About Us
OUR MISSION
Growing in Jesus, Transforming Lives
“Jesus said: Go to the people of all nations and make them My disciples. Baptize them in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, and teach them to do everything that I have told you. I will be with you always, even to the end of the world.” Matthew 28: 19-20
OUR VISION
Through the guidance of the Holy Spirit, Immanuel will strive to:
- Provide a variety of excellent worship services so people will worship more
- Provide excellent education so adults and youths will learn more
- Equip people to spread the Good News so people will reach out more in fellowship and caring
- Inspire people to be like Christ so they will serve more in growing God’s kingdom
OUR CORE VALUES
Christ-Centered - Keeping Jesus as the core of all we do.
Commitment - Following Jesus with devotion to his word, His will, and His people.
Calling - Responding to God by using our gifts, talents, and passions.
Care - Extending God’s love through compassion and encouragement.
Connection - Building relationships through shared experiences, joys, and challenges.
Celebration - Honoring faith milestones and life transformations.
WHAT WE BELIEVE
We treasure our faith at Immanuel, and are eager to share it with you. Everything we believe and teach is based on clear passages from the Bible, and on nothing else. The best way to discover our teachings is simply to come to worship, and hear us as we preach, sing, and pray. You are always welcome…in person or online. When you come, you will hear us proclaim Jesus as the Son of God, as the one who has influenced history more than anyone else, and as love personified, who guarantees eternal life to all who believe.
We believe that Jesus Christ, the very son of God, came into our world as the infant son of Mary and Joseph.
God the Father sent him for the sole purpose to live, to die, and to rise again so that everyone who believes in Him will have everlasting life in heaven. It was necessary for Jesus to come into our world because of our sin. We do not live a perfect life and need to be forgiven for the wrongs we do to each other and to God. Forgiveness is free and offered to all who believe. God the Holy Spirit works faith in our heart so that we continually grow stronger even though each day brings more than its share of temptations. In the New Testament, Saint John describes God’s love for us when he writes,
“For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life.” John 3:16
We believe that the Bible is God’s inspired word.
God caused a select group of writers to be inspired and record his message for us in a rich variety of writing styles including history, allegory, song, and parable. God’s word is relevant today and brings us great comfort as well as guidance for our lives. We believe, as Saint Paul writes,
“All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be competent, equipped for every good work.” 2 Timothy 3:16-17
We believe that God desires all people to be saved.
It is only unbelief that condemns a person. Our mission at Immanuel is to share the message of Jesus Christ, that is the good news that he came into our world lived, died, and rose on Easter so that all who believe in him are saved. We strive to share this message in our community and throughout the world. Saint Peter describes how Jesus saves us from our sins through his death:
“… knowing that you were ransomed from the futile ways inherited from your forefathers, not with perishable things such as silver or gold, but with the precious blood of Christ, like that of a lamb without blemish or spot.” 1 Peter 1:18-19
We believe that God wants all people to be baptized.
Baptism is washing away the sin we are born with, making us a child of God. Saint Peter also said,
“Repent and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins, and you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit. For the promise is for you and for your children and for all who are far off, everyone whom the Lord our God calls to himself. And with many other words he bore witness and continued to exhort them, saying, ‘Save yourselves from this crooked generation.’ So those who received his word were baptized, and there were added that day about three thousand souls.” Acts 2:38:41
There is so much more to share about our faith, our beliefs! These are shared to strengthen your faith and give you a brief perceptive of our teachings as we have learned from the Bible.
Immanuel is a Christian Church and a member congregation of the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod (LCMS). For detailed information, please visit the LCMS webpage Belief And Practice.
Our History
Immanuel, or “God with us”, was the name which the Immanuel Evangelical Lutheran Congregation of Palatine, Cook County, Illinois chose for itself 150 years ago. As we look back over those 150 years we can definitely say God has been, is, and will be with us! 150 years of God’s own Word, regular preaching, Holy Sacraments, grace, love, protection, comfort, instruction, admonition – 150 years of genuine blessing has been the gift of God to Immanuel. For this undeserved mercy, we give thanks, praise, honor and glory to God alone.
1800’s
Pause for a moment and turn back the pages of the last 150 years. Palatine was but a stop on the railroad line with no sidewalks, no paved streets, no electric lights, no modern conveniences.
In 1867 there was a small group of Lutherans who did not want to be without God’s Word and so asked The Rev. Richmann of St. Peter’s Lutheran Church in Schaumburg, to serve them. Pastor Richmann came every other Sunday for services held in a building at the corner of Bothwell and Wilson.
On February 20, 1869 a meeting was held on the platform of the Chicago and Northwestern Railroad to consider formal organization of a congregation. The Battermann, Engelking, Grebe, Hartung, Knickrehm, Prellberg, Senne, Schirding, and Schroeder families met on March 1 to officially organize a congregation and constitute membership to be known as the Evangelical Lutheran Immanuel Congregation Unaltered Augsburg Confessions of Palatine Illinois.
The cemetery land was purchased by the congregation and dedicated on June 7, 1869 by Pastor Roeder of Arlington Heights. (It is shared with St. Paul Church of Christ). Land was also purchased to build a church next to the cemetery but lack of funds made the building of a church inadvisable and that portion of the land was sold. Shortly thereafter, on August 28 the congregation decided to purchase the first church building. $2000 was paid for the first building located near the corner of Lincoln and Plum Grove Road. On May 22, 1870, the congregation Called its first regular pastor, Rev. H. Rathjen. He also taught the school which was held in the same building.
Women sat on one side of the church and men sat on the other side. Women could only take communion after all the men went through the line. At that time all instruction was still done in German. There was no parking lot – just a stable for the horses and buggies. And if you were playing baseball outside, if you hit the ball over the stable, that was a Home Run!
On May 4th, 1873 the congregation joined the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod.
Early 1900’s
The second building was dedicated on November 22, 1914. It cost $29,000 and was a magnificent brick structure. The regal architecture included beautiful stained glass windows and a majestic bell tower steeple. The inside featured an exquisitely hand-carved wooden altar and a lovely life-like statue of Jesus with outstretched arms. This building sat on the corner of Plum Grove and Wood with the front door facing Wood Street (where the playground is now). The original bell still hangs in our present bell tower but the elder no longer has to pull the rope to ring the bell!
Immanuel had built a parsonage in 1898, joined the City Mission Association in 1902, bought a house and 2 lots, turned the house into a parsonage and the old parsonage into a teacher’s apartment and began having worship services in English on the first Saturday of each month beginning in 1911. In 1913, the “envelope system” was introduced to have better control of the finances. In the fall of that year it was decided to build a new church with the cornerstone laid on March 29, 1914. The inauguration of the new church was held November 22 of that same year. Three services were held that day – one in the morning, one in the afternoon and an English service in the evening. Four years later the congregation decided to implement envelopes for mission offerings.
The fiftieth Anniversary celebration was on May 11th, 1919 with again – three services throughout the day. It was noted that Immanuel “has received many blessings from God. She had joys and sorrows to shoulder as her needs required. God has all wisely proportioned – He has given, He has taken, He has hurt, He has healed. We have to glorify and praise God and it must encourage us to intensify His work so that His name is increasingly held holy and His kingdom is spread out further.”
Mid 1900’s
German services were stopped for good during World War II because of the anti-German sentiment. Offering plates were actually a bag on the end of a long handle. And until about 1940 or so the church published a list every year stating the exact amount each person had donated! And who remembers that the church was heated with a “pot-bellied” stove which ate wood like it was going out of style? Music was made on a “pump-organ” where a person was hidden behind a door who would pump throughout each song while the organ was played. The segregation of men and women sitting on opposite sides of the church didn’t stop until around 1930. Communion was held once a month and people had to go to the parsonage to register on Friday or Saturday if they wished to commune. There were no carpeted floors or kneelers – they had to kneel on the bare floor.
At least ten sons of Immanuel have gone on to become pastors. This perhaps is due to the influence of the pastors of their times. A new church parsonage built entirely by volunteers was built in 1958 at 403 N. Plum Grove Road.
In 1944 Immanuel celebrated its 75th anniversary.
Late 1900’s
In 1955, property north of the school was purchased from the Salem Evangelical United Brethren, site of the current church building, and was dedicated in 1970. 1968 saw the ground broken during the Centennial year for the new church. In 1978 a gymnasium, meeting rooms, cafeteria and additional educational facilities were built to replace the 1926 building. In 1979, the annex property located across Wood Street was obtained. In addition to parking, there is a building on the lot. This building currently houses the clothing and food pantries for Immanuel’s Good Samaritan Ministries, which was founded in 1983. During the 1987–1988 school year, Immanuel Lutheran School received its first National Blue Ribbon School award, recognizing its commitment to academic excellence and Christian education. In 1989, the middle school classrooms, church offices, Discipleship Center and Fellowship Hall were added.
Late 1900’s
As Immanuel Lutheran Church entered the 21st century, the congregation continued its work in worship, education, and service in the Palatine community. During the 2000–2001 school year, Immanuel Lutheran School received its second National Blue Ribbon School award, recognizing its commitment to academic excellence and Christian education. On March 3, 2019, the congregation celebrated its 150th anniversary with a special worship service and the beginning of a yearlong celebration under the theme “Living a Legacy of Faith,” based on Psalm 100:5. Nearly 500 members and guests attended the anniversary service. In 2020, the congregation faced the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic. During this time, worship services and ministries were adapted to continue serving members and the community, including the use of online worship. In 2022, a vision campaign was launched to support facility improvements. With generous contributions and many hours of volunteer work, a phased refresh was completed in the main entryway, Fellowship Hall, conference rooms, and Narthex. The kindergarten and first grade classrooms were also refreshed, and improvements were made to the middle school classrooms and hallways.
Immanuel Lutheran Church continues to carry out its mission of sharing the Gospel and serving the community.