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R62.10 Deacons, Evangelists and the Office of the Holy Ministry in the New Testament (2025) CTCR Opinions and Other Documents

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Report number/id
R62.10
Report title
R62.10 Deacons, Evangelists and the Office of the Holy Ministry in the New Testament (2025) CTCR Opinions and Other Documents
Workbook start page
263
Workbook end page
269
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263, 264, 265, 266, 267, 268, 269
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source_checked
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R62.10

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THEOLOGICAL DOCUMENTS  —COMMISSION ON THEOLOGY AND CHURCH RELATIONS
resurrection (see Acts 1:21–22). Although it is used for other apostles in the New Testament (such as Paul 
and others), the distinctiveness of the Twelve is maintained.10  
An important text that serves as testimony to Jesus moving beyond the 12 apostles to a larger number 
of workers is Luke’s account of Jesus appointing the 72 and sending them out two by two (Luke 10:1–
20).11 Although the 12 apostles were a unique group of disciples, the sending out of the 72 suggests that 
Jesus would establish an Office of the Holy Ministry that would continue to grow in the future beyond the 
12 to other male disciples.  
 
Lutherans have used the term “the apostolic ministry” regularly (and properly) as another title for the 
Office of the Holy Ministry because that title stresses that it is a continuation of the one office established 
in Jesus and instituted for the extension of His ministry in the church.
12 Sometimes the important 
distinction between the time-bound office of apostle and the Office of the Holy Ministry as it continues to 
exist in the church has been emphasized in ways that deny or fail to acknowledge a valid continuity 
between the apostolic office and the Office of the Holy Ministry. It is clear from the New Testament, 
however, that there is continuity between the office of apostle and those who follow in the apostolic office 
through the divinely instituted activities of preaching, teaching and administering the Sacraments. As the 
CTCR states in its 1981 report on the ministry: “The office of the public ministry is grounded in the 
ministry of Christ and is an extension of the apostolate established by Him.” “As a continuation of the 
ministry of Christ and as an extension of the apostolic ministry, the office of the public ministry is not 
optional for the church.”
13 
 
C. Prophet, Evangelist and Teacher 
 
Ephesians 4:11 provides important testimony to the various titles used for the Office of the Holy 
Ministry during the early decades of the Christian church: “Kai autos edōken tous men apostolous, tous 
de prophētas, tous de euangelistas, tous de poimēnas kai didaskalous.” On the basis of Paul’s testimony 
that Christ gave the church “the apostles, the prophets, the evangelists, the shepherds/pastors and 
teachers,” the offices of apostle and shepherd/pastor are sometimes understood as distinct and separate 
from the offices of prophet, evangelist and teacher in the first-century church. This understanding is 
reflected in the older New International Version that renders the verse, “It was he who gave some to be 
 
10 An exception would be sectarian Christian groups that continue to use the title “apostle” for specific leaders to 
express their unique authority (cf. the ranking of “apostles” as “first” in 1 Cor. 12:28). 
11 Due to textual variants, there is some debate about whether Jesus sent out 72 or 70 disciples; for discussion of this 
textual problem, see Arthur A. Just Jr., Luke 9:51–24:53 (St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1997), 435–445. 
Because “seventy-two” is the harder reading due to the probability of some harmonization of this account with 
Moses choosing “seventy elders” (Num. 11:16–17, 25; Ex. 24:1, 9–14), the reading of “seventy-two” will be 
followed here.  
12 This emphasis on “apostolic ministry” should not be understood as espousing the need for “apostolic succession” 
as argued in some churches. As the CTCR notes, “the pastoral ministry is apostolic in terms of what it teaches but 
not in terms of an unbroken succession of ordaining bishops” (The Ministry, 26).  
13 CTCR, The Ministry, 26, 27.  
apostles, some to be prophets, some to be evangelists, and some to be pastors and teachers” (NIV 1984). 
It is more accurate, however, to conclude that Paul is specifying here the individuals whom Christ has 
given to the church: “And he gave the apostles, the prophets, the evangelists, the shepherds and teachers” 
(ESV).
14 The syntax of “shepherds/pastors and teachers [tous de poimēnas kai didaskalous]” also 
indicates that these two are not distinct offices. Apostles, prophets and teachers are also mentioned by 
Paul in a sort of descending rank within the Office of the Holy Ministry when addressing the problem of 
ecstatic speaking in tongues at Corinth: “And God has appointed in the church first apostles, second 
prophets, third teachers” (1 Cor. 12:28). The phrase “God has appointed” affirms that these all belong to 
the Office of the Holy Ministry, mandated and instituted by Jesus. 
 
Although Thomas Winger understands Paul to be implying some distinction of offices with these five 
titles in Ephesians, he concludes with this important observation: “At the same time, the usage of the five 
terms in Eph 4:11 elsewhere in the NT demonstrates a certain overlap of categories; within the one 
divinely instituted office of the ministry, certain men held only one, but others held many, of these 
offices.”
15 This “overlap of categories” between apostle and shepherd/pastor, which has already been 
discussed above, is also present here. Jesus is often addressed as “Teacher” or “Rabbi” by His disciples 
(e.g., Mark 9:5, 38; 10:17, 35, 51). Two of the primary tasks that characterize Jesus’ earthly ministry are 
teaching and preaching as noted with the participles didaskōn (“teaching”) and kēryssōn 
(“proclaiming/preaching”) in the Gospels (e.g., Matt. 4:23; 9:35). Thus, the apostles are also teachers who 
teach everything that Jesus taught (Matt. 28:19). Jesus is also identified explicitly as “a prophet,” showing 
that His ministry has continuity with this established office in the history of Israel since Moses (e.g., 
Deut. 18:15; John 6:14). In light of the longtime office of prophet among the Israelites for the man chosen 
by YHWH to proclaim the words that the prophet received from YHWH, it is not surprising that Paul 
uses the term “prophet” in the first-century church as a title for those who follow Jesus in the prophetic 
task of proclaiming the Word of God (Eph. 4:11; 1 Cor. 12:28). 
 
Paul appears to be using these five titles in Ephesians 4:11 in an inclusive manner, therefore, for those 
who were carrying out, in various unique ways, the one Office of the Holy Ministry in the first-century 
church. At the heart of each title is the sacred task of preaching and teaching the Word of God, especially 
the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. According to the Apostle Paul, the Office of the Holy Ministry is 
manifested in the apostles, prophets, evangelists, shepherds/pastors and teachers whom Christ has given 
to His church. We also use a variety of titles today for men holding the one Office of the Holy Ministry 
based upon their specific call and pastoral vocation: senior pastors, associate pastors, visitation pastors, 
missionaries, church planters, college and seminary professors, district presidents, and the like.  
 
 
14 On the translation issue, see Winger, Ephesians, 449–458. There are also challenges with modern translations of 
Ephesians 4:12; see Henry H. Hamann, “The Translation of Ephesians 4:12 — A Necessary Revision,” Concordia 
Journal 14 (1988): 42–49, and Winger, Ephesians, 459. 
15 Winger, Ephesians, 458. 
Acts 21:8 describes Philip as an “evangelist.” Acts 8 tells how Philip proclaimed Christ in Samaria, 
bringing people (like the Ethiopian eunuch) to faith and baptizing them. “It seems clear from these 
passages that Philip had a gift for bringing the Gospel to men who had not yet heard it. He does not 
appear to have become a parish pastor, but went from place to place proclaiming Christ.”
16 In 2 Timothy 
4:5, Paul tells Timothy to “do the work of an evangelist, fulfill your ministry.” “In some sense, [Timothy] 
could be called a ‘diocesan bishop,’ so far as his office is concerned. This is indicated by the instruction 
about what should be done in the churches (1 Tim. 1:3ff.; 2), and the instructions about what kind of 
persons should become bishops (chapter 3).”
17 
 
D. Overseer 
 
The fact that the title “overseer” (episkopos) is closely related to the title “shepherd” and “elder” is 
visible especially in Acts 20:28, where Paul summons “the elders of the church [tous presbyterous tēs 
ekklēsias]” (Acts 20:17) from Ephesus in order to exhort them about shepherding as the key function of 
being an overseer: “Pay careful attention to yourselves and to all the flock, in which the Holy Spirit has 
made you overseers [episkopous], to shepherd [poimainein] the church of God, which he obtained with 
his own blood.” The close relationship and overlap between the offices of “overseer” and “elder” in the 
congregations established by Paul and his associates is evident in the similar qualifications given by Paul 
in his pastoral epistles for “overseers” (1 Tim. 3:1–7) and for “elders” (Titus 1:5–9). 
 
