Abstract:
This  doctoral  dissertation  is  an  analysis  of  the  formation  of  the  Sínodo 
Evangélico  Luterano  Unido  (SELU)  [United  Lutheran  Evangelical  Synod],  in  1962, 
stemming from the fusion of the Lutheran Church in Brazil (1905) and the Evangelical 
Synod of Santa Catarina and Paraná (1911), normally called synods. The trajectories 
of these two institutions were marked in good measure by mutual combat, being that 
the  origins  of  these  conflicts  are  in  the  pre-existing  congregational  divergences  as 
well as in theological and confessional differences which remit back to the history of 
the  institutions as  to  the origins of  the pastors and members who make up  the  two 
synods.  The nationalisms of the end of the 19th century and the first half of the 20th 
century determined  the history of  the  synods. Mainly with  the  result of  the Second 
World War, the ideal of edifying the Church based on an ethnic matrix was revealed 
as  invalid,  leading  the  synods  to  continue  the  dialog  that  had  begun  under  their 
condition of Germanity, however now with a new discourse, marked by a theological 
reorientation. This new order gained  formal expression with  the   constitution of  the 
Federação  Sinodal  (FS)  [Synod  Federation]/  Igreja  Evangélica  de  Confissão 
Luterana no Brasil (IECLB) [Evangelical Church of Lutheran Confession in Brazil], in 
1949. From the commitment with the new established order there arose the need for 
restructuring  the  two  synods, which  had  experienced  a  parallel  development  even 
though  co-existing  in  the  same  territory.  The  constitution  of  the  SELU  is  a 
fundamental marking point  in  the  consolidation of  the  IECLB as a  church of  Jesus 
Christ in Brazil.