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Evangelical Church in Germany

The Evangelical Church in Germany (German: Evangelische Kirche in Deutschland, abbreviated EKD) is a federation of twenty one Lutheran, Reformed (Calvinist) and United (e.g. Prussian Union) Protestant regional churches and denominations in Germany, which collectively encompasses the vast majority of Protestants in that country. In 2020, the EKD had a membership of 20,236,000 members, or 24.3% of the German population.[3] It constitutes one of the largest national Protestant bodies in the world. Church offices managing the federation are located in Hannover-Herrenhausen, Lower Saxony. Many of its members consider themselves Lutherans.

Evangelical Church in Germany
Evangelische Kirche in Deutschland
ClassificationProtestant
OrientationUnited (Prussian Union)
Lutheran
Reformed
PolityEpiscopal
Presbyterian
Congregationalist
AssociationsWorld Council of Churches
Community of Protestant
Churches in Europe
RegionGermany
Origin1948; 75 years ago (1948)[1]
Members2020 EKD data:
20.2 million
~49.7% United Protestant (Lutheran and Reformed)
~48.7% Lutheran
~1.5% Reformed[2][3][4]
Official websitewww.ekd.de

Historically, the first formal attempt to unify German Protestantism occurred during the Weimar Republic era in the form of the German Evangelical Church Confederation, which existed from 1922 until 1933. Earlier, there had been successful royal efforts at unity in various German states, beginning with Prussia and several minor German states (e.g. Duchy of Nassau) in 1817. These unions resulted in the first united and uniting churches, a new development within Protestantism which later spread to other parts of the world.

When Adolf Hitler came to power in 1933, his administration tried to reorganize the old confederation into a unified German Evangelical Church as Hitler wanted to use a single Protestant church to further his own ambitions. However, a division emerged between the Reichskirche, led by the pro-government German Christians, and the Confessing Church, which opposed state control of the church. Other Protestant churches aligned themselves with one of these groups, or stayed neutral in this church strife.

The postwar church council issued the Stuttgart Declaration of Guilt on 19 October 1945, confessing guilt and declaring remorse for indifference and inaction of German Protestants in the face of atrocities committed by Hitler's regime. In 1948, the Evangelical Church in Germany was organized in the aftermath of World War II to function as a new umbrella organization for German Protestant churches. As a result of tensions between West and East Germany, the regional churches in East Germany broke away from the EKD in 1969. In 1991, following German reunification, the East German churches rejoined the EKD.

The member churches (Gliedkirchen), while being independent and having their own theological and formal organisation, share full pulpit and altar fellowship, and are united in the EKD synod, but they act as individual members of the World Council of Churches (WCC) and the Community of Protestant Churches in Europe (CPCE). Boundaries of EKD churches within Germany partially resemble those of the states of the Holy Roman Empire and successor forms of German statehood (to the most part 1815 borders), due to the historically close relationship between individual German states and churches.

As for church governance, the Lutheran churches typically practise an episcopal polity, while the Reformed and the United ones a mixture of presbyterian and congregationalist polities. Most member churches are led by a (state) bishop. Only one member church, the Evangelical Reformed Church in Germany, is not restricted to a certain territory. In some ways, the other member churches resemble dioceses of the Roman Catholic and Anglican churches, from an organisational point of view.

Name

The German term evangelisch here more accurately corresponds to the broad English term Protestant[5] rather than to the narrower evangelical (in German called evangelikal), although the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada and the Evangelical Lutheran Church of England use the term in the same way as the German church. Literally, evangelisch means "of the Gospel", denoting a Protestant Reformation emphasis on sola scriptura, "by scripture alone". Martin Luther encouraged the use of this term alongside Christian.

History

 
Front page of the Peace of Augsburg, which laid the legal groundwork for two co-existing religious confessions (Roman Catholicism and Lutheranism) in the German-speaking states of the Holy Roman Empire.

From the Peace of Augsburg in 1555 to the end of the First World War and the collapse of the German Empire, some Protestant churches were state churches. Each Landeskirche[1] (state or regional church) was the official church of one of the states of Germany, while the respective ruler was the church's formal head (e.g. the King of Prussia headed the Evangelical Church of Prussia's older Provinces as supreme governor), similar to the British monarch's role as the Supreme Governor of the Church of England.

This changed somewhat with growing religious freedom in the 19th century, especially in the republican states of Bremen, Frankfurt (1857), Lübeck, and Hamburg (1860). The greatest change came after the German Revolution, with the formation of the Weimar Republic and the abdication of the princes of the German states. The system of state churches disappeared with the Weimar Constitution (1919), which brought about disestablishment by the separation of church and state, and there was a desire for the Protestant churches to merge. In fact, a merger was permanently under discussion but never materialised due to strong regional self-confidence and traditions as well as the denominational fragmentation into Lutheran, Reformed, and United and uniting churches.

During the Revolution, when the old church governments lost power, the People's Church Union (Volkskirchenbund) was formed and advocated unification without respect to theological tradition and also increasing input from laymen. However, the People's Church Union quickly split along territorial lines after the churches' relationship with the new governments improved.[6]

It was realised that one mainstream Protestant church for all of Germany was impossible and that any union would need a federal model. The churches met in Dresden in 1919 and created a plan for federation, and this plan was adopted in 1921 at Stuttgart. Then in 1922 the then 28 territorially defined Protestant churches founded the German Evangelical Church Confederation (Deutscher Evangelischer Kirchenbund, DEK). At the time, the federation was the largest Protestant church federation in Europe with around 40 million members.[6] Because it was a federation of independent bodies, the Church Union's work was limited to foreign missions and relations with Protestant churches outside Germany, especially German Protestants in other countries.