The saying is trustworthy: If anyone aspires to the office of overseer [episkopēs], he desires a noble 
task. Therefore an overseer [ton episkopon] must be above reproach, the husband of one wife, sober-
minded, self-controlled, respectable, hospitable, able to teach, not a drunkard, not violent but gentle, 
not quarrelsome, not a lover of money. He must manage his own household well, with all dignity 
keeping his children submissive, for if someone does not know how to manage his own household, 
how will he care for God’s church? He must not be a recent convert, or he may become puffed up 
with conceit and fall into the condemnation of the devil. Moreover, he must be well thought of by 
outsiders, so that he may not fall into disgrace, into a snare of the devil. (1 Tim. 3:1–7) 
 
This is why I left you in Crete, so that you might put what remained into order, and appoint elders 
[presbyterous] in every town as I directed you — if anyone is above reproach, the husband of one 
wife, and his children are believers and not open to the charge of debauchery or insubordination. For 
an overseer [ton episkopon], as God’s steward [theou oikonomon], must be above reproach. He must 
not be arrogant or quick-tempered or a drunkard or violent or greedy for gain, but hospitable, a lover 
of good, self-controlled, upright, holy, and disciplined. He must hold firm to the trustworthy word as 
 
16 CTCR, The Ministry in Its Relation to the Christian Church (St. Louis: The Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod, 
1973), 11. The use and citation of this 1973 document does not imply  endorsement of its conclusions or 
recommendations, such as the ordination of called male teachers.  
17 CTCR, Ministry in Its Relation, 12. 
taught, so that he may be able to give instruction in sound doctrine and also to rebuke those who 
contradict it. (Titus 1:5–9) 
 
The qualifications listed in these two texts have much in common. Even the titles are so closely 
related that Paul begins in Titus 1:5 with the title “elder” (presbyteros) and then switches to the title 
“overseer” (episkopos) in Titus 1:7. Although we do not know whether overseers may have had more 
and/or different responsibilities than elders, nevertheless both should be understood as titles for those who 
hold the Office of the Holy Ministry. Therefore, an elder is also an overseer, who is further described here 
as “God’s steward [theou oikonomos],” a descriptive term used elsewhere by Paul for those in the Office 
of the Holy Ministry (“stewards [oikonomous] of the mysteries of God” in 1 Cor. 4:1). The title episkopos 
(“overseer”) is sometimes translated as “bishop” and used by some denominations for pastors who have 
oversight authority within that denomination. The understanding of episkopos as an office distinct from 
and higher than the Office of the Holy Ministry, however, is not present in the New Testament. 
E. Elder 
 
Because “elder” (presbyteros) is a term used in many Christian congregations today for an elected 
office held by laity who work closely with the pastor in the spiritual care of a congregation, its presence in 
the New Testament as a title for the Office of the Holy Ministry can be a source of some confusion. The 
close interrelationship and interchangeability between the titles “elder,” “apostle,” “shepherd” and 
“overseer” is most clearly presented in 1 Peter 5:1–5. There the Apostle Peter clearly understands himself 
to be an elder when he writes: “I exhort the elders [presbyterous] among you, as a fellow elder 
[sympresbyteros]” (1 Peter 5:1, emphasis added). He then exhorts these elders to “shepherd [poimanate] 
the flock of God that is among you, exercising oversight [episkopountes], … being examples to the flock” 
(1 Peter 5:2–3). The use of the participle episkopountes (“exercising oversight”) in this text demonstrates 
the close relationship and overlap between an overseer and an elder in the understanding of the Apostle 
Peter and the first-century Christians to whom he is writing. Both “overseers” and “elders” served in the 
Office of the Holy Ministry and were responsible for shepherding Christ’s flock.  
 
Furthermore, as noted above, Paul’s list of qualifications for “elders” in Titus 1:5–9 clearly identifies 
an “elder” as one who was also an “overseer” (Titus 1:7). Paul also emphasizes that elders carry out the 
primary task of the Office of the Holy Ministry: the teaching and proclaiming of God’s Word. “He must 
hold firm to the trustworthy word as taught, so that he may be able to give instruction in sound doctrine 
and also to rebuke those who contradict it” (Titus 1:9).  
 
F. Deacon  
 
One of the challenges related to the title “deacon” is that the semantic range of that term can include 
everything from those who are simply “servants” in various household capacities, to rulers (Rom. 13:4), 
to the Lord Jesus Himself (Rom. 15:8), and to those potentially occupying a specific ecclesial office of

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“deacon.” Moreover, there has not been complete consensus — in the LCMS or otherwise — about how 
the term is used in the New Testament or its relationship to the Office of the Holy Ministry.  
Most New Testament references to “deacon” seem to refer to general “service” in the church. Two 
passages, however, clearly refer to deacon as an office in the church. In Philippians 1:1, Paul greets “all 
the saints in Christ Jesus who are at Philippi, with the overseers and deacons.” No further information is 
provided in this letter about the nature of these offices, their specific responsibilities or the relationship 
between them. In 1 Timothy 3, Paul lists the qualifications for overseers (vv. 1–7) and deacons 
(vv. 8–13), again without providing specific information about the nature of these offices, their duties or 
the relationship between them. Because these offices are linked together in some way in both of these 
passages, some Lutheran exegetes and theologians have concluded that both offices belong to the Office 
of the Holy Ministry, with only slight differences in qualifications and perhaps (therefore) somewhat 
different duties and responsibilities. On the other hand, precisely because of the differences in the list of 
qualifications (“able to teach,” “above reproach” and “not … a recent convert” are omitted from the 
deacon list), other Lutheran exegetes and theologians have come to the opposite conclusion: The office of 
deacon did not belong to the Office of the Holy Ministry, but was created by the Early Church to assist 
those in the Office of the Holy Ministry.   
 
 Complicating matters further is Luke’s account of the seven men chosen to assist the apostles in 
Acts 6:1–6. Some interpreters have identified these seven as “deacons,”
18 primarily because the infinitive 
form of the verb diakoneō (“I serve/minister”) is used in Acts 6:2. Luke, however, never identifies these 
seven using the noun diakonos (“deacon/servant/minister”). He only uses the noun to describe the 
apostles’ “ministry of the word” (Acts 6:4). The 12 apostles state, “It is not right that we should give up 
preaching of the word of God to serve/minister [diakonein] tables. Therefore, brothers, pick out from 
among you seven men of good repute, full of the Spirit and of wisdom, whom we will appoint to this 
duty. But we will devote ourselves to prayer and to the ministry/service of the word [tē diakonia tou 
logou]” (Acts 6:2–4).  
 
Even though one of their tasks was “serving/ministering” tables (possibly in the sense of 
administrative oversight
19), it is noteworthy that the description of these seven as being “full of the Spirit 
and of wisdom” (Acts 6:3) implies that they are being set aside for more than serving tables. (This is 
reminiscent of how Joshua was described when Moses had laid hands upon him as his successor in the 
leadership of Israel; see Deut. 34:9.) More importantly, Luke testifies at length to Stephen’s character 
(“full of grace and power” in Acts 6:8 and “full of the Holy Spirit” in Acts 7:55), his preaching 
(exhibiting “wisdom and the Spirit” in Acts 6:10 and in his extensive proclamation in Acts 7:2–53), his 
deeds (“doing great wonders and signs among the people” in Acts 6:8), and even his appearance (“his 
 
18 CTCR, The Ministry, 17, implies that a new office distinct from the Office of the Holy Ministry was begun by the 
church in Jerusalem. While the seven in Acts 6 were not apostles, they clearly did more than wait on tables, as will 
be discussed below. 
19 A Greek Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature, ed. Frederick William Danker, 
Third Edition (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2000), 230 (definition 5).  
face was like the face of an angel/messenger” in Acts 6:15). Luke also testifies to Philip’s ministry of 
proclamation/teaching, his demonstration of divine signs (exorcisms and healings), and his baptizing of 
the Ethiopian eunuch (Acts 8:5–8, 26–40). While it seems clear that there is some distinction between the 
12 apostles and these seven (the latter were not necessarily eyewitnesses of Jesus’ earthly ministry and 
resurrection), some theologians see this as evidence to suggest that these seven did, indeed, hold the 
Office of the Holy Ministry. Others disagree. 
 
