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Evangelical Church in Berlin, Brandenburg and Silesian Upper Lusatia

The Evangelical Church Berlin-Brandenburg-Silesian Upper Lusatia (German: Evangelische Kirche Berlin-Brandenburg-schlesische Oberlausitz, EKBO) is a United Protestant church body in the German states of Brandenburg, Berlin and a part of Saxony (historical region of Silesian Upper Lusatia).

The seat of the church is in Berlin. It is a full member of the Protestant Church in Germany (German: Evangelische Kirche in Deutschland - EKD), and is a church of the Prussian Union. The leader of the church is bishop Dr. Markus Dröge (2010). The EKBO is one of 20 Lutheran, Reformed, and United churches of the EKD and is itself a United church. The church has 890,654 members (December 2020[1]) in 1,770 parishes. The church is a member of the Union of Evangelical Churches (German: Union Evangelischer Kirchen - UEK) and the Community of Protestant Churches in Europe. In Berlin and Görlitz the church runs two academies. St. Mary's Church, Berlin, is the church of the bishop of the EKBO with the Berlin Cathedral being under joint supervision of all the member churches of the UEK.

Some theological statements edit

The theology of the church goes back to Martin Luther and the Protestant Reformation. Since 1927 the ordination of women has been allowed, and the blessing of same-sex unions has been allowed by the synod but depends on the local presbytery (German: Gemeindekirchenrat).

History edit

After the Second World War the integrated Evangelical Church of the old-Prussian Union (under this name 1922–1953, then renamed into Evangelical Church of the Union) was transformed into an umbrella organization. In 1947 its ecclesiastical provinces (German: Kirchenprovinzen), as far as their territories were not annexed by Poland or the Soviet Union, became independent church bodies of their own.

Evangelical Church in Berlin-Brandenburg edit

The March of Brandenburg ecclesiastical province (including Berlin, but after 1945 without the territory east the Oder-Neiße line), which until 1933 was headed in rotation by the general superintendents of Kurmark, Neumark-Lower Lusatia, and Berlin, became the Evangelical Church in Berlin-Brandenburg. After 1945, the church covered only the territory still in Germany.

From 1972 on this church body ran double administrative structures in West Berlin and East Berlin - also competent for Brandenburg - because the communist government of East Germany did not allow pastors and church functionaries to travel freely between East and West. The two church bodies reunited in 1991.

Evangelical Church of Silesia(n Upper Lusatia) edit

In 1946 the Silesian ecclesiastical province, presided over by Ernst Hornig, held its first post-war provincial synod in then already Polish Świdnica (formerly Schweidnitz). But on 4 December 1946 Poland deported Hornig from Wrocław (formerly Breslau) beyond the Lusatian Neiße, where he took his new seat in the German part of the now divided city of Görlitz of the former Prussian province of Lower Silesia. In 1947 the Polish government also expelled the remaining members of the Silesian consistory, which temporarily could continue to officiate in Wrocław. Görlitz became the seat of the tiny territorial rest of the Silesian ecclesiastical province, constituting on May 1, 1947 as the independent Evangelical Church of Silesia (German: Evangelische Kirche von Schlesien) - comprising the small parts of Silesia remaining with Germany after 1945.

All of the church property east of the Oder-Neiße Line, parochial and provincial alike, was expropriated without compensation, and the church buildings were mostly taken over by the Roman Catholic Church in Poland. A small number of Silesian churches are owned today by Protestant congregations of the Evangelical-Augsburg Church in Poland (see e.g. Churches of Peace).

On April 9, 1968 East Germany adopted its second constitution, accounting for the de facto transformation into a communist dictatorship. Thus the East German government deprived the church bodies of their status as statutory bodies (German: Körperschaft des öffentlichen Rechts) and abolished the church tax, by which parishioners' contributions had been automatically collected as a surcharge on the income tax. Now parishioners would have to fix the level of their contributions and to transfer them again and again on their own. This together with ongoing discrimination of church members, which resulted in many people leaving the church, effectively eroded the financial situation of the church bodies in the East.

In 1968, churches were reclassified as civic associations, and the East German government required the Evangelical Church of Silesia to remove the word "Silesia" from its name. The church body then chose the new name Evangelical Church of the Görlitz Ecclesiastical Region.

With the end of the East German dictatorship in 1989, the things changed decisively. In 1992 the Evangelical Church of the Görlitz Ecclesiastical Region dropped its unwanted name and chose the new name of Evangelical Church of Silesian Upper Lusatia.

Due to increasing irreligion, the low birth rates in Germany since the 1970s, and low numbers of Protestant immigrants, the Protestant church bodies in Germany are undergoing a severe shrinking of parishioners and thus of parishioners' contributions. So church bodies are forced to reorganise their efforts also with respect to the financial situation.