In July 1933, the German Evangelical Church (Deutsche Evangelische Kirche, DEK) was formed under the influence of the German Christians, a pro-Nazi religious movement. They had much influence over the decisions of the first National Synod, via their unambiguous partisanship in successfully backing Ludwig Müller for the office of Reich bishop. He did not manage, however, to prevail over the Landeskirchen in the long term. The Confessing Church arose in resistance to the Nazi regime's ideology. After the installation of Hanns Kerrl as minister for church matters in a Führer-directive of 16 July 1935 and the foundation of the – in the end not materialising – Protestant Reich Church, the DEK played more or less no further role.

 
Synodal elections 1933: German Christians and Confessing Church campaigners in Berlin.

In 1948, freed from the German Christians' influence, the Lutheran, Reformed and United churches came together as the Evangelical Church in Germany at the Conference of Eisenach. In 1969, the regional Protestant churches in East Germany and East Berlin[7] broke away from the EKD and formed the League of Evangelical Churches in the German Democratic Republic (German: Bund der Evangelischen Kirchen in der DDR, BEK), in 1970 also joined by the Moravian Herrnhut District. In June 1991, following German reunification, the BEK merged with the EKD.

While the members are no longer state churches, they enjoy constitutional protection as statutory corporations, and they are still called Landeskirchen, and some have this term in their official names. A modern English translation, however, would be regional church. Apart from some minor changes, the territories of the member churches today reflect Germany's political organisation in the year 1848, with regional churches for states or provinces that often no longer exist or whose borders changed since. For example, between 1945 and 1948, the remaining six ecclesiastical provinces (Kirchenprovinzen), each territorially comprising one of the Old Prussia provinces, within the Evangelical Church of the old-Prussian Union assumed independence as a consequence of the estrangement among them during the Nazi struggle of the churches. This turned the Evangelical Church of the old-Prussian Union into a mere umbrella, being itself a member of EKD (and the BEK, 1969–1991) but covering some regional church bodies, which were again themselves members of EKD (and the BEK, 1969–1991).

Since 1973, when many Protestant churches in Europe, including the EKD members, concluded the Leuenberg Agreement, also the then 21 EKD members[8] introduced full communion for their parishioners and ministry among each other.

Since also the regional Protestant churches in East Germany had signed the Leuenberg Agreement, thus the then ten members of the Federation of Protestant Churches in the German Democratic Republic practised full communion with the EKD members too. Ordination of women is practised in all 20 member churches with many women having been ordained in recent years. There are also several women serving as bishops. Margot Käßmann, former bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Hanover and Chairperson of the Council of the EKD from 2009 until February 2010, was the first woman to head the EKD.[9] Blessings of same-sex marriages is practised and allowed in 14 of 20 and Blessing of same-sex unions are allowed in all other member churches.[10][11] The EKD opposes abortion in most situations but believes it should remain legal.[12]

The EKD has undergone a split in the 20th century and lost a bulk of its adherents in East Germany due to state atheist policies of the former East German government. After 1990, membership was counted and amounted to around the same number as the Roman Catholic Church. In the 21st century, membership in both the Evangelical Church and the Roman Catholic Church stagnates as more people are becoming religious nones.

Membership

Confessions of EKD parishioners

  United (administratively or confessionally, both Lutheran and Reformed; Prussian Union) (57%)
  Lutheran (40%)
  Reformed (3%)
 
Member churches by confession

Protestantism is the major religion in Northern, Eastern and Middle Germany, with the Reformed branch predominating in the extreme northwest and Lippe, the Lutheran branch in the north and south, and the United branch in Middle and Western Germany. While the majority of Christians in Southern Germany are Roman Catholic, some areas in Baden-Württemberg and Bavaria are predominantly Protestant, e.g. Middle Franconia and the government region of Stuttgart. The vast majority of German Protestants belong to a member church of the EKD. With 20,236,000 members in 2020, around 24.3 percent of all Germans belong to a member church of the EKD.[3] Average church attendance is lower, however, with only around a million people attending a service on Sunday.[13]

The regional Protestant church bodies accept each other as equals, despite denominational differences. No member church runs congregations or churches in the area of another member church, thus preventing competing with each other for parishioners. The only exception is the Evangelical Reformed Church, which combines Reformed congregations within the ambits of usually Lutheran member churches, which themselves do not include the eventual local Reformed congregations. Thus, for example, a Lutheran moving from a place where their parish belongs to a Lutheran member church, would be accepted in their new place of domicile by the locally competent congregation within another member church, even if this church and its local parish are Reformed or of united Protestant confession, with Lutheran being exchangeable with the two other respective Protestant confessions within the EKD. This is due to full pulpit and altar fellowship between all EKD member churches.

In this the ambits of the member churches resemble dioceses of the Anglican or Roman Catholic churches, however, else there is no common hierarchy supervising the member churches, who are legally independent equals with the EKD being their umbrella. Members of congregations within the member churches – like those of parishes within Catholic dioceses and those enrolled in Jewish congregations also enjoying statutory corporation status – are required to pay a church tax, a surcharge on their normal income tax collected by the states of Germany and passed on to the respective religious body.

2011 census results by state

State [14] Church membership (2011) Percentage of the population
  Schleswig-Holstein 1,550,200 55.7%
  Lower Saxony 3,976,430 51.5%
  Bremen 279,180 43.2%
  Hesse 2,426,990 40.8%
  Baden-Württemberg 3,552,450 34.1%
  Hamburg 573,960 33.9%
  Rhineland-Palatinate 1,260,720 31.8%
  Germany 24,552,110 30.8%
  North Rhine-Westphalia 4,974,240 28.5%
  Thuringia 529,010 24.3%
  Berlin 706,650 21.6%
  Saxony 856,340 21.4%
  Bavaria 2,592,550 21.1%
  Saarland 199,240 20.1%
  Brandenburg 448,970 18.4%
  Mecklenburg-Vorpommern 280,500 17.7%
  Saxony-Anhalt 344,680 15.2%

Gallery

Structure

The structure of the EKD is based on federal principles. Each regional church is responsible for Christian life in its own area while each regional church has its own special characteristics and retains its independence. The EKD carries out joint tasks with which its members have entrusted it. For the execution of these tasks, the Church has the following governing bodies, all organised and elected on democratic lines:

Synod

The Synod is the legislature of the EKD. It has 126 members: 106 elected by Landeskirchen synods and 20 appointed by the council.[15] These 20 are appointed for their importance in the life of the Church and its agencies. Members serve six year terms and the synod meets annually.