Luther, for his part, held that “the diaconate is the ministry, not of reading the Gospel or the Epistle, 
as is the present practice, but of distributing the church’s aid to the poor, so that the priests may be 
relieved of the burden of temporal matters and may give themselves more freely to prayer and the Word. 
For this was the purpose of the institution of the diaconate, as we read in Acts.”
20 Others, such as 
Chemnitz, suggested a variation of Luther’s view: Deacons such as Stephen and Philip were originally 
appointed to the more mundane task described in Acts 6 but, after proving themselves, were later 
entrusted with “more important duties of the ministry [i.e., preaching and teaching] conferred with greater 
benefit.”
21 Theodore Graebner is representative of a view that is common in the LCMS tradition and 
relates to our forthcoming discussion of what the LCMS has historically referred to as “auxiliary offices” 
created by the church in Christian freedom: 
 
The seven elders performed such services as the twelve apostles were unable to do for want of time. 
In order to emphasize the fact, we repeat that this office of eldership was not divinely appointed, nor 
instituted by God’s command, as is the office of the ministry. It simply was inaugurated to supply 
help for the office of the ministry; it is an auxiliary office thereof, instituted by the Church.
22 
 
Many more examples could be given, but to summarize and reiterate: No consensus exists among 
Lutheran exegetes and theologians, past or present, about the nature of the office of “deacon” in the New 
Testament — specifically, whether this office was a “help ing office” created by the church or whether it 
was an office that belonged to the one divinely instituted Office of the Holy Ministry. In view of these 
differing exegetical and historical perspectives, it is important that when the term “deacon” is used today 
in the LCMS we strive to be as clear and consistent as possible in our usage of this term, especially if and 
when it is used in “official” ways to designate a particular office of service in the church (see Parts II and 
III of this report).
23   
 
20 “The Babylonian Captivity of the Church” (1520), AE 36:116. 
21 Walther, The Church and the Office of the Ministry, 293. 
22 Theodore Graebner, “Elders and Deacons in the Lutheran Church,” trans. W. Cook, The Lutheran Witness 15 
[1916], 222. 
23 The single text that might possibly be understood as a biblical basis for a woman holding the office of “deacon” 
(or “deaconess”) is Paul’s statement about Phoebe in Romans 16:1, “I commend to you our sister Phoebe, a 
servant/deaconess [diakonon] of the church at Cenchreae.” Although most translators render diakonos here as 
“servant,” some English translations render it as “deaconess” (e.g., RSV, JB and NJB). Some scholars think it is 
premature to speak of an established office of diaconate being referenced here, yet 1 Timothy 3:8 –13 is evidence of 
the existence of such an office for males during the mission carried out by Paul. While all early Christians — male 
 
G. Other Related Nomenclature 
 
There are a few terms used in the New Testament and in the church that are related to the Office of 
the Holy Ministry but are not exclusively used as titles for this office. These terms include slave, 
servant/minister, steward, father, reverend and priest. Each will be discussed very briefly here. 
The Apostle Paul refers to himself as a “slave” (doulos) or a “servant/minister” (diakonos) in his 
epistles (e.g., Gal. 1:10; Rom. 1:1; 1 Cor. 1:23), but he does not use either term as a specific title for his 
office as apostle. These terms function as descriptors of his life in the office of apostle. They simply 
describe his life and ministry as one of service to Christ and others. Every apostle and pastor is to be a 
slave and servant/minister of Jesus. By using the term “servant/minister” (diakonos) to describe himself in 
1 Corinthians 1:23, Paul is not implying that he is in both the office of apostle and the office of deacon. 
Because the term “minister” is often used in the LCMS for those who serve in the Office of the Holy 
Ministry and is also sometimes used as a title for those in the auxiliary office of deacon, it must be 
carefully defined when used.
24  
 
As noted above, “steward” (oikonomos) is sometimes used by Paul as a description of what holders of 
the Office of the Holy Ministry do as well as what they are (“stewards of the mysteries of God,” 1 Cor. 
4:1; cf. Titus 1:7). Although there are New Testament texts about the importance of respecting those with 
spiritual authority over others (e.g., 1 Thess. 5:12), the title “reverend” is not used in the New Testament. 
While Paul refers to himself as a spiritual “father” (patēr) on occasion (e.g., 1 Cor. 4:15b), “father” is not 
used as a title for the Office of the Holy Ministry in the New Testament. Each baptized Christian is said to 
have the status of a “priest” (hiereus) in various texts (e.g., 1 Peter 2:9; Rev. 1:6), and Jesus is our “high 
priest” (e.g., Heb. 4:14). “Priest” is not used in the New Testament, however, as a title for those who 
serve in the Office of the Holy Ministry, even though those who serve in this office clearly have some 
priestly roles (e.g., service at the altar by offering prayers and administering the Lord’s Supper). 
 
II. Nomenclature for Auxiliary Offices in the LCMS Today 
 
 
and female — were to be “servants” in their respective congregation, Phoebe appears to serve “the church at 
Cenchreae” as one holding a position that assisted the man who held the Office of the Holy Ministry. We will 
discuss briefly the LCMS office of deaconess in the next section of the report. 
24 Within the LCMS, the terms “ordained minister” and “commissioned minister” are used to distinguish between 
those in the Office of the Holy Ministry and those in auxiliary offices; see Constitution Article V B in the 2023 
LCMS Handbook. An example of the confusion that use of the term “minister” without clear definition can cause is 
seen in Oscar E. Feucht, Everyone a Minister: A Guide to Churchmanship for Laity and Clergy (St. Louis: 
Concordia Publishing House, 1974). The natural question arises: If only some are called to be ordained ministers, 
and some others are called to be commissioned ministers, then how can everyone be a minister? Because of the 
technical use of “minister” for specific offices in the church, “servant” is a better translation to use as a label for 
every Christian (i.e., everyone is a servant).  
Note: The LCMS has for nearly its entire existence used the concept of “auxiliary offices” to 
describe the vocation of those church workers (among others) who do not hold the Office of the 
Holy Ministry. That concept emerged from the eighth of C.F.W. Walther’s synodically adopted 
1851 theses on the ministry, which argued that all such helping offices in the church stem from 
the pastoral ministry, as the highest office in the church. Since that time, these other offices — 
primarily teachers, but also all those now presently grouped under the classification of 
“commissioned ministers” — have been considered as functioning in a way that supports the 
pastoral office in its ministry of Word and Sacrament. This has understandably raised concerns 
from different corners of the Synod. For some, the very fact of referring to those in helping 
offices as “ministers” seems to detract from or confuse them with the one Office of the Holy 
Ministry. For others, especially those serving in auxiliary offices, being placed in this category 
gives the impression that their work is somehow less important than or spiritually inferior to the 
pastor’s. The Commission acknowledges that the concept itself is limited and not altogether 
helpful (as will be discussed later), and it concedes that the historical tensions the concept has 
produced on both sides of the debate are valid and reflect legitimate concerns. The description 
of auxiliary offices in what follows is not meant necessarily as an endorsement of the term or 
concept of “auxiliary office,” but rather it is an attempt to use the category the Synod has used 
throughout its history — one that has shaped and continues to shape our church polity — and 
apply it to the present question regarding deacons and evangelists.
25 
The LCMS uses the language of “ordained ministers” for those who hold the Office of the Holy Ministry 
and “commissioned ministers” for those who hold an officially recognized auxiliary office in the Synod.
26 
Although it is possible to have an ordained minister called to and serving in one of the auxiliary offices 
(e.g., an ordained pastor serving as a kantor or a Lutheran school principal), these offices are ordinarily 
filled by Synod-trained laity who are commissioned ministers. Some LCMS congregations and districts 
use the nomenclature of deacon and evangelist, even though these are not officially recognized auxiliary 
offices in the Synod at the present time. Therefore, usage of this nomenclature will also be discussed 
below. 
 