In 2004 the Evangelical Church of the Silesian Upper Lusatia merged with the Evangelical Church in Berlin-Brandenburg to become the present church body. The Ordination of women were allowed. In June 2017, the church votes to allow same-sex marriages in its churches.[2]

Leading persons and bishops in history edit

Today the leading bishop is elected for ten years from the synod and can be reelected for a second term. Since 1817, when the Lutheran, Calvinist and newly founded united congregations formed a common administrative umbrella, later called Evangelical Church in Prussia's older Provinces, the area comprised by today's church body formed part of the two old-Prussian ecclesiastical provinces of Silesia (German: Kirchenprovinz Schlesien) and of the March of Brandenburg (German: Kirchenprovinz Mark Brandenburg). Until 1933/1934 the spiritual leaders of the Evangelical church were called general superintendents (German: Generalsuperintendent[en]) with regional competences. The adulteration of the church constitution by the Nazi-submissive German Christians was accompanied by new titles (provincial bishop, German: Provinzialbischof) with hierarchical supremacy over parishioners and church employees, and renamings (provosts German: Propst instead of general superintendents). After 1945 the offices of general superintendents as spiritual leaders were reconstituted. The two ecclesiastical provinces assumed independence as the Evangelical Church of Silesia (as of 1947) and the Evangelical Church in Berlin-Brandenburg (as of 1948) when their respective provincial synods legislated new church constitutions. Both independent regional Protestant church bodies created its office of an elected chairperson called bishop, in Protestant tradition of course without hierarchical supremacy. After the merger of both churches in 2004 Wolfgang Huber has been elected the first bishop of the merged Evangelical Church in Berlin-Brandenburg-Silesian Upper Lusatia (German: Evangelische Kirche Berlin-Brandenburg-schlesische Oberlausitz; EKBO.

Chairmen of the March of Brandenburg ecclesiastical province edit

The general superintendents for the different areas were rotating in the spiritual leadership within the provincial consistory, seated in Berlin.

Ecclesiastical Chairmen of Berlin (City) edit

  • 1823 - 1865: D. Daniel Amadeus Gottlieb Neander, bearing the title Provost of St. Peter's Church, then the highest ecclesiastical rank in Berlin, in 1830 King Frederick William III of Prussia bestowed him with the merely honorary title Bishop.
  • 1865 - 1871: not restaffed before Neander's death in 1869, then vacancy
  • 1871 - 1892: D. Bruno Brückner, bearing the title General Superintendent (Gen.Supt.)
  • 1893 - 1911: Gen.Supt. D. Wilhelm Faber
  • 1912 - 1918: Gen.Supt. D. Friedrich Lahusen
  • 1918 - 1921: vacancy
  • 1921 - 1927: Gen.Supt. D. Georg Burghart
  • 1928 - 1933: Gen.Supt. D. Emil Karow, furloughed by State Commissioner August Jäger, after Hermann Göring's Prussian government usurped the factual power in the church body.

General superintendent of Berlin Suburbia edit

The general superintendency was called in German: Berlin-Land und Kölln-Land.

  • 1911 - 1933: D. Wilhelm Haendler (created in 1911, dissolved after Haendler retired)

General superintendents of the Kurmark edit

  • 1540 - 1550: Jacob Stratner (*unknown-1550*)
  • 1550 - 1566: Johannes Agricola (1494-1566)
  • 1566 - 1581: Andreas Musculus (1514-1581)
  • 1581 - 1594: Christoph Cornerus (also Corner, Körner, or Korner; 1519-1594)
  • 1595 - 1633: Christoph Pelargus (also Storch; 1565-1633)
  • 1633 – 1829: vacancy, the function of general superintendent was taken by the recently formed Marcher Consistory (Märkisches Konsistorium), consisting of Lutheran and Reformed (Calvinist) members
  • 1829 - 1853: D. Daniel Amadeus Gottlieb Neander, in personal union Provost of St. Peter's Church (Berlin)
  • 1853 - 1873: D. Wilhelm Hoffmann, also court preacher
  • 1873 - 1879: ?
  • 1879 - 1891: Theodor Johannes Rudolf Kögel (1829-1896), also Berlin royal court preacher since 1863
  • 1892 - 1903: D. Ernst Hermann (von) Dryander (1843-1922)
  • 1903 - 1921?: David Hennig Paul Köhler (1848-1926)
  • 1921 - 1924: Karl Theodor Georg Axenfeld (1869-1924)
  • 1925 - 1933: D. Dr. Otto Dibelius, furloughed by State Commissioner August Jäger.

General superintendent for the Governorate of Frankfurt upon Oder edit

  • 1829–1836: Wilhelm Ross

The general superintendency of Frankfurt was merged with Lower Lusatia into New March-Lower Lusatia in 1836.

