statistics, and Research Services

Official Workbook report source text. No analysis has been added.

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Report number/id
R4.1
Report title
R4.1 Rosters, Statistics, and Research Services
Workbook start page
46
Workbook end page
49
Source pages
46, 47, 48, 49
Source status
source_checked
Committee
Not available
R4.1
Rosters, Statistics, and Research Services
The Department of Rosters, Statistics, and Research Services 
(RSRS), reporting to the Office of the Secretary, provides the core 
“organ of recollection and administration” for roster, leadership, con-
tact, and statistical information related to congregations, individual 
members, schools, districts, and other agencies and affiliated entities 
of the Synod. Some of this information is published in The Lutheran 
Annual or to the Synod webpage; some is utilized by districts and 
others in the Synod for ministry, administrative, and research purpos-
es. The preceding three years have continued to produce meaningful 
changes for the department. Using updated systems and optimized 
processes, RSRS continues to transform from a transactional da-
ta-entry unit into a strategic information and user support provider. 
Noteworthy accomplishments include the following:
•	 Implementation of two new applications to support LCMS 
District offices with
o
 the call 
process and general roster management of 
ordained and commissioned ministers—unifying, for 
the first time, the roster management system jointly

2026 Convention Workbook
47
OFFICER, BOARD, AND COMMISSION REPORTS
•	 Made numerous appointments and filled vacancies as pro-
vided by the Bylaws.
•	 Updated and modified various policies that guide the work of 
both the BOD and agencies of the Synod.
•	 Received, considered, and sometimes acted relating to re-
ports from Synod agencies.
•	 Monitored, and when in the best interests of the Synod, re-
solved, defended, and pursued litigation involving corporate 
Synod.
•	 Monitored litigation involving agencies of the Synod and 
submitted amicus curiae briefs on issues of significance to 
First Amendment rights, including religious freedom and 
freedom of speech, considered by the courts.
•	 Released funds to resolve a corporate Synod guarantee of 
Concordia University System (CUS) debt.
•	 Continually monitored giving and other financial trends.
•	 Approved the purchase of property in Wittenberg, Germa-
ny, that will provide space to support Synod mission work 
across Europe.
•	 Directed a comprehensive review of the scope and efficiency 
of work within each of the corporate Synod officers’ respec-
tive departments.
•	 Established policies to ensure adequate reserves for corpo-
rate Synod to avoid future deficiencies of available cash to 
meet budget requirements.
•	 Retained new legal counsel for Synod to provide informed 
options, perspectives, and support for actions taken or con-
sidered by the BOD and Synod officers.
C. Proactive Initiatives of the Board
The BOD has also worked diligently to take a more proactive 
approach to address significant issues that have broad synodwide 
impact. In this process, the BOD has worked to create a cooperative 
working atmosphere with and among the agencies of the Synod. 
These efforts include:
•	 Formed an LCMS Entity Activity Development (LEAD) 
Committee that has worked extensively with the synodwide 
corporate and trust entities and other agencies to prepare and 
submit for consideration by the 2026 Synod convention pro-
posed changes to bylaws that impact corporate Synod and 
agencies of the Synod when creating corporations. If adopt-
ed, this will provide uniformity across the Synod and—by 
retiring confusing former regulations in large part not previ-
ously captured in the Bylaws—clarity for those forming and 
evaluating the formation of new corporations.
•	 Identified and sought opportunities to engage boards of Syn-
od agencies for collaboration, discussion, and training on 
matters including Synod governance and compliance, rela -
tionship of the BOD to the various agency boards, fiduciary 
responsibilities owed to the agency and to the Synod, the 
First Amendment, and hard decisions on challenging issues.
•	 Approved and submitted to the convention overtures that 
relate to the mission boards, appointed Synod officers, and 
CUS and in response to opinions of the Commission on Con-
stitutional Matters (CCM).
gations cannot do alone or can do more effectively when acting 
together. The Synod was created by, is maintained by, and con-
tinues to exist to serve the Synod’s congregations and individual 
members. 
Synod Const. Art. VII establishes the relationship of the Synod 
to the congregations: “Synod is not an ecclesiastical government 
exercising legislative or coercive powers.” It is only advisory with 
respect to the individual congregations. 
The congregations that formed and continue to maintain the 
Synod have a common confession stated in Art. II. This confession 
is that the “written Word of God is the only rule and norm of faith 
and practice” and that the Lutheran Confessions are “a true and 
unadulterated statement and exposition of the Word of God.” It is 
this confession that binds the congregations (and individual mem -
bers) together. Every member of the Synod accepts this confession 
“without reservation” and is not free to depart from it.
The Synod, under Scripture and the Lutheran Confessions, has 
established, in Const. Art. III, the Synod’s objectives. To carry out 
these objectives, the member congregations, through their Synod, 
have created seminaries and universities, synodwide corporation 
and trust entities, and various other agencies (see Bylaw 1.2.1 [a]), 
as well as various offices and the BOD. 
The BOD, all Synod agencies, offices, and others were created 
to serve congregations and other members. They do so by carrying 
out the objectives established by the Synod. This is always to be 
done (1) consistent with Scripture and the Lutheran Confessions; 
and (2) according to the directives given by the Synod congrega -
tions in the form of a Constitution, Bylaws, and convention reso-
lutions. 
The role of the BOD within the Synod is unique. The BOD is 
both the board of corporate Synod, the Missouri corporation (com-
pare Bylaws 1.2.1 [f] and [v]), and “an officer” of ecclesial Synod 
(Const. Art. XI A 4), overseeing especially the business, property, 
and legal aspects of the Synod’s work in the agencies of the Synod 
outside corporate Synod (Const. Art. XI E 2) and exercising the 
specific business, property, and legal authority and duties not del-
egated otherwise.
The important role of the BOD makes it directly “accountable 
to the Synod in convention for the discharge of its duties” (Bylaw 
3.3.4). The BOD takes this accountability very seriously. In all its 
work, it keeps at the forefront of its actions the decisions and inter-
ests of the Synod congregations and individual members. 
The BOD’s work involves left-hand kingdom matters, including 
property of the Synod (Bylaw 1.2.1 [r]) and a broad variety of busi-
ness and legal matters. The BOD has oversight (Bylaw 1.2.1[p]) 
and other responsibilities over the Synod’s seminaries, universities, 
synodwide corporation and trust entities, and other agencies. Over-
sight means “to monitor; to make inquiry and receive a response 
thereto; to make suggestions; to bring to a higher authority.” The 
“higher authority” for the BOD is the Synod in convention. The 
right-hand kingdom ecclesiastical responsibilities are given to the 
Synod President, district presidents, and other officers.
B. Stewardship Actions of the Board
More specifically, and as an example, over the past triennium, 
the BOD considered and took the following actions as part of its 
stewardship of Synod resources:
•	 Approved master plan changes and capital projects for both 
seminaries and most of the universities.

2026 Convention Workbook
48 
OFFICER, BOARD, AND COMMISSION REPORTS
Res. 7-04B directs the BOD to report to the 2026 Synod con-
vention its progress in achieving this resolution requirements and to 
propose bylaw changes and other action as may be necessary. Be-
cause of the detail involved, the number of corrections that remain 
to be made, and the intensive work the institutions are engaged in 
at the Workbook deadline, the BOD intends to continue its work 
over the upcoming months and provide a supplemental report to the 
2026 convention identifying any remaining corrections to be made 
and proposing any further action that might be necessary.
E. Challenges for the Board
In large organizations it is not uncommon to have “silos,” which 
are units within the organization that pursue an agenda or direction 
at least isolated from and often increasingly inconsistent with the 
objectives and mission of the organization. That has occurred in the 
Synod. Perhaps the best example of this is the theological direction 
that the Concordia Seminary, St. Louis, administration and faculty 
majority took in the 1960s and 1970s that was in direct conflict with 
our confession. Correcting this had a dramatic impact on all aspects 
of our church body that continues today.
But the Seminex circumstance, while perhaps the most signif-
icant and best known, is not the only silo that has existed or could 
exist in our Synod. Silos have existed through many agencies in all 
aspects of the Synod. Absent intentional effort, they naturally arise 
and strengthen. They have hurt the Synod and cost her vital re-
sources. All must consciously resist their development. Sometimes 
the misdirection is theological, sometimes it involves left-hand 
kingdom matters, and sometimes it involves both. 
There has been steady progress in recent years by many in the 
Synod, including the BOD, to eliminate these silos. This effort will 
continue. Eliminating silos will help the Synod more faithfully and 
efficiently carry out its objectives consistent with its confession; 
will help avoid unnecessary conflict, disputes, division, and im-
proper utilization of property of the Synod; and, simply put, will 
help us all walk together more faithfully. While the President is 
charged with promoting and maintaining “unity of doctrine and 
practice” and seeing that the officers and agencies of the Synod “act 
in accordance with Synod’s Constitution” (Const. Art. XI B 1–3), 
the BOD in its sphere must oversee business, property, and legal 
aspects in a way that keeps the whole responsible and responsive 
to the convention. 
The BOD faces with some regularity concerns that individuals 
or agencies are failing, with regard to property, business, or legal 
matters, to comply with the Constitution, Bylaws, and resolutions 
of the Synod. It is then incumbent upon the BOD to address and 
attempt to correct any noncompliance. On occasion, the individu -
als or agencies continue to proceed in a fashion that conflicts with 
what the Synod has decided. In these situations, it is important to 
consider again that the Synod and all its agencies are responsible 
to the member congregations. The congregations have made deci -
sions as to how they will be served best by those who they have 
put in positions to carry out their decisions. This means that when 
individuals or agencies fail to comply with the Synod Constitution, 
Bylaws, and resolutions, they are failing to honor and respect what 
the Synod’s member congregations have decided.
The BOD, with some frequency, receives an assortment of ex-
cuses or justifications for noncompliance. Sometimes, efforts are 
made to negotiate with the BOD an agreement that would allow 
the noncompliance. The BOD, of course, has never been given the 
authority to excuse noncompliance with Synod’s Constitution, By-
•	 In response to the leadership and diligent work of Concordia 
Plan Services (CPS), the BOD approved the creation of a 
property and casualty insurance company, named Concordia 
Risk Solutions (CRS), that will be able to provide insurance 
to corporate Synod, agencies of the Synod, auxiliaries, rec-
ognized service organizations, and member congregations. 
The BOD also delegated the management of CRS to CPS.
•	 With the help and insight of Synod’s Chief Financial Officer, 
Nathan Haak, the BOD has adopted a balanced budget each 
of the past three years and continued a multi-year process of 
improving the financial condition of corporate Synod. Please 
note CFO Haak’s Report (Report R5.2).  
•	 Worked with the Operations Team in long-range planning to 
develop long-term plans to sustain corporate Synod opera-
tions and foster financial stability and integrity.
•	 Adopted policies and protocols to maintain financial strength 
and integrity when adopting future budgets.
•	 As part of its regular monitoring of gifting and other finan-
cial trends, noted, in particular, continuing decline in receipts 
from the districts, resulting in large part from the decline of 
receipts by the districts from congregations.
•	 Updated policies governing executive compensation for cor-
porate Synod and the synodwide corporation and trust en-
tities.
D. 2023 Resolution 7-04B
This resolution made comprehensive changes to the CUS and 
the overall governance of the Concordia universities. It also ad-
dressed certain long-standing issues that have impacted how “prop-
erty of the Synod” (Bylaw 1.2.1 [r]) is to be managed by the Synod 
with respect to the Concordia universities and Synod seminaries. 
Resolution 7-04B provided:
Resolved, That the BOD, after input from the Commission 
on Constitutional Matters, review within the upcoming trien-
nium the governing documents and governance practices of 
all higher education institutions of the Synod, and all boards 
of regents and boards of associated foundations be directed to 
correct any identified noncompliance with the Synod Consti-
tution, Bylaws, and resolutions; and be it further 
Resolved, That each university of the CUS shall acknowl-
edge in a written agreement, facilitated by the BOD of the 
Synod, the paramount right, title, and interest of the Synod in 
the name Concordia, … ; and be it finally 
Resolved, That the BOD report to the subsequent Synod 
convention its progress in achieving the foregoing and any 
proposed bylaw changes or other action needed to more faith-
fully steward resources for higher education in the Synod.
As required by Res. 7-04B, the CCM conducted an extensive 
review of the governing documents and governance practices of all 
Concordia universities and Synod seminaries. The CCM then pro-
vided comprehensive and detailed reports to each of the higher ed-
ucation institutions and the BOD. The BOD has accepted the CCM 
opinions in their entirety and has worked with the higher education 
institutions to bring all their governing documents and governance 
practices into compliance with the Constitution, Bylaws, and res-
olutions. 
Much progress has been made in this effort. But there remains 
more work to be done.

2026 Convention Workbook
49
OFFICER, BOARD, AND COMMISSION REPORTS
A. International Efforts
The CAO works with Synod legal counsel, foreign legal coun-
sel, and the Office of International Mission to determine how to 
best structure LCMS operations in the many foreign countries 
where we work. These efforts are critical for protecting LCMS as-
sets abroad, protecting LCMS employees working abroad, and pro-
tecting LCMS assets in the U.S. by ensuring appropriate structures 
are in place. As we clarify a strategy and preferred methodology for 
entering a country, this work can shift from setting up new entities 
to managing and maintaining what’s already in place.
B. Operations Team
The CAO is charged with convening the Operations Team, com-
prised of the CAO, Chief Financial Officer, and Chief Mission Of-
ficer of the Synod. This meeting provides a regular forum to ensure 
operational and strategic alignment across LCMS programs. 
The Operations Team regularly meets with leaders of LCMS 
operational units including Human Resources, Information Tech-
nology, Operations Support Services, and others to align key efforts 
in those areas.
C. Process Improvement
As mentioned in the Chief Financial Officer report (Report 
R5.2), we have been working to improve the tools and processes we 
use to do the work of the Synod. A key effort currently underway 
is implementation of a new constituent relationship management 
system, which is a key tool used daily by many of the employees 
of the Synod, helping manage relationships with donors, congrega-
tions, church workers, other entities, and more. This program has 
brought together a substantial portion of our workforce to ensure 
our many varied requirements are met, and the objectives of the 
program include increasing efficiency in how we work, improving 
our relationships with constituents across the Synod, and identify-
ing opportunities to increase revenues. 
We cannot accomplish the work given to us by convention in 
support of the Synod without the significant support of the church, 
via your prayers, time, talents, and treasures. I pray that the Lord 
continues to bless our efforts for the good of the Synod, recogniz-
ing that in all things His will is done, that the world may know that 
Christ Is Risen Indeed. 
Nathan M. Haak, Interim Chief Administrative Officer

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