 
25 “The pastoral ministry [Predigtamt] is the highest office in the church, and from it stem all other offices in the 
church,” C.F.W. Walther, Church and Ministry, trans. J.T. Mueller (St. Louis: The Lutheran Church—Missouri 
Synod, 1987), 289. Note also Walther’s explanation of this concept of an auxiliary office: “Every other public office 
in the church is part of the ministry of the Word or an auxiliary office that supports the ministry, whether it be the 
elders who do not labor in the Word and doctrine (1 Tim. 5:17) or the rulers (Rom. 12:8) or the deacons (the office 
of service in a narrow sense) or whatever other offices the church may entrust to particular per sons for special 
administration. Therefore, the offices of Christian day school teachers, almoners, sextons, precentors at public 
worship, and others are all to be regarded as ecclesiastical and sacred, for they take over a part of the one ministry of 
the Word and support the pastoral office,” 289–290. 
26 LCMS Bylaw 2.6.1.1 (2023 Handbook) lists these current commissioned offices: “The roster of commissioned 
ministers shall admit eligible teachers, directors of Christian education, directors of Christian outreach, directors of 
family life ministry, directors of parish music, deaconesses, parish assistants, and directors of church ministries.”

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First, more should be said about the concept of auxiliary offices and how they have been understood 
within the LCMS. For instance, in its 1981 report on the ministry, the CTCR described auxiliary offices 
this way:  
 
These are offices established by the church. Those who are called to serve in them are authorized 
to perform certain of the function(s) of the office of the public ministry. These offices are 
“ministry” and they are “public,” yet they are not the office of the public ministry. Rather, they 
are auxiliary to that unique pastoral office, and those who hold these offices perform their 
assigned functions under the supervision of the holders of the pastoral office. Such offices are 
established by the church as the need arises, and their specific functions are determined by the 
church. The most common auxiliary office today is the office of the teaching ministry. (Ministry, 
12)
27 
 
The church has freedom to create, use and oversee these “helping offices” or “auxiliary offices” however 
and whenever it sees fit. Yet there remains a consistent proviso that, whatever these auxiliary offices are 
and however they function, they are not the Office of the Public Ministry established by Christ and so the 
church must avoid any confusion of the auxiliary offices with the pastoral office. 
 
An important question that arises with auxiliary offices is whether or in what way such offices can be 
seen or characterized as “divine” in nature, especially in view of the fact that in the LCMS “divine calls” 
are issued to individuals serving in these offices. In light of the discussion above, two opposite positions 
are to be avoided. One position is to argue that such offices are divine offices in the same sense that the 
Office of the Holy Ministry is a divine office (i.e., they are instituted by God and testified to in the 
Scriptures). The Scriptures testify that the Office of the Holy Ministry is divinely given and mandated by 
Christ Himself. Scripture does not testify that Christ gave or mandated any other office. The other 
extreme is to assert that these auxiliary offices have no divine character whatsoever, so that individuals 
should not be called to such offices by the church.  
 
One way to view these auxiliary offices that have been established by the church is to recognize that 
they exist to assist and support the divinely instituted Office of the Holy Ministry, and to carry out certain 
(but not all) of its divinely instituted responsibilities under the oversight of an ordained pastor. Auxiliary 
offices created by the church can therefore be seen as “divine” by virtue of their close relationship to the 
Office of the Holy Ministry. Those who hold auxiliary offices (established in good order by the church) 
are called and commissioned by the church to carry out certain specific divinely given responsibilities 
under the oversight of those who hold the divinely instituted Office of the Holy Ministry.  
 
27 In its 1985 document, Women in the Church, the CTCR described the “distinctive functions” of the pastoral office 
— which are to be performed only by those who hold the Office of the Holy Ministry — as follows: “1) preaching 
in the services of the congregation; 2) leading the formal public services of worship; 3) the public administration of 
the sacraments; 4) the public administration of the office of the keys,” CTCR, Women in the Church: Scriptural 
Principles and Ecclesial Practice (St. Louis: The Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod, 1985),  42.  
 
A second important question concerning auxiliary offices is how they are established by the church — 
in this case, by the LCMS. In the LCMS, congregations and districts have a certain degree of freedom to 
use nomenclature for humanly instituted offices even when this nomenclature is not used in official ways 
by the Synod itself. As noted above, some congregations use the term “deacon” for the congregational 
office more commonly known as “elder” or specifically for laymen who assist in public worship.
28 While 
this may be somewhat confusing (especially for those who transfer their membership from one 
congregation to another), this is an area of congregational polity that is not mandated by the Synod and 
falls into the realm of Christian freedom (as long as a congregation’s constitution complies with other 
matters of theology and polity that are mandated by the Synod and the congregation’s district).  
 
Generally speaking, the same is true for districts of the Synod. In the case of districts, however, the 
potential for confusion is much greater because of issues such as:  
 
• The frequency and “normalization” of such nomenclature within a district;  
• Perceptions and misunderstandings about the relationship between districts and the Synod 
(e.g., “the district has an office of ‘deacon,’ so this office must also be recognized by the 
Synod”); and 
• Inevitable questions about definition, job description, oversight, etc. (It might be noted, for 
example, that only rostered workers of the Synod are accountable to the disciplinary 
guidelines set forth in the Synod’s Bylaws.)  
 
It is important to emphasize, therefore, that it is not the prerogative of individual congregations 
and districts — apart from the LCMS in convention — to establish auxiliary offices into which they call, 
commission and install individuals. In order for such offices to be recognized by the Synod as a whole, 
they would need to be thoroughly studied and discussed, carefully defined, have proper preparation and 
training in place for those who would be called to such an office, and ultimately be approved by the 
LCMS in convention.
29 This is part of our “walking together” in doctrine and practice as a Synod. 
 
28 Somewhat customary is the use of “liturgical deacons” to assist in the administration of the Lord’s Supper. In the 
Early Church, and in other theological traditions today, a deacon was one of the three orders or ranks of clergy 
within an episcopal structure (bishop, priest, deacon), often requiring ordination into the diaconate. The primary 
responsibility of such deacons was assisting liturgically with the Lord’s Supper. In the medieval church, as for 
Roman Catholicism after the Council of Trent, “deacon” was one of the several ranks of clergy, ordinarily the 
middle of the three “major” orders or grades (priest, deacon, subdeacon), who administered Holy Communion. 
Lutherans inherited the office of deacon at the time of the Reformation and treated the terminology as an 
adiaphoron, but considered those occupying that office to have the same requirements of examination, calling and 
ordination as any other occupant of the pastoral office — what the Treatise on the Power and Primacy of the Pope 
refers to as “choosing, calling, ordaining” (Tr 67). The practice in the LCMS of using liturgical deacons to assist 
with the administration of the Lord’s Supper (sometimes ordained men, other times laymen) is simply understood as 
congregational assistance of the pastor and not as an office of deacon, let alone an “ordained diaconate.” 
29 The result would be inclusion of such “commissioned minister” offices in the LCMS Bylaws; see footnote 24 
above. 
Christian freedom in matters (such as polity and nomenclature) that are not commanded or forbidden by 
God’s Word is a vital theological principle. But God-pleasing order and uniformity (even in matters of 
adiaphora) is also vital in order to avoid confusion and potential division in the church over matters that 
ought not disrupt our walking together in confession and mission. The CTCR urges, therefore, that 
fraternal, honest, deliberate discussion take place in the Synod regarding this matter to avoid further 
confusion that could undermine and threaten our walking together (see below for more specific 
commentary on the offices of “deacon” and “evangelist” as examples of this real and/or potential 
confusion in the Synod today).  
 
A. Teacher and Director of Christian Education 
 
A very prevalent auxiliary office in the LCMS for many years has been the office of Lutheran school 
teacher, because the primary responsibility of a teacher in a Lutheran school is to teach the Word of 
God.
30 This is an office, therefore, that is closely related to, and assists, the Office of the Holy Ministry. 
As noted above, the task of “teaching” is frequently mentioned in the New Testament in relationship to 
the Office of the Holy Ministry, and the title “teacher” (didaskolos) appears in tandem with 
“shepherd/pastor” (poimēn) in Ephesians 4:11, demonstrating that the terms “teacher” and “pastor” are 
used synonymously in the New Testament. The activities of preaching/proclaiming and teaching are often 
linked together in the New Testament and were a central characteristic of the ministry of Jesus and His 
apostles (e.g., Matt. 4:23; 9:35). The evidence presented earlier from the New Testament — especially 
Ephesians 4 — demonstrates that “teacher” is to be viewed as a first- century office in the church that was 
not distinct from the Office of the Holy Ministry.  
Just as the Early Church established the office of deacon, the office of teacher as it exists in the 
church today was established later as a distinct office due to the need and desire of the church for teachers 
who were not pastors (e.g., in a Christian school) but who would work closely with pastors in teaching the 
Word of God and other subjects. Like other auxiliary offices, it is closely related to the Office of the Holy 
Ministry and serves under its authority and supervision. Some Lutheran school teachers have the 
additional responsibility of serving as a Lutheran school principal. Closely related to the office of teacher, 
director of Christian education is an office that supports and guides the Christian education program of a 
congregation. Both of these auxiliary offices can be held by males or females who have the proper 
theological and skill preparation to be called as commissioned ministers. 
 