General superintendents of Lower Lusatia edit

The general superintendency was seated in Lübben. The general superintendency of Frankfurt was merged with Lower Lusatia into New Narch-Lower-Lusatia in 1836.

  • 1711–1715: Johann Christian Adami
  • 1715–1811: ?
  • 1811–1836: Friedrich Brescius (1766–1842), still appointed by the Saxon government

General superintendents of the New March-Lower Lusatia edit

The general superintendency was seated in Cottbus.

  • 1836–1842: Friedrich Brescius (1766–1842)
  • 1842–1853: ?
  • 1853–1884: Carl Büchsel
  • 1884–1900: ?
  • 1900–1909?: D. Theodor Braun (?-1911)
  • 1909?–1925?: Hans Keßler (1856-1939)
  • 1925–1933: D. Ernst Vits, pensioned off by State Commissioner August Jäger.

Bishopric of the March of Brandenburg edit

In 1933 the Prussian government imposed new leaders, who reshaped the structures. The evangelical church (then named Evangelical Church of the old-Prussian Union) underwent a schism into a schismatic streamlined Nazi-obedient branch and a steadfast, truly Protestant branch, clinging to the Confessing Church. The bishops were subordinate to the newly instituted State Bishop (German: Landesbischof) of the Evangelical Church of the old-Prussian Union, Ludwig Müller. During Church Affair Minister Hanns Kerrl's attempt to force the Confessing Church and the officially recognised hierarchy to reunite, 1935–1937, many outspoken Nazi protagonists were furloughed. After the attempts to compromise the Confessing Church opposition turned out less successful than expected many functions remained simply vacant and the Church Affair Ministry and its favourites usurped direct influence by orders and ordinances.

Kurmark (1933–1945) edit

While the Nazi-streamlined provost was subordinate to the Bishopric of Berlin, the general superintendent ignored his illegitimate furlough and continued to serve, however, accepted only by the non-schismatic Confessing Church congregations.

New March-Lower Lusatia (1933–1945) edit

The Nazi-streamlined provost was subordinate to the Bishopric of Berlin.

  • 1933 - 1935?: Provost Otto Eckert
  • 1935 - 1945: vacancy due to the struggle of the churches

General superintendents since 1945 edit

In 1945 the pre-1933 structures were provisionally restituted. The provisionally leading advisory council (German: Beirat) reconfirmed Dibelius as general superintendent of the Kurmark (i.e. Electoral March). The Beirat also commissioned Dibelius to serve per pro the vacant general superintendencies of Berlin and the New March-Lower Lusatia. The Soviet occupational power agreed that Dibelius would use the title of Bishop, better recognisable for the Soviets as clerical title than the term general superintendent mostly unknown in Russian. In 1949 the Kurmark ceded deaneries to the New March-Upper Lusatia general superintendency which had lost almost all the New March, Polish annexed in March 1945, by the flight and expulsion of its parishioners living there. The New March-Upper Lusatia general superintendency was renamed into Cottbus after its seat. In 1963 the new Eberswalde general superintendency was partitioned from the Kurmark, which was renamed on that occasion to Neuruppin (and again into Potsdam in 2010). The Eberswalde general superintendency remerged in that of Neuruppin in 1996. In 2003, with the merger of the Evangelical Church in Silesian Upper Lusatia, its region became a subdivision of the EKBO.

Berlin edit

Berlin (reunited) edit
  • 1993–1996: Ingrid Laudien (1934-2009)
  • 1996–2008: Martin-Michael Passauer
  • 2008–2011: Ralf Meister
  • 2011– date: Ulrike Trautwein

Kurmark (1945–1963)/Neuruppin (1963–2010)/Potsdam (since) edit

The general superintendency is seated in Potsdam. In 1963 the general superintendency of Eberswalde was partitioned from the Kurmark, renamed into Neuruppin on that occasion. In 1996 Eberswalde remerged in Neuruppin.

  • 1945–1946: D. Dr. Otto Dibelius
  • 1946–1963: Walter Braun (1892–1973)
  • 1963–1978: Horst Lahr (1913-2008)
  • 1979–1996: Günter Bransch (1931)
  • 1997–2010: Hans-Ulrich Schulz
  • 2010– date: Heilgard Asmus

New March-Lower Lusatia (1945–1949)/Cottbus (1949–2010) edit

  • 1945–1946: D. Dr. Otto Dibelius, per pro
  • 1946–1972: Günter Jacob
  • 1973–1981: Gottfried Forck
  • 1982–1993: Reinhardt Richter (1928–2004)
  • 1995–2004: Rolf Wischnath
  • 2004–2010: Heilgard Asmus

In 2010 the general superintendency was dissolved and its area partitioned between Potsdam and Görlitz.