Praesides of the Synod

 
Irmgard Schwaetzer, praeses of the synod till 2021
1949–1955: Gustav Heinemann
1955–1961: Constantin von Dietze
1961–1970: Hans Puttfarcken [de]
1970–1973: Ludwig Raiser
1973–1985: Cornelius von Heyl
1985–2003: Jürgen Schmude
2003–2009: Barbara Rinke
2009–2013: Katrin Göring-Eckardt
2013–2021: Irmgard Schwaetzer
since 2021: Anna-Nicole Heinrich

Council of the EKD

The EKD Council is the representative and governing body of the Evangelical Church in Germany. The Council of the EKD has 15 members jointly elected by the Synod and Church Conference who serve terms of six years.[16]

 
Heinrich Bedford-Strohm, the Chairman of the Council of the EKD.

Chairman of the Council of the EKD

The representative of the EKD is the Chairman of the Council of the EKD.

1945-1949: Theophil Wurm, Bishop, Württemberg
1949-1961: Otto Dibelius, bishop of Berlin-Brandenburg
1961-1967: Kurt Scharf, president, bishop from 1966, Berlin-Brandenburg
1967-1973: Hermann Dietzfelbinger [de], Bishop, Bavaria
1973-1979: Helmut Claß [de], Bishop, Württemberg
1979-1985: Eduard Lohse [de], Bishop, Hanover
1985-1991: Martin Kruse [de], bishop of Berlin-Brandenburg
1991-1997: Klaus Engelhardt [de], Bishop, Baden
1997-2003: Manfred Kock, president, Rhineland
2003-2009: Wolfgang Huber, bishop of Berlin-Brandenburg-Silesian Upper Lusatia
2009-2010: Margot Käßmann, bishop of Hanover
2010-2014: Nikolaus Schneider, president, Rhineland
2014-2021: Heinrich Bedford-Strohm, Bishop, Bavaria
2021-: Annette Kurschus, Bishop of Westphalia

Church Conference (permanent body)

The Church Conference is where member churches, through the representatives of their governing boards, can directly participate in the work of the EKD.[17]

Church Office of the EKD

The Church Office is the administration of the EKD and shall the business of the Synod, Council and Conference of the EKD.[18]

Main divisions:

  • I = line, law and finance: President Hans Ulrich Anke [de]
  • II = Religious Activities and Education: Vice President Thies Gundlach [de] (since 2010)
  • III = Public Responsibility: Vice President Horst Gorski (also head of the Office of the United Evangelical Lutheran Church of Germany) (since 2007)
  • IV = ecumenism and working abroad: Vice President Bishop Petra Bosse-Huber [de], foreign bishop and head of the Office of the Union of Evangelical Churches) (since 2014)

President

The EKD Church Office has approximately 200 employees.

International activities

The EKD holds various charities ("Hilfswerke") under its auspices. The Gustav-Adolf-Werk (GAW) (Gustaphus Adolphus Union formerly) was founded 1832 in Leipzig as the first and eldest such organization and is responsible to aid feeble sister churches, especially in Roman Catholic countries and the Protestant diaspora. It has separate branches internationally, the organization in Austria is still called the Gustav-Adolf-Verein.[19] Brot für die Welt is responsible for international development aid.

Member churches (since 2012)

 
Member churches of the Protestant Church in Germany (after the fusion of the Evangelical churches of Mecklenburg, North Elbia and Pomerania in 2012).

The umbrella of the Evangelical Church in Germany comprises 20 regional churches:

These bodies are termed Landeskirchen ("Regional Churches")[20] though in most cases, their territories do not correspond to the current federal states, but rather to former duchies, electorates and provinces or mergers thereof.

  1. Evangelical Church of Anhalt (Evangelische Landeskirche Anhalts), a united church body in Anhalt
  2. Evangelical Lutheran Church in Baden (Evangelisch-Lutherische Kirche in Baden), a lutheran church body in Baden
  3. Evangelical Church in Baden (Evangelische Landeskirche in Baden), a united church body in Baden
  4. Evangelical Lutheran Church in Bavaria (Evangelisch-Lutherische Kirche in Bayern), a Lutheran church body in Bavaria
  5. Evangelical Church Berlin-Brandenburg-Silesian Upper Lusatia (Evangelische Kirche in Berlin-Brandenburg-schlesische Oberlausitz), a united church body in Berlin-Brandenburg-Silesian Upper Lusatia merged in 2004 from:
    • Evangelische Kirche in Berlin-Brandenburg
    • Evangelische Kirche der schlesischen Oberlausitz
  6. Evangelical Lutheran Church in Brunswick (Evangelisch-Lutherische Landeskirche in Braunschweig), a Lutheran church body in Brunswick
  7. Evangelical Church of Bremen (Bremische Evangelische Kirche), a united church body in Bremen
  8. Evangelical-Lutheran Church of Hanover (Evangelisch-Lutherische Landeskirche Hannovers), a Lutheran church body in the former Province of Hanover
  9. Protestant Church in Hesse and Nassau (Evangelische Kirche in Hessen und Nassau), a united church body in the former People's State of Hesse and Nassau
  10. Evangelical Church of Hesse Electorate-Waldeck (Evangelische Kirche von Kurhessen-Waldeck), a united church body in former Hesse-Cassel and Waldeck
  11. Church of Lippe (Lippische Landeskirche), a Reformed church body of Lippe
  12. Evangelical Church in Central Germany (Evangelische Kirche in Mitteldeutschland), a united church body that was created in 2009 from the merger of:
  13. Evangelical Lutheran Church in Northern Germany Evangelisch-Lutherische Kirche in Norddeutschland), a Lutheran church body that was created in 2012 from the merger of:
  14. Evangelical Lutheran Church in Oldenburg (Evangelisch-Lutherische Kirche in Oldenburg), a Lutheran church body in Oldenburg
  15. Evangelical Church of the Palatinate (Evangelische Kirche der Pfalz) or Protestantische Landeskirche, a united church body in Palatinate
  16. Evangelical Church in the Rhineland (Evangelische Kirche im Rheinland), a united church body in the Rhineland
  17. Evangelical-Lutheran Church of Saxony (Evangelisch-Lutherische Landeskirche Sachsens), a Lutheran church body in Saxony
  18. Evangelical Lutheran Church of Schaumburg-Lippe (Evangelisch-Lutherische Landeskirche Schaumburg-Lippe), a Lutheran church body in Schaumburg-Lippe
  19. Evangelical Church of Westphalia (Evangelische Kirche von Westfalen), a united church body in Westphalia
  20. Evangelical Church in Württemberg (Evangelische Landeskirche in Württemberg), a Lutheran church body in Württemberg
  21. Evangelical Reformed Church (Regional Church) Evangelisch-reformierte Kirche (Landeskirche), a Reformed church body, covering the territories of No. 3, 5, 7, 12, 16, 17, and 19

The Moravian Church ("Herrnhuter Brüdergemeine") and the Federation of Evangelical Reformed Congregations are associate members.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b EKD-Internearbeit (5 May 2015). . Archived from the original on 9 July 2015. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  2. ^ www.reformiert-info.de(in German)
  3. ^ a b c "Gezählt 2021 - Zahlen und Fakten zum kirchlichen Leben" (PDF). ekd.de. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
  4. ^ The percentages of specific denominations are approximate.
  5. ^ Peter Terrell, Harper Collins German Unabridged Dictionary, 4th ed., (New York: HarperCollins Publishers, Inc., 1999), 273 sub loco.
  6. ^ a b D. Karl Bornhausen, "The Present Status of the Protestant Churches in Germany," The Journal of Religion, Vol. 3, No. 5 (Sep. 1923), 501-524.
  7. ^ The Eastern churches were the Evangelical Church of Anhalt, Evangelical Church in Berlin, Brandenburg and Silesian Upper Lusatia#Evangelical Church in Berlin-Brandenburg (EKiBB, East Ambit, for East Berlin and Brandenburg), Evangelical Church of the Görlitz Ecclesiastical Region, Evangelical Church in Greifswald, Evangelical Lutheran Church of Mecklenburg, Evangelical-Lutheran Church of Saxony, Evangelical Church of the Church Province of Saxony (KPS), Evangelical Lutheran Church in Thuringia and Evangelical Church of the Union (East Region, for EKiBB-East Ambit, Görlitz, Greifswald and KPS, and since 1970 for Anhalt too).
  8. ^ The Western churches were the Evangelical Church of Baden, Evangelical Lutheran Church in Bavaria, Evangelical Church in Berlin, Brandenburg and Silesian Upper Lusatia#Evangelical Church in Berlin-Brandenburg (EKiBB, West Ambit, for West Berlin), Bremian Evangelical Church, Evangelical Lutheran Church in Brunswick, Evangelical Lutheran Church of Eutin, Evangelical Lutheran Church in the Hamburg State, Evangelical-Lutheran Church of Hanover, Protestant Church in Hesse and Nassau, Evangelical Church of Hesse Electorate-Waldeck, Church of Lippe, Evangelical Lutheran Church in Lübeck, Evangelical Reformed Church in Northwestern Germany, Evangelical Lutheran Church in Oldenburg, Evangelical Church of the Palatinate, Evangelical Church in the Rhineland, Evangelical Lutheran Church of Schaumburg-Lippe, Evangelical Lutheran Church of Schleswig-Holstein, Evangelical Church of the Union (West Region, for EKiBB-West Ambit, Rhineland, and Westphalia), Evangelical Church of Westphalia, and Evangelical Church in Württemberg.
  9. ^ Deutsche Welle, 2009-10-28. German Protestant Church elects first woman as its leader. Retrieved 2009-10-29.
  10. ^ Ökumenische Arbeitsgruppe Homosexuelle und Kirche (HuK) e. V.: Möglichkeiten der kirchlichen Segnung gleichgeschlechtlicher Paare 2017-06-17 at the Wayback Machine, 25 April 2016.
  11. ^ Johannes Süßmann, Anne Kampf: Segnung Homosexueller: Bunt wie ein Regenbogen. Evangelisch.de, 14 January 2016.
  12. ^ "Gott ist ein Freund des Lebens".
  13. ^ EKD: Services of Worship and Holy Communion 2006 2011-06-17 at the Wayback Machine. Accessed 16 March 2010.
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on 5 June 2013. Retrieved 3 January 2017.
  15. ^ § 24 of the Basic Order (Grundordnung) of the Evangelical Church (http://www.kirchenrecht-ekd.de/showdocument/id/3435#s1.100042)
  16. ^ § 29, §30 of the Basic Order (Grundordnung) of the Evangelical Church (http://www.kirchenrecht-ekd.de/showdocument/id/3435#s1.100049)
  17. ^ § 28 of the Basic Order (Grundordnung) of the Evangelical Church (http://www.kirchenrecht-ekd.de/showdocument/id/3435#s1.100049)
  18. ^ § 31 of the Basic Order (Grundordnung) of the Evangelical Church (http://www.kirchenrecht-ekd.de/showdocument/id/3435#s1.100049)
  19. ^ "Startseite - Gustav-Adolf-Werk e.V." (in German). Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  20. ^ EKD-Internearbeit (24 March 2015). . Archived from the original on 2015-07-09. Retrieved 8 July 2015.

External links

  • Official website (in English)

evangelical, church, germany, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, german, evangelische, kirche, deutschland, abbreviated, federation, twenty, lutheran, reformed, calvinist, united, prussian, union, protestant, regional, churches, denominations, germa. EKD redirects here For other uses see EKD disambiguation The Evangelical Church in Germany German Evangelische Kirche in Deutschland abbreviated EKD is a federation of twenty one Lutheran Reformed Calvinist and United e g Prussian Union Protestant regional churches and denominations in Germany which collectively encompasses the vast majority of Protestants in that country In 2020 the EKD had a membership of 20 236 000 members or 24 3 of the German population 3 It constitutes one of the largest national Protestant bodies in the world Church offices managing the federation are located in Hannover Herrenhausen Lower Saxony Many of its members consider themselves Lutherans Evangelical Church in GermanyEvangelische Kirche in DeutschlandClassificationProtestantOrientationUnited Prussian Union LutheranReformedPolityEpiscopalPresbyterianCongregationalistAssociationsWorld Council of ChurchesCommunity of ProtestantChurches in EuropeRegionGermanyOrigin1948 75 years ago 1948 1 Members2020 EKD data 20 2 million 49 7 United Protestant Lutheran and Reformed 48 7 Lutheran 1 5 Reformed 2 3 4 Official websitewww wbr ekd wbr deHistorically the first formal attempt to unify German Protestantism occurred during the Weimar Republic era in the form of the German Evangelical Church Confederation which existed from 1922 until 1933 Earlier there had been successful royal efforts at unity in various German states beginning with Prussia and several minor German states e g Duchy of Nassau in 1817 These unions resulted in the first united and uniting churches a new development within Protestantism which later spread to other parts of the world When Adolf Hitler came to power in 1933 his administration tried to reorganize the old confederation into a unified German Evangelical Church as Hitler wanted to use a single Protestant church to further his own ambitions However a division emerged between the Reichskirche led by the pro government German Christians and the Confessing Church which opposed state control of the church Other Protestant churches aligned themselves with one of these groups or stayed neutral in this church strife The postwar church council issued the Stuttgart Declaration of Guilt on 19 October 1945 confessing guilt and declaring remorse for indifference and inaction of German Protestants in the face of atrocities committed by Hitler s regime In 1948 the Evangelical Church in Germany was organized in the aftermath of World War II to function as a new umbrella organization for German Protestant churches As a result of tensions between West and East Germany the regional churches in East Germany broke away from the EKD in 1969 In 1991 following German reunification the East German churches rejoined the EKD The member churches Gliedkirchen while being independent and having their own theological and formal organisation share full pulpit and altar fellowship and are united in the EKD synod but they act as individual members of the World Council of Churches WCC and the Community of Protestant Churches in Europe CPCE Boundaries of EKD churches within Germany partially resemble those of the states of the Holy Roman Empire and successor forms of German statehood to the most part 1815 borders due to the historically close relationship between individual German states and churches As for church governance the Lutheran churches typically practise an episcopal polity while the Reformed and the United ones a mixture of presbyterian and congregationalist polities Most member churches are led by a state bishop Only one member church the Evangelical Reformed Church in Germany is not restricted to a certain territory In some ways the other member churches resemble dioceses of the Roman Catholic and Anglican churches from an organisational point of view Contents 1 Name 2 History 3 Membership 3 1 2011 census results by state 3 2 Gallery 4 Structure 4 1 Synod 4 2 Praesides of the Synod 4 3 Council of the EKD 4 4 Chairman of the Council of the EKD 4 5 Church Conference permanent body 4 6 Church Office of the EKD 4 6 1 President 4 7 International activities 5 Member churches since 2012 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksName EditThe German term evangelisch here more accurately corresponds to the broad English term Protestant 5 rather than to the narrower evangelical in German called evangelikal although the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada and the Evangelical Lutheran Church of England use the term in the same way as the German church Literally evangelisch means of the Gospel denoting a Protestant Reformation emphasis on sola scriptura by scripture alone Martin Luther encouraged the use of this term alongside Christian History Edit Front page of the Peace of Augsburg which laid the legal groundwork for two co existing religious confessions Roman Catholicism and Lutheranism in the German speaking states of the Holy Roman Empire From the Peace of Augsburg in 1555 to the end of the First World War and the collapse of the German Empire some Protestant churches were state churches Each Landeskirche 1 state or regional church was the official church of one of the states of Germany while the respective ruler was the church s formal head e g the King of Prussia headed the Evangelical Church of Prussia s older Provinces as supreme governor similar to the British monarch s role as the Supreme Governor of the Church of England This changed somewhat with growing religious freedom in the 19th century especially in the republican states of Bremen Frankfurt 1857 Lubeck and Hamburg 1860 The greatest change came after the German Revolution with the formation of the Weimar Republic and the abdication of the princes of the German states The system of state churches disappeared with the Weimar Constitution 1919 which brought about disestablishment by the separation of church and state and there was a desire for the Protestant churches to merge In fact a merger was permanently under discussion but never materialised due to strong regional self confidence and traditions as well as the denominational fragmentation into Lutheran Reformed and United and uniting churches During the Revolution when the old church governments lost power the People s Church Union Volkskirchenbund was formed and advocated unification without respect to theological tradition and also increasing input from laymen However the People s Church Union quickly split along territorial lines after the churches relationship with the new governments improved 6 It was realised that one mainstream Protestant church for all of Germany was impossible and that any union would need a federal model The churches met in Dresden in 1919 and created a plan for federation and this plan was adopted in 1921 at Stuttgart Then in 1922 the then 28 territorially defined Protestant churches founded the German Evangelical Church Confederation Deutscher Evangelischer Kirchenbund DEK At the time the federation was the largest Protestant church federation in Europe with around 40 million members 6 Because it was a federation of independent bodies the Church Union s work was limited to foreign missions and relations with Protestant churches outside Germany especially German Protestants in other countries In July 1933 the German Evangelical Church Deutsche Evangelische Kirche DEK was formed under the influence of the German Christians a pro Nazi religious movement They had much influence over the decisions of the first National Synod via their unambiguous partisanship in successfully backing Ludwig Muller for the office of Reich bishop He did not manage however to prevail over the Landeskirchen in the long term The Confessing Church arose in resistance to the Nazi regime s ideology After the installation of Hanns Kerrl as minister for church matters in a Fuhrer directive of 16 July 1935 and the foundation of the in the end not materialising Protestant Reich Church the DEK played more or less no further role Synodal elections 1933 German Christians and Confessing Church campaigners in Berlin In 1948 freed from the German Christians influence the Lutheran Reformed and United churches came together as the Evangelical Church in Germany at the Conference of Eisenach In 1969 the regional Protestant churches in East Germany and East Berlin 7 broke away from the EKD and formed the League of Evangelical Churches in the German Democratic Republic German Bund der Evangelischen Kirchen in der DDR BEK in 1970 also joined by the Moravian Herrnhut District In June 1991 following German reunification the BEK merged with the EKD While the members are no longer state churches they enjoy constitutional protection as statutory corporations and they are still called Landeskirchen and some have this term in their official names A modern English translation however would be regional church Apart from some minor changes the territories of the member churches today reflect Germany s political organisation in the year 1848 with regional churches for states or provinces that often no longer exist or whose borders changed since For example between 1945 and 1948 the remaining six ecclesiastical provinces Kirchenprovinzen each territorially comprising one of the Old Prussia provinces within the Evangelical Church of the old Prussian Union assumed independence as a consequence of the estrangement among them during the Nazi struggle of the churches This turned the Evangelical Church of the old Prussian Union into a mere umbrella being itself a member of EKD and the BEK 1969 1991 but covering some regional church bodies which were again themselves members of EKD and the BEK 1969 1991 Since 1973 when many Protestant churches in Europe including the EKD members concluded the Leuenberg Agreement also the then 21 EKD members 8 introduced full communion for their parishioners and ministry among each other Since also the regional Protestant churches in East Germany had signed the Leuenberg Agreement thus the then ten members of the Federation of Protestant Churches in the German Democratic Republic practised full communion with the EKD members too Ordination of women is practised in all 20 member churches with many women having been ordained in recent years There are also several women serving as bishops Margot Kassmann former bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Hanover and Chairperson of the Council of the EKD from 2009 until February 2010 was the first woman to head the EKD 9 Blessings of same sex marriages is practised and allowed in 14 of 20 and Blessing of same sex unions are allowed in all other member churches 10 11 The EKD opposes abortion in most situations but believes it should remain legal 12 The EKD has undergone a split in the 20th century and lost a bulk of its adherents in East Germany due to state atheist policies of the former East German government After 1990 membership was counted and amounted to around the same number as the Roman Catholic Church In the 21st century membership in both the Evangelical Church and the Roman Catholic Church stagnates as more people are becoming religious nones Membership EditConfessions of EKD parishioners United administratively or confessionally both Lutheran and Reformed Prussian Union 57 Lutheran 40 Reformed 3 Member churches by confession Protestantism is the major religion in Northern Eastern and Middle Germany with the Reformed branch predominating in the extreme northwest and Lippe the Lutheran branch in the north and south and the United branch in Middle and Western Germany While the majority of Christians in Southern Germany are Roman Catholic some areas in Baden Wurttemberg and Bavaria are predominantly Protestant e g Middle Franconia and the government region of Stuttgart The vast majority of German Protestants belong to a member church of the EKD With 20 236 000 members in 2020 around 24 3 percent of all Germans belong to a member church of the EKD 3 Average church attendance is lower however with only around a million people attending a service on Sunday 13 The regional Protestant church bodies accept each other as equals despite denominational differences No member church runs congregations or churches in the area of another member church thus preventing competing with each other for parishioners The only exception is the Evangelical Reformed Church which combines Reformed congregations within the ambits of usually Lutheran member churches which themselves do not include the eventual local Reformed congregations Thus for example a Lutheran moving from a place where their parish belongs to a Lutheran member church would be accepted in their new place of domicile by the locally competent congregation within another member church even if this church and its local parish are Reformed or of united Protestant confession with Lutheran being exchangeable with the two other respective Protestant confessions within the EKD This is due to full pulpit and altar fellowship between all EKD member churches In this the ambits of the member churches resemble dioceses of the Anglican or Roman Catholic churches however else there is no common hierarchy supervising the member churches who are legally independent equals with the EKD being their umbrella Members of congregations within the member churches like those of parishes within Catholic dioceses and those enrolled in Jewish congregations also enjoying statutory corporation status are required to pay a church tax a surcharge on their normal income tax collected by the states of Germany and passed on to the respective religious body 2011 census results by state Edit State 14 Church membership 2011 Percentage of the population Schleswig Holstein 1 550 200 55 7 Lower Saxony 3 976 430 51 5 Bremen 279 180 43 2 Hesse 2 426 990 40 8 Baden Wurttemberg 3 552 450 34 1 Hamburg 573 960 33 9 Rhineland Palatinate 1 260 720 31 8 Germany 24 552 110 30 8 North Rhine Westphalia 4 974 240 28 5 Thuringia 529 010 24 3 Berlin 706 650 21 6 Saxony 856 340 21 4 Bavaria 2 592 550 21 1 Saarland 199 240 20 1 Brandenburg 448 970 18 4 Mecklenburg Vorpommern 280 500 17 7 Saxony Anhalt 344 680 15 2 Gallery Edit EKD Protestants according to the 2011 census Red denotes states in which EKD Protestants outnumber Catholics Flag of the Evangelical Church in Germany Another version as used by German Protestants EKD church office in Hannover Lower Saxony Germany EKD s internal organization Structure EditThe structure of the EKD is based on federal principles Each regional church is responsible for Christian life in its own area while each regional church has its own special characteristics and retains its independence The EKD carries out joint tasks with which its members have entrusted it For the execution of these tasks the Church has the following governing bodies all organised and elected on democratic lines Synod Edit The Synod is the legislature of the EKD It has 126 members 106 elected by Landeskirchen synods and 20 appointed by the council 15 These 20 are appointed for their importance in the life of the Church and its agencies Members serve six year terms and the synod meets annually Praesides of the Synod Edit Irmgard Schwaetzer praeses of the synod till 2021 1949 1955 Gustav Heinemann 1955 1961 Constantin von Dietze 1961 1970 Hans Puttfarcken de 1970 1973 Ludwig Raiser 1973 1985 Cornelius von Heyl 1985 2003 Jurgen Schmude 2003 2009 Barbara Rinke 2009 2013 Katrin Goring Eckardt 2013 2021 Irmgard Schwaetzer since 2021 Anna Nicole HeinrichCouncil of the EKD Edit The EKD Council is the representative and governing body of the Evangelical Church in Germany The Council of the EKD has 15 members jointly elected by the Synod and Church Conference who serve terms of six years 16 Heinrich Bedford Strohm the Chairman of the Council of the EKD Chairman of the Council of the EKD Edit The representative of the EKD is the Chairman of the Council of the EKD 1945 1949 Theophil Wurm Bishop Wurttemberg 1949 1961 Otto Dibelius bishop of Berlin Brandenburg 1961 1967 Kurt Scharf president bishop from 1966 Berlin Brandenburg 1967 1973 Hermann Dietzfelbinger de Bishop Bavaria 1973 1979 Helmut Class de Bishop Wurttemberg 1979 1985 Eduard Lohse de Bishop Hanover 1985 1991 Martin Kruse de bishop of Berlin Brandenburg 1991 1997 Klaus Engelhardt de Bishop Baden 1997 2003 Manfred Kock president Rhineland 2003 2009 Wolfgang Huber bishop of Berlin Brandenburg Silesian Upper Lusatia 2009 2010 Margot Kassmann bishop of Hanover 2010 2014 Nikolaus Schneider president Rhineland 2014 2021 Heinrich Bedford Strohm Bishop Bavaria 2021 Annette Kurschus Bishop of WestphaliaChurch Conference permanent body Edit The Church Conference is where member churches through the representatives of their governing boards can directly participate in the work of the EKD 17 Church Office of the EKD Edit The Church Office is the administration of the EKD and shall the business of the Synod Council and Conference of the EKD 18 Main divisions I line law and finance President Hans Ulrich Anke de II Religious Activities and Education Vice President Thies Gundlach de since 2010 III Public Responsibility Vice President Horst Gorski also head of the Office of the United Evangelical Lutheran Church of Germany since 2007 IV ecumenism and working abroad Vice President Bishop Petra Bosse Huber de foreign bishop and head of the Office of the Union of Evangelical Churches since 2014 President Edit 1945 1948 Hans Asmussen 1949 1965 Heinz Brunotte 1966 1989 Walter Hammer de 1989 1997 Otto von Camphausen 1997 2006 Valentin Schmidt de 2006 2010 Hermann Barth de since 2010 Hans Ulrich Anke de The EKD Church Office has approximately 200 employees International activities Edit The EKD holds various charities Hilfswerke under its auspices The Gustav Adolf Werk GAW Gustaphus Adolphus Union formerly was founded 1832 in Leipzig as the first and eldest such organization and is responsible to aid feeble sister churches especially in Roman Catholic countries and the Protestant diaspora It has separate branches internationally the organization in Austria is still called the Gustav Adolf Verein 19 Brot fur die Welt is responsible for international development aid Member churches since 2012 Edit Member churches of the Protestant Church in Germany after the fusion of the Evangelical churches of Mecklenburg North Elbia and Pomerania in 2012 The umbrella of the Evangelical Church in Germany comprises 20 regional churches 10 United Protestant Lutheran and Reformed 9 Lutheran 2 ReformedThese bodies are termed Landeskirchen Regional Churches 20 though in most cases their territories do not correspond to the current federal states but rather to former duchies electorates and provinces or mergers thereof Evangelical Church of Anhalt Evangelische Landeskirche Anhalts a united church body in Anhalt Evangelical Lutheran Church in Baden Evangelisch Lutherische Kirche in Baden a lutheran church body in Baden Evangelical Church in Baden Evangelische Landeskirche in Baden a united church body in Baden Evangelical Lutheran Church in Bavaria Evangelisch Lutherische Kirche in Bayern a Lutheran church body in Bavaria Evangelical Church Berlin Brandenburg Silesian Upper Lusatia Evangelische Kirche in Berlin Brandenburg schlesische Oberlausitz a united church body in Berlin Brandenburg Silesian Upper Lusatia merged in 2004 from Evangelische Kirche in Berlin Brandenburg Evangelische Kirche der schlesischen Oberlausitz Evangelical Lutheran Church in Brunswick Evangelisch Lutherische Landeskirche in Braunschweig a Lutheran church body in Brunswick Evangelical Church of Bremen Bremische Evangelische Kirche a