American Lutheran Church

American Lutheran Church
ClassificationProtestant
OrientationLutheran
StructureNational church, middle level synods, and local congregations
AssociationsLutheran World Federation
Lutheran Council in the United States of America
RegionUnited States and Canada
HeadquartersMinneapolis, Minnesota
Origin1960
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Merger offirst American Lutheran Church
The Evangelical Lutheran Church
United Evangelical Lutheran Church
AbsorbedLutheran Free Church (1963)
SeparationsEvangelical Lutheran Church of Canada (1966)
American Association of Lutheran Churches (1987)
Merged intoEvangelical Lutheran Church in America (1988)
Congregations4,959 (1986)
Members2,319,443 (1986)
Ministers7,671 (1986)
PublicationsLutheran Standard

The American Lutheran Church (ALC) was a Christian Protestant denomination in the United States and Canada that existed from 1960 to 1987. Its headquarters were in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Upon its formation in 1960, The ALC designated Augsburg Publishing House, also located in Minneapolis, as the church publisher. The Lutheran Standard was the official magazine of The ALC.

The ALC's immigrant heritage came mostly from Germany, Norway, and Denmark, and its demographic center was in the Upper Midwest (with especially large numbers in Minnesota). Theologically, the church was influenced by pietism. It was slightly more conservative than the Lutheran Church in America (LCA), with which it would eventually merge. While officially it taught biblical inerrancy in its constitution, this was seldom enforced by such means as heresy trials.

The ALC was a founding member of the "Lutheran Council in the United States of America", which began on January 1, 1967. The ALC cooperated with the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod in many ventures, but the ties came to an end when talks concerning a merger of The ALC with the Lutheran Church in America began.

After six years, in 1966, Canadian congregations of the ALC formed the autonomous Evangelical Lutheran Church of Canada (ELCC), which in 1986 joined with the Lutheran Church in America – Canada Section (LCA-CS) (former LCA congregations in separate regional synods in Canada) to form the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada (ELCIC).