Eberswalde (1963–1996) edit

In 1963 the Eberswalde district (Sprengel Eberswalde) was partitioned from the Kurmark.

  • 1963–1972: Albrecht Schönherr
  • 1972–1978: Hermann-Theodor Hanse (1912–1999)
  • 1978–1983: Erich Schuppan
  • 1983–1996: Leopold Esselbach (1931)

Görlitz (since 2004) edit

In 2003 the Evangelical Church of Silesian Upper Lusatia merged with the Evangelical Church in Berlin-Brandenburg, its region forms a unit within the merger called EKBO.

  • 2004–2011: Regional Bishop Hans-Wilhelm Pietz
  • 2011– date: Gen.Supt. Martin Herche

Bishops of the Evangelical Church in Berlin-Brandenburg edit

In 1948 the first post-war elected provincial synod of the March of Brandenburg ecclesiastical province of the Evangelical Church of the old-Prussian Union constituted as an independent church body named Evangelical Church in Berlin-Brandenburg. The new constitution provided for a chairperson to bear the title bishop.

Reunited church body since 1991:

  • 1991 - 1993: Dr. theol. Martin Kruse
  • 1994 - 2003: Prof. Dr. theol. Wolfgang Huber

On January 1, 2004 the church body merged with the Evangelical Church of Silesian Upper Lusatia.

Silesian general superintendents and bishops edit

General superintendents (1829–1924) edit

  • 1829 - 1830: Johann Gottfried Bobertag
  • 1830 - 1832: ?
  • 1832 - 1843: Ernst Friedrich Gabriel Ribbeck
  • 1844 - 1863: August Hahn
  • 1864 - 1900: David Erdmann
  • 1901 - 1903: Hugo Nehmiz (1845–1903)

Bishops (1935–2003) edit

  • 1935 - 1941/1945: D. Otto Zänker, due to his siding with the Confessing Church he was involuntarily pensioned off in 1941, but ignored that, however, accepted only by the non-schismatic Confessing Church congregations. The Nazi authorities expelled him from Silesia in January 1945.
  • 1941/1945 - 1946: vacancy
  • 1946 - 1963: D. Ernst Hornig
  • 1964 - 1979: D. Hans-Joachim Fränkel
  • 1979 - 1985: Hanns-Joachim Wollstadt
  • 1986 - 1994: Joachim Rogge
  • 1994 - 2003: Klaus Wollenweber

Bishops of the Evangelical Church of Berlin-Brandenburg-Silesian Upper Lusatia edit

Synod edit

The election of the synod (Landessynode) is for six years. The synod meets each year in Berlin. The leader of the synod is called "Präses" (English: praeses).

Books edit

  • Berlin-Brandenburg:
    • Gesangbuch zum gottesdienstlichen Gebrauch für evangelische Gemeinen, Berlin, 1829
    • Evangelisches Gesangbuch, nach Zustimmung der Provinzialsynode vom Jahre 1884 zur Einführung in der Provinz Brandenburg mit Genehmigung des Evang. Oberkirchenrats herausgegeben vom Königlichen Konsistorium, Berlin, 1884
    • Evangelisches Gesangbuch for Brandenburg and Pommern, Berlin and Frankfurt/Oder; eingeführt durch Beschlüsse der Provinzialsynoden der Kirchenprovinz Pommern 1925 and 1927 and Mark Brandenburg 1927 and 1929 and nach der Notverordnung des Kirchensenats from August 7, 1931 published from the Provinzialkirchenräten Brandenburg and Pommern 1931
    • Evangelisches Kirchengesangbuch, Edition for the Evangelische Kirche in Berlin-Brandenburg; Ausgabe für die Konsistorialbezirke Berlin, Magdeburg, Greifswald und Görlitz und der Evang. Landeskirche Anhalts" bzw. "Evangelisches Kirchengesangbuch, Ausgabe für die Evangelische Landeskirche Anhalt, Evang. Kirche Berlin-Brandenburg, Evang. Kirche des Görlitzer Kirchengebietes, Evang. Landeskirche Greifswald, Evang. Kirche der Kirchenprovinz Sachsen"
    • Evangelisches Gesangbuch, Edition for the Evangelische Landeskirche Anhalts, die Evangelische Kirche in Berlin-Brandenburg, die Evangelische Kirche der schlesischen Oberlausitz, die Pommersche Evangelische Kirche, die Evangelische Kirche der Kirchenprovinz Sachsen, Berlin/Leipzig; eingeführt am Reformationstag, 31. Oktober 1993
  • Silesian Upper Lusatia:
    • Gesangbuch für Evangelische Gemeinden Schlesiens; since 1878
    • Schlesisches Provinzial-Gesangbuch; since 1908
    • Evangelisches Kirchen-Gesangbuch (EKG) - Edition for the Konsistorialbezirke Berