In the early 1960s, the nation's many independent Lutheran church bodies moved progressively toward greater unity. A number of such bodies merged in 1960, for example, to form the
American Lutheran Church. From his position as head of the United Lutheran Church in America, Fry engineered a similar move in 1962, organizing the merger of his own church with three other independent bodies –- the
Finnish Evangelical Lutheran Church of America, the
American Evangelical Lutheran Church, and the
Augustana Evangelical Lutheran Church –- to form the
Lutheran Church in America (LCA), of which he was elected president. Fry was elected as the head of the
Lutheran World Federation in 1957 making him the most powerful figure among U.S. Lutherans, and one of the most influential leaders of world Protestantism. The new LCA cut across traditional ethnic distinctions among Finnish, Danish, German, and Swedish Lutherans, and with 3.3 million members was the largest Lutheran church body in the United States. Theologically, the LCA was most often considered the most
liberal and
ecumenical branch in American Lutheranism. In church governance, the LCA was clerical and centralistic, in contrast to the
congregationalist or "
low church" strain in American Christianity. His accumulation of jobs was very impressive, serving as chairman of the policy making Central and Executive Committees of the World Council of Churches, and as a member of the Policy and Strategy Committee of the National Council of Churches. At the same time, he was president (since 1944) of the United Lutheran Church in America, a member of the Executive Committee of the
National Lutheran Council, and the first American ever elected president of the 50-million-member Lutheran World Federation. Fry lived in
New Rochelle in
Westchester,
New York, commuting to his offices in
Manhattan in the former J.P. Morgan mansion on Madison Avenue in
Manhattan. In 1962 he was chosen as "Clergy Churchman of the Year" by the
Religious Heritage of America. He was also known as a fan of the
New York Yankees baseball club. ==Death and aftermath==