 
 
 
 
B. Deaconess 
 
30 See the discussion of “teaching ministry” in CTCR, The Ministry, 17–19. 
 
Although (as noted in footnote 28) the New Testament testimony to the office of deaconess is limited 
to Romans 16:1, it is an office with a long history in the Christian church and in the LCMS.31 The 
preparation of deaconesses for service in the LCMS originally took place through college and university 
programs, but it was expanded to the seminaries with the approval of Resolution 5-06B at the 2001 
LCMS convention.
32 The office of deaconess is clearly defined as an auxiliary office that assists the 
Office of the Holy Ministry in a variety of ways, especially in the showing of Christ’s mercy. It is an 
office limited to females who have the proper preparation to be called and commissioned as deaconesses. 
 
C. Other Auxiliary Offices in the LCMS 
 
In addition to teacher, director of Christian education and deaconess, the LCMS Bylaws officially 
recognize five other auxiliary offices: director of parish music, director of Christian outreach (see the 
further discussion below), director of family life ministry, parish assistant and director of church 
ministries.
33 There are specific training programs to prepare individuals to be called and commissioned to 
serve in these auxiliary offices of the LCMS. 
 
D. Deacon  
 
The office of deacon, in various forms, has been present throughout history in a number of Christian 
denominations. Although deacon is not an officially recognized auxiliary office in the LCMS,34 some 
LCMS congregations (as noted above) use this term as a synonym for the lay office of “elder.” As also 
noted above, some LCMS districts use the term “deacon” to denote a lay office that is distinct both from 
the Office of the Holy Ministry and from auxiliary offices that are recognized by the LCMS. On the 
district level, those who hold this office normally have some training (typically provided by the district 
itself) and may be authorized by the district president to provide assistance to a congregation under the 
supervision of an ordained pastor. Specific responsibilities of a deacon may vary from congregation to 
congregation (and from district to district), but these typically do not (and from the Synod’s perspective, 
definitely should not) involve public preaching and the administration of the Sacraments.
35 Confusion 
arises when deacons (whether authorized to do so or not) carry out these responsibilities, even if this takes 
place under the “supervision” of an ordained pastor.
36   
 
31 See Cheryl D. Naumann, In the Footsteps of Phoebe: A Complete History of the Deaconess Movement in The 
Lutheran Church— Missouri Synod (St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 2008). Naumann offers a detailed 
history, including the establishment of LCMS deaconess preparation programs at Concordia College , River Forest, 
in 1980; at Concordia Seminary, St. Louis, in 2002; and at Concordia Theological Seminary, Fort Wayne, in 2003. 
32 See Naumann, In the Footsteps of Phoebe, 507–508.  
33 See footnote 24 above. 
34 See footnote 24 above. 
35 2016 Resolution 13-02A. For discussion, see below. 
36 In its 2023 opinion, “President of Synod Request for Opinion on Lay Reading of Sermons and Conduct of 
Worship in the Absence of a Pastor,” the CTCR advised that it was theologically permissible for laymen to conduct

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Recent history in the LCMS has served to complicate things further when it comes to the office of 
deacon. In an attempt to address the problem of providing Word and Sacrament ministry to congregations 
when no ordained pastor was available, the Synod’s 1989 convention (via Res. 3-05B) established an 
office distinct from the Office of the Holy Ministry called “licensed lay deacon.” According to the 
protocols specified in the resolution, such deacons were required to complete a certain amount of 
seminary course work and training; were to be approved, licensed and regularly monitored by the district 
president; and were then authorized “in exceptional circumstances or in emergencies” to carry out certain 
duties normally restricted to those who hold the pastoral office (e.g., lead public worship, preach and — 
under certain circumstances — administer the Lord’s Supper). In view of the rather contentious debate 
that took place regarding this resolution at the 1989 convention itself and in subsequent years, it seems 
self-evident that there was a lack of careful Synodwide and consensus-building study and discussion 
before this resolution was presented and (narrowly) adopted.  
 
The vigorous debate about this office that ensued in the years after the establishment of licensed lay 
deacons resulted in two major changes in the LCMS. First, the Specific Ministry Pastor (SMP) program 
was established at both seminaries by the adoption of Resolution 5-01B at the 2007 LCMS convention. 
The SMP program provides pastoral training by the LCMS seminaries to men in their contexts so that 
they can be called and ordained as Specific Ministry Pastors (a roster status established by the Synod in 
2007 in contrast to General Ministry Pastors). The second major change that came about was the adoption 
of Resolution 13-02A at the 2016 LCMS convention, which brought an end to the licensing of lay 
deacons for Word and Sacrament ministry. It should be noted that the 2016 resolution did not reject the 
use of the term “deacon”:  
 
Resolved, That nothing in this resolution shall be construed as impeding the training, recognition, 
credentialing or service of deacons who do not publicly preach or administer the Sacraments, 
namely, those who serve in ministries of mercy, education, or visitation, and so forth, or in an 
outreach role, assisting in evangelism and church planting (but not in public preaching and 
administration of the Sacraments); and be it further  
Resolved, That district presidents may continue to recruit, train, and credential new deacons for 
general varieties of service in the church that do not include public preaching and administration 
of the Sacraments. (2016 Proceedings, 237–238) 
 
 
services in the absence of a pastor, provided that it is a legitimate emergency or temporary need and that the layman 
not administer the Sacrament or pronounce absolution (in accordance with AC XIV). However, the Commission 
acknowledges that the lay officiating of a formal worship service in the congregation is a genuine gray area. To that 
end, it suggested that non-Communion orders of service (which allow for such lay leadership) should be used. The 
principle underlying these concerns is avoidance of confusion with the pastoral office , and that principle likewise 
applies to auxiliary offices or others such as deacons or evangelists.  
What has not yet happened in the LCMS is careful study, discussion and definition of the office of 
deacon in light of recent history in the LCMS, both in view of the now-defunct licensed lay deacon 
program and continued deacon training programs in certain LCMS districts. The LCMS has specified (in 
2016 Res. 13-02A and elsewhere) what deacons are not to do (public preaching and administration of the 
Sacraments), but more needs to be done to define the duties of and training for this office if it is ever to 
become an officially recognized auxiliary office in the LCMS into which men are called, commissioned 
and installed. 
 
E. Evangelist 
 
Like deacon, “evangelist” is also not an auxiliary office recognized by the LCMS (at least not using 
this specific title). The Synod, however, has established an auxiliary office called director of Christian 
outreach (DCO). Any Synod discussion contemplating the establishment of an auxiliary office of 
evangelist would do well to consider this already-established auxiliary office. Another factor to keep in 
mind is that there is some current usage of the term “evangelist” as an additional title for the Office of the 
Holy Ministry within the LCMS, which (as discussed earlier) is actually more in keeping with the New 
Testament usage of this term.  
 
Complicating matters further, in recent years some districts have begun to use the term “evangelist” 
for a lay office in which male or female individuals go through some limited training to share the Gospel 
in order to establish “faith communities.”
37 Such evangelists typically serve under the guidance of an 
LCMS pastor, but little or no study and discussion of this recent use of the term or title “evangelist” has 
taken place within the LCMS as a whole and no resolution recognizing “evangelist” as an official Synod 
office has been approved by the Synod in convention. While (as noted above) there is considerable 
freedom for individual congregations and even districts to have titles for various elected, appointed or 
paid staff positions, it would be very helpful if an office connected to some form of evangelistic ministry 
of the Word would be studied and discussed carefully across the Synod before being used by some 
districts and congregations in what may be perceived by some as an officially recognized title and office.  
 
At the Synod’s request, the CTCR’s 1973 report on the ministry studied and discussed the “office of 
evangelist” and came to the conclusion that: 
 
The work of an evangelist … does not necessarily call for a separate office. It is a function of the total 
Ministry and may be carried out even by bishops, and certainly by parish pastors. However, the work 
of evangelizing the unchurched is so great and pressing a task that the church may well find it 
 
37 One recommendation of the 2013 Resolution 4-06A Task Force was “that congregations and districts be 
encouraged to identify individuals for special training in and attention to evangelism. ” See 2013 Resolution 4-06A 
Task Force Report to the Synod, 25. Available at resources.lcms.org/reading -study/ctcr-library-lcms-task-force-
updates. 
desirable to appoint persons in addition to parish pastors, who are often fully occupied with parish 
work, to the task of evangelizing. … If a congregation calls an evangelist, he will as a matter of 
course work under the supervision of and in closest harmony with the pastor, who is the shepherd of 
the whole flock entrusted to his charge, including the evangelist.
38 
 
Although the Synod in convention never acted upon this or other specific recommendations of the 
1973 report, it did eventually (as noted above) create the office of director of Christian outreach, which 
seems to align closely with what is described in the 1973 report. In the final section of the current report, 
the CTCR will offer its own conclusions and recommendations regarding the office of evangelist.  
 
 
 
III. Summary Conclusions and Recommendations 
 
There are three primary conclusions to be drawn from this study. First, the New Testament uses 
several different titles for those serving in the one, divinely instituted Office of the Holy Ministry. These 
include shepherd/pastor, apostle, prophet, evangelist, teacher, overseer and elder (and possibly others, 
including deacon). This variety of terminology should not be interpreted as somehow contradicting the 
clear evidence in the New Testament for this one, divinely instituted office, nor should it be seen as 
evidence that this office was not widely recognized by first-century Christians. The early decades of 
Christianity were simply a time when titles were more varied and less standardized. 
 
Second, there is nothing in the New Testament that prevents or proscribes the church from 
establishing helping or auxiliary offices to assist the Office of the Holy Ministry. While opinions differ 
about whether the New Testament itself attests to the creation of such offices by the church (as we have 
discussed, some regard “deacon” and “deaconess” as auxiliary offices created by the Early Church), there 
is no disagreement in the LCMS about whether the church today has the freedom to create and fill such 
offices in response to particular needs, challenges and opportunities in its efforts to proclaim the Gospel 
and further Christ’s mission on earth. If the Synod were to determine that auxiliary offices of deacon or 
evangelist were needed, then it has the freedom to establish them, along with establishing appropriate 
forms for calling, commissioning and installing deacons and/or evangelists into those offices.  
Third, this study points out the confusion that can result from using biblical titles without 
understanding their original referent. For example, in the New Testament an elder was a man who served 
in the Office of the Holy Ministry. In the LCMS today, an elder is typically a layman who holds an 
elected and term-restricted congregational office made up of men who assist the pastor(s) with matters 
related to worship and pastoral care. In the New Testament, an evangelist was also a man who served in 
the Office of the Holy Ministry, presumably focused on the task of outreach and evangelism. In the 
 
38 CTCR, The Ministry in Its Relation, 12. Again, the use and citation of this report does not imply an endorsement 
of its conclusions or recommendations, including the possibility of ordaining “evangelists.”  
LCMS today, the title “evangelist” is being used by some for a lay office that is often not clearly or 
consistently defined. The challenges with the office of deacon in the LCMS in recent decades have 
demonstrated the importance of defining terms, titles and responsibilities carefully and consistently; of 
seeking to avoid confusion (and practices that may be at odds with the Synod’s position); and of striving 
for as much uniformity as possible to avoid confusion, misunderstanding and tension in our walking 
together as a Synod.  
 
The use of biblical terms such as “deacon” or “evangelist” in and of itself is not a problem. They are 
biblical terms that can and may be employed profitably by the church. It is rather how they are being used 
that can and does cause confusion. For instance, all Christians are in some sense “evangelists,” in that 
they are entrusted with sharing the Gospel. Likewise, all Christians are “deacons” in the sense that they 
are called to lives of service toward God and neighbor. Yet we must not confuse a Christian’s general 
Christian vocation as an evangelist or deacon with his or her occupying the office of deacon or evangelist. 
The latter uses of these terms connotate ecclesiastically recognized offices into which one is called, 
commissioned and installed, and the LCMS has not as yet designated them auxiliary offices. 
 
As emphasized earlier, a proper way to understand helping or auxiliary offices established by the 
church to which qualified individuals can be called is to recognize that those holding such offices are 
authorized to assist the pastor in carrying out certain responsibilities of his office. In light of the 
foregoing, the Commission makes several recommendations that may lessen confusion over the use of 
various nomenclature in the Synod, including the terms “deacon” and “evangelist.”  
 
• Deacons: The term “deacon” is ambiguous exegetically, and it is clear that even within the Synod 
historically there has been no single understanding or application of it.
39 This at times has led to 
confusing and contradictory applications of it, though usage of the biblical term in itself is not 
objectionable. As noted above, 2016 Resolution 13-02A also allows for the formation of deacons 
to “serve in ministries of mercy, education, or visitation, and so forth, or in an outreach role,” 
provided their responsibilities do not include “public preaching and administration of the 
Sacraments.” In light of the potential for confusion and misunderstanding of the various ways 
“deacon” has or might be used in the Synod, the Commission makes the following 
recommendation: The term “deacon” should only be used for laymen who assist the pastor in 
certain, specific ways (liturgically, administratively, educationally, etc.), yet do not publicly 
preach or administer the Sacraments. 
 
 
39 Note, for instance, the debates concerning the possibility of an “ordained diaconate” as a resolution to the 
controversy over the licensed lay deacons created by the 1989 convention. See, the opinion  of the Faculty of 
Concordia Theological Seminary, “A Response to ‘An Overture to Establish an Ordained Diaconate,’” Concordia 
Theological Quarterly 63, no. 3 (July 1999): 205–220.

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• Evangelists: The term “evangelist” has a closer relationship to the Office of the Holy Ministry in 
the New Testament and therefore may evoke greater confusion. However, the 2013 Resolution 4-
06A Task Force explicitly encouraged the “identification and training of laity for the role of 
evangelist,” that is, “special training in and attention to evangelism” (2013 Resolution 4-06A 
Task Force Report to the Synod, 25). Since this evangelistic role obviously has a different scope 
than the New Testament usage of the term, the Synod should seek to clarify that role and 
distinguish it clearly from the pastoral office. The Commission recommends the following: First, 
calling men or women to be trained for and to serve in the auxiliary office of director of Christian 
outreach should be more widely encouraged and emphasized. In this regard, the Synod might 
expand the formal title for this office (e.g., “Director of Christian Outreach—Evangelist”). 
Second, the term “evangelist” as a lay or congregational office should be restricted to those 
laypersons (male or female) identified and trained for outreach to visitors and nonmembers in 
their communities. Neither those called to the auxiliary office of DCO nor congregational 
outreach workers (whether or not they are referred to as evangelists) should exercise the 
characteristically “distinctive functions” of the pastoral office (preaching in the services of the 
congregation, leading formal public services of worship, the public administration of the 
Sacraments, and the public administration of the Office of the Keys).  
 
• Training: The Synod has repeatedly emphasized that programs intended to theologically train 
laity for the work of service in the church or outreach within their communities may be of great 
benefit for our churches. Those programs already exist in various ways, though more uniform 
definitions of “deacon” or “evangelist” (especially should the Synod designate them as auxiliary 
offices) may also entail uniform training programs. The seminaries, ministry-related faculties of 
our universities, and other offices and/or institutions of the Synod (such as the Office of National 
Mission) are well-equipped to collaborate in developing, administering and teaching such 
programs. The Commission recommends: If and when the Synod were to recognize deacons 
and/or evangelists as rostered auxiliary offices, the above-named entities should be engaged to 
develop biblically, theologically and confessionally faithful resources to aid in the training and 
credentialing of those auxiliary offices.  
 
• Auxiliary Offices: There is as yet no official Synod definition of the term “auxiliary office,” nor 
are there parameters for what particular ministries are included in the concept of auxiliary offices 
or what specific duties may be assigned to those who hold these offices in differing contexts and 
circumstances. In his synodically adopted theses on the ministry, C.F.W. Walther noted that 
“other offices” stem from the ministry, as the highest office in the church. In its 1981 report on 
the ministry, the CTCR referred to them as “facilitating offices” (since they facilitate the 
proclamation of the Word and the administration of the Sacraments and the Keys) and conceded 
that “auxiliary,” while a traditional term, is itself ambiguous: “Perhaps a better term than 
‘auxiliary’ might be found” (The Ministry, 28). More attention might be paid to defining and 
clarifying this term and its usage in the church, as well as associated practical realities, such as 
the call into auxiliary offices. The Commission recommends the following: The Synod in 
convention should consider asking the CTCR to produce a study of auxiliary offices, including 
their historical usage, theological basis and practical application in the life of the church, as well 
as potential terminological changes to the category or to ministries included in it.  
  
Appendix 
2023 Convention Workbook 
Ov. 5-48 
To Distinguish Terms for Pastoral Office from Those for Auxiliary or Helping Offices 
 WHEREAS, The Lutheran Confessions simply and clearly  confess that God has established the
 
Office of the Public Ministry for the preaching of the Gospel and the administration of the Sacraments, 
through which the Holy Spirit works to create faith when and where He wills ( Matt. 28:18–20;  
Mark 16:15–16; Luke 2:44–49; John 20:21–23; Augsburg Confession [AC] V; AC XIV); and 
 WHEREAS, The Lutheran Confessions also simply and clearly  confess that God, through the 
Church calls qualified men into this unique and distinct Office of the Public Ministry, so that His Word 
will be preached and the Sacraments will be administered to the end that the Holy Spirit will call, gather, 
enlighten, and sanctify the whole Christian Church on earth and keep it with Jesus Christ in the one true 
faith (1 Cor. 4:1; 1 Peter 2:7; Matt. 18:18–20; AC V; AC XIV; Small Catechism [SC] II, Third Article); 
and 
 WHEREAS, The members of The  Lutheran Church—Missouri  Synod, by God’s grace, have by 
their unequivocal and unconditional subscription to the Luthera n Confessions publicly confessed this 
understanding of the Church and the ministry throughout the Synod’s history; and 
 W HEREAS, C.F.W. Walther, in Thesis I of “Church and Ministry” confessed, “The holy ministry 
or pastoral office is an  office distinct [The German word translated as “distinct” is unterschiedene, 
which can be  translated distinguished, different from, distinctive, and unique] from the priesthood of 
all believers” (C.F.W. Walther, Church and Ministry [Kirche und Amt] [St. Louis: Concordia Publishing 
House, 1987], 161); and 
 WHEREAS, The New Testament also includes many  functions and titles for the Office of the 
Public Ministry, including apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors, and teachers, among others (Eph. 
4:10; Titus 1:5 –9;  1 Tim. 3:1–7; 1 Peter 5:1–4), and sets aside other functions and titles for those who 
assist the Office of the Public Ministry in carrying out its tasks, including deacons (Acts 6:1–5; 1 Tim.  
3:8–13); and 
 WHEREAS, The 2016 convention urged Synod to uphold the biblical and confessional 
qualifications for the pastoral office (2016 Resolution 6-02A) and to remove any confusion of the pastoral 
office with other forms of helping or auxiliary offices in the church, such as deacons (2016 Res. 13 -
02A); and 
 WHEREAS, 2016 Res. 13-02A brought an end to  the licensing of laymen for Word and 
Sacrament ministry, yet also commended the work of educated lay evangelists to assist in bringing 
the Gospel to an increasingly secular, unbelieving world; and 
 W HEREAS, Ongoing training programs in several districts for lay assistants, making use of 
various titles such as evangelist, pastoral assistants, pastoral ministry assistants, and deacons, include 
instruction and training for functions unique to and reserved for men called into the Office of the 
Public Ministry. For example, a course offered by the Mission Training Center of the Pacific Southwest 
District entitled “Homiletics” includes the description: “In this course the deacon applicant will 
concentrate on the basic preparation and delivery of a sermon”; and 
 WHEREAS, Although well intentioned, these lay training programs have created confusion 
because of the use of terms historically associated with the Office of the Public Ministry; and 
 WHEREAS, In attempting to comply with timelines and expectations set by 2016 Res. 13-
02A for ending the licensure of lay deacons for Word and Sacrament ministry, confusion has arisen 
over the use of the terms of deacon and evangelist in relation to those who occupy the Office of the 
Public Ministry; therefore be it 
 Resolved, That the Synod commend the publications of the Commission on Theology and 
Church Relations (CTCR) which define the theology, nomenclature, and responsibilities of the office 
of the ministry, especially The Ministry in Its Relation to the Christian Church (1973), The Ministry: 
Offices, Procedure, and Nomenclature (1981) [Such as: “Thus, we may  speak of various “ministries” 
in and of the church, but we must be careful to distinguish them properly. An office is not defined solely 
by what one who holds it does (function) but by the duties, responsibility, and accountability assigned to 
it. The pastoral office is unique in that all the functions of the church ’s ministry belong to it.” The 
Ministry: Office, Procedure, and Nomenclature (1981)]; and be it further 
 R esolved, That the CTCR be directed to produce a report that defines and distinguishes the New 
Testament terms used for the Office of the Public Ministry and its auxiliary offices, including special 
discussions of the offices of deacon and evangelist, in preparation for the 2026 convention; and be it finally  
 Resolved, That the Council of Presidents take this report under consideration as it seeks to formalize 
the functions and requirements of these auxiliary and helping offices in their respective districts in 
keeping with 2016 Res. 13-02A. 
Board of Directors 
Iowa East District

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 1 
President of Synod Request for Opinion on Lay Reading of Sermons and Conduct of 
Worship in the Absence of a Pastor 
The Request of the Synod President
During the extended triennium, the President of Synod repeatedly noted the looming shortage of 
clergy and the need to provide direction for (male) laymen assisting vacant congregations or 
congregations without ordained clergy available to preach or conduct worship. In November 
2022, following extended conversations with CTCR executive staff and the chairman of the 
CTCR, the President posed the following questions: 
1) Given the biblical and confessional doctrine of the Office of the Holy Ministry, under what
conditions might a layman read sermons or lead worship at a congregation when there is no 
pastor available to serve? What precedents are there within orthodox Lutheranism (and the 
LCMS, in particular) for such a practice? What qualifications should an individual have to assist 
in this way and what supervision should be provided? 
2) What practical guidelines could the CTCR offer to ensure this is done “decently and in good 
order” (1 Cor. 14:40) and in keeping with Scripture and the Confessions of the Evangelical 
Lutheran Church?  
It is the President’s hope that, if possible, the CTCR provide answers to these questions in 
advance of the 2023 Synod Convention. 
The President’s questions require a careful and informed response. In light of this request, the 
Commission recommended a two-part opinion. It would include a brief statement on the 
qualifications and supervision appropriate for a layman to read a sermon and conduct worship in 
the public services of a congregation without a pastor present, especially taking into account the 
stipulations already addressed in 1989 Res. 3-05B and the recommendations of the 2013
Resolution 4-06A Task Force. It would also (or furthermore) provide guidelines that offer 
direction for laymen serving in this capacity and congregations being assisted by such laymen. 
Since the Commission is customarily not the entity tasked with providing liturgical guidance, it 
sought to restrict itself to a theological consideration of the President’s request and practical 
guidelines in accordance with those theological considerations.  
The Response of the CTCR
The 2013 Synod convention requested that the President of Synod establish a task force to 
address questions regarding the service of licensed lay deacons under the terms established in 
1989 Resolution 3-05B, whereby qualified laymen were authorized to preach the Gospel and 
administer the sacraments in certain extraordinary cases with proper supervision. In advance of 
the 2016 convention, 2013 Task Force 4-06A published its report, which laid out important 
exegetical, theological, and historical foundations for the office of the ministry and argued that 
these were inconsistent with the widespread licensure of lay deacons to carry out Word and 
 2 
Sacrament Ministry. It particularly recommended the elimination of two practices—the use of 
Licensed Lay Deacons in congregations that were already being served or reasonably could be 
served by ordained pastors, and the use of Licensed Lay Deacons to serve vacancies in 
neighboring congregations. The task force further suggested that Synod should “provide a clear 
path forward to certify, call, and ordain men presently serving as lay deacons.” It recommended 
that “no new lay deacons be licensed to preach or administer the sacraments after January 1, 
2018” and that all previously licensed lay deacons apply to a Synodical path leading to 
ordination (seminary or colloquy).
1
At the 2016 convention, the Synod adopted resolution 6-02, by a vote of 875-177, upholding the 
biblical and confessional qualifications for the office of the public ministry, including the 
ordinary prerequisite that all those carrying out the functions of that office be examined, called, 
and ordained. Synod also adopted resolution 13-02A, by a vote of 809-277, affirming the 
“theological framework” of the task force and accepting its proposals for regularizing the 
ministry of lay deacons through ordination. Again, following the task force, it stipulated the 
cessation of licensure of deacons for Word and Sacrament ministry by January 1, 2018. It also 
included a provision that would allow qualified deacons to colloquize directly into Specific 
Ministry Pastor (SMP) status. It further resolved that the training of lay deacons should continue 
for service that does not include public preaching or administration of the sacraments and finally
directed the First Vice-President of Synod and a committee appointed by the Council of 
Presidents to direct the implementation of the resolution’s requirements, subject to approval by 
the Colloquy Committee for Pastoral Ministry.
As the Word and Sacrament ministry of Licensed Lay Deacons has been phased out in 
accordance with these 2016 resolutions, concerns have been raised by the President of Synod and 
Council of Presidents about procuring service for congregations which are temporarily or 
permanently unable to obtain a pastor, potentially growing more acute in light of present and 
future clergy shortages. It is for this reason that the President of Synod posed the current 
questions regarding the propriety of laymen publicly reading sermons and conducting worship 
services in the absence of ordained clergy. The Commission addresses them as follows.
2
Q. 1) Given the biblical and confessional doctrine of the Office of the Holy Ministry, may a 
layman read sermons or lead worship at a congregation when there is no pastor available to 
serve?
 
 
1 2016 LCMS Convention Workbook, 245.
2 This opinion presupposes the basic Scriptural and confessional foundations and role of the pastoral office in the 
church which the LCMS has repeatedly affirmed. For examples, see especially the Commission on Theology and 
Church Relations, The Ministry: Offices, Procedures, and Nomenclature (St. Louis: Lutheran Church-Missouri 
Synod, 1981); C.F.W. Walther, Theses on the Church and the Office of the Ministry (St. Louis: Concordia 
Publishing House, 2012), 3-6; “To Uphold the Scriptural and Confessional Principles for the Office of the Holy 
Ministry,” 2016 Res. 6-02, 2016 LCMS Convention Proceedings, 166-168; and “To Affirm Synod’s Official 
Position on Church and Ministry,” 2001 Res. 7-17A, 2001 LCMS Convention Proceedings, 172-173.
 3 
To this question, the Commission answers a qualified “Yes.” The Commission does not believe 
either practice mentioned in the above question necessarily contradicts the biblical and 
confessional doctrine of the ministry, provided that certain safeguards remain in place to prevent 
confusion with the pastoral office. The Commission has repeatedly identified four distinctive 
functions of the public ministry that should be carried out by those who have been rightly called 
to the office of the public ministry: preaching in the services of the congregation, leading formal 
public services of worship, public administration of the sacraments, and the public administration 
of the keys.
3 Apart from certain exceptional circumstances, the laity ought not exercise these 
distinctive functions of the public ministry, lest they risk such confusion with the pastoral office. 
In the case of the lay reading of sermons, one would be exercising a distinctive function of the 
public ministry only in a qualified sense, because the sermon would simply be read and not 
composed by the layman himself. Rather, an ordained pastor, who is regarded as “apt to teach”
(2 Tim 2:24), would prepare the sermon. In the case of conducting worship services, there is 
certainly potential for confusion, but the Commission believes that this can be avoided through 
the use of services especially designed for lay officiation, or through the use of the daily prayer 
offices and existing devotional orders (see Lutheran Service Book 282-89, 294-98). Likewise, it 
may be wise for lay officiants to distinguish themselves from ordained clergy in vesture, for 
instance, by not wearing a stole, or possibly even an alb, to prevent confusion.  
Moreover, there is adequate precedent for these measures. Confessional Lutheran churches 
throughout their history have sought to address pastoral shortages and other emergency situations 
in ways that are faithful to Scripture and the Lutheran Confessions. That has at times included 
laymen reading sermons written for them by ordained clergy and conducting public services with 
certain limitations. This was particularly the practice for Lutheran congregations in America. For 
instance, the Berkenmeyer Constitution of 1735 (for congregations of New York and New 
Jersey) established the office of Vorleser, or “reader,” who would serve in the absence of a 
pastor by leading the congregation in song, or liturgy, and the reading of a sermon provided him 
by a pastor or from other authorized books.
4 Likewise, during its early expansion, many Synod 
congregations found themselves without called pastors for extended periods of time. In these 
instances, laymen were allowed to publicly read sermons and conduct services in what was
called a “read service” (Lesegottesdienst), though this was only seen as a temporary or 
emergency provision and never proposed as a permanent solution.
5
In its report to the 2016 convention, the 2013 Resolution 4-06A Task Force specifically made 
this same proposal in the fifth of its concluding recommendations to Synod: 
Emergencies and other unforeseen circumstances will occur that will make it impossible 
for a pastor to serve his congregation on a given Sunday. The time-honored approach to 
such occasions has been to designate a man (typically an elder or perhaps another called 
auxiliary minister) to conduct Matins or another service from the hymnal so that the 
 
3 CTCR, The Ministry, 35.  
4 Karl Kretzmann, ed., “The Constitution of the First Lutheran Synod in America,” Concordia Historical Institute 
Quarterly 9 (1936): 88-89. 
5 Karl H. Wyneken, “The Development of the Itinerant Ministries in the Lutheran Church— Missouri Synod, 1847-
1865,” Unpublished Thesis (Concordia Seminary, 1963), 27-36. 
 4 
congregation has opportunity to hear the Word of God, to pray together, and to sing 
praise (1 Tim. 4:4-5). A proactive approach to such occasional needs is important. On 
most occasions a sermon can be prepared by the pastor to be read in the service.
6
The task force recommendation, however, cautioned that such measures should not be taken 
haphazardly, without guidelines, or in any way that may cause offense. It added: 
In all such cases where it is simply impossible for a pastor to preach or conduct worship, 
care should be taken so that an exceptional circumstance does not create confusion or 
become a precedent for errant practices. Though “emergency knows no law,” it should 
not be an excuse for disorder. Thus, even in such difficult circumstances, every attempt 
should be made to address the problem in an orderly way that is consonant with Scripture 
and does not cause offense or misunderstanding. For example, while an emergency 
pastoral absence may necessitate having a layman lead a service of the Word and read a 
sermon prepared by the pastor, our congregations should heed the Synod’s counsel for 
women not to exercise liturgical leadership. Moreover, it would be good to distinguish 
between an emergency and ongoing challenges. A pastor’s illness and unavoidable 
absence on a given Sunday presents an emergency need. But, when there will be no 
pastor for the foreseeable future, a thoughtfully considered, theologically orthodox 
answer, rather than “emergency” remedies, is needed.
7
It is in the spirit of this rationale and these kinds of concerns that the Commission offers a 
qualified “Yes.” We can explicitly affirm that, in temporary or emergency situations, a layman 
may read public sermons or conduct public worship in the absence of an ordained minister of 
Word and Sacrament. However, certain guidelines, as noted above and expanded upon below, 
should be practiced to prevent confusion with the pastoral office and its distinctive functions. 
Furthermore, care should be taken so that such temporary or emergency exceptions are in fact 
truly temporary or truly emergencies, and thus not seen or encouraged as normative. They are by 
definition exceptions and every effort should be made to obtain ordained clergy to preach and 
conduct public services of the church in accordance with the distinctive functions of the public 
ministry implicit in that office. 
Q. 2) What practical guidelines could the CTCR offer to ensure this is done “decently and in 
good order” (1 Cor. 14:40) and in keeping with Scripture and the Confessions of the Evangelical 
Lutheran Church? 
As noted above, the Commission ordinarily does not address itself to strictly liturgical concerns, 
such as guidelines for the conduct of lay-led services. However, it can speak to what we believe 
are optimal theological and practical standards to guide congregations of Synod in this practice. 
To that end, we suggest that, in these situations, congregations select lay readers and officiants 
who fit the following criteria. First, the candidate must be a male. Second, the candidate should 
hold a position within the congregation that maintains some accountability for the pastoral office 
or support of it, such as an elder, officer of the congregation, or, alternately, an auxiliary minister 
 
6 2016 LCMS Convention Workbook, 246–47. 
7 2016 LCMS Convention Workbook, 247.

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