united church body in Bremen Evangelical Lutheran Church of Hanover Evangelisch Lutherische Landeskirche Hannovers a Lutheran church body in the former Province of Hanover Protestant Church in Hesse and Nassau Evangelische Kirche in Hessen und Nassau a united church body in the former People s State of Hesse and Nassau Evangelical Church of Hesse Electorate Waldeck Evangelische Kirche von Kurhessen Waldeck a united church body in former Hesse Cassel and Waldeck Church of Lippe Lippische Landeskirche a Reformed church body of Lippe Evangelical Church in Central Germany Evangelische Kirche in Mitteldeutschland a united church body that was created in 2009 from the merger of Evangelical Church of the Church Province of Saxony Evangelische Kirche der Kirchenprovinz Sachsen Province of Saxony Evangelical Lutheran Church in Thuringia Evangelisch Lutherische Kirche in Thuringen Thuringia Evangelical Lutheran Church in Northern Germany Evangelisch Lutherische Kirche in Norddeutschland a Lutheran church body that was created in 2012 from the merger of North Elbian Evangelical Lutheran Church Nordelbische Evangelisch Lutherische Kirche a Lutheran church body in Northern Germany Evangelical Lutheran Church of Mecklenburg Evangelisch Lutherische Landeskirche Mecklenburgs a Lutheran church body in Mecklenburg Pomeranian Evangelical Church Pommersche Evangelische Kirche a united church body in Pomerania Evangelical Lutheran Church in Oldenburg Evangelisch Lutherische Kirche in Oldenburg a Lutheran church body in Oldenburg Evangelical Church of the Palatinate Evangelische Kirche der Pfalz or Protestantische Landeskirche a united church body in Palatinate Evangelical Church in the Rhineland Evangelische Kirche im Rheinland a united church body in the Rhineland Evangelical Lutheran Church of Saxony Evangelisch Lutherische Landeskirche Sachsens a Lutheran church body in Saxony Evangelical Lutheran Church of Schaumburg Lippe Evangelisch Lutherische Landeskirche Schaumburg Lippe a Lutheran church body in Schaumburg Lippe Evangelical Church of Westphalia Evangelische Kirche von Westfalen a united church body in Westphalia Evangelical Church in Wurttemberg Evangelische Landeskirche in Wurttemberg a Lutheran church body in Wurttemberg Evangelical Reformed Church Regional Church Evangelisch reformierte Kirche Landeskirche a Reformed church body covering the territories of No 3 5 7 12 16 17 and 19The Moravian Church Herrnhuter Brudergemeine and the Federation of Evangelical Reformed Congregations are associate members See also EditBarmen Declaration Evangelical Theology Student Council German Evangelical Church Assembly List of the largest Protestant bodies Protestant Women in Germany Religion in Germany Union Evangelischer Kirchen Union of Protestant Churches in Germany References Edit a b EKD Internearbeit 5 May 2015 Short History Archived from the original on 9 July 2015 Retrieved 8 July 2015 www wbr reformiert info wbr de in German a b c Gezahlt 2021 Zahlen und Fakten zum kirchlichen Leben PDF ekd de Retrieved 2 January 2022 The percentages of specific denominations are approximate Peter Terrell Harper Collins German Unabridged Dictionary 4th ed New York HarperCollins Publishers Inc 1999 273 sub loco a b D Karl Bornhausen The Present Status of the Protestant Churches in Germany The Journal of Religion Vol 3 No 5 Sep 1923 501 524 The Eastern churches were the Evangelical Church of Anhalt Evangelical Church in Berlin Brandenburg and Silesian Upper Lusatia Evangelical Church in Berlin Brandenburg EKiBB East Ambit for East Berlin and Brandenburg Evangelical Church of the Gorlitz Ecclesiastical Region Evangelical Church in Greifswald Evangelical Lutheran Church of Mecklenburg Evangelical Lutheran Church of Saxony Evangelical Church of the Church Province of Saxony KPS Evangelical Lutheran Church in Thuringia and Evangelical Church of the Union East Region for EKiBB East Ambit Gorlitz Greifswald and KPS and since 1970 for Anhalt too The Western churches were the Evangelical Church of Baden Evangelical Lutheran Church in Bavaria Evangelical Church in Berlin Brandenburg and Silesian Upper Lusatia Evangelical Church in Berlin Brandenburg EKiBB West Ambit for West Berlin Bremian Evangelical Church Evangelical Lutheran Church in Brunswick Evangelical Lutheran Church of Eutin Evangelical Lutheran Church in the Hamburg State Evangelical Lutheran Church of Hanover Protestant Church in Hesse and Nassau Evangelical Church of Hesse Electorate Waldeck Church of Lippe Evangelical Lutheran Church in Lubeck Evangelical Reformed Church in Northwestern Germany Evangelical Lutheran Church in Oldenburg Evangelical Church of the Palatinate Evangelical Church in the Rhineland Evangelical Lutheran Church of Schaumburg Lippe Evangelical Lutheran Church of Schleswig Holstein Evangelical Church of the Union West Region for EKiBB West Ambit Rhineland and Westphalia Evangelical Church of Westphalia and Evangelical Church in Wurttemberg Deutsche Welle 2009 10 28 German Protestant Church elects first woman as its leader Retrieved 2009 10 29 Okumenische Arbeitsgruppe Homosexuelle und Kirche HuK e V Moglichkeiten der kirchlichen Segnung gleichgeschlechtlicher Paare Archived 2017 06 17 at the Wayback Machine 25 April 2016 Johannes Sussmann Anne Kampf Segnung Homosexueller Bunt wie ein Regenbogen Evangelisch de 14 January 2016 Gott ist ein Freund des Lebens EKD Services of Worship and Holy Communion 2006 Archived 2011 06 17 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 16 March 2010 Zensusdatenbank Ergebnisse des Zensus 2011 Archived from the original on 5 June 2013 Retrieved 3 January 2017 24 of the Basic Order Grundordnung of the Evangelical Church http www kirchenrecht ekd de showdocument id 3435 s1 100042 29 30 of the Basic Order Grundordnung of the Evangelical Church http www kirchenrecht ekd de showdocument id 3435 s1 100049 28 of the Basic Order Grundordnung of the Evangelical Church http www kirchenrecht ekd de showdocument id 3435 s1 100049 31 of the Basic Order Grundordnung of the Evangelical Church http www kirchenrecht ekd de showdocument id 3435 s1 100049 Startseite Gustav Adolf Werk e V in German Retrieved 8 July 2015 EKD Internearbeit 24 March 2015 Regional Churches Archived from the original on 2015 07 09 Retrieved 8 July 2015 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Evangelical Church in Germany Official website in English Overview of World Religions Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Evangelical Church in Germany amp oldid 1147266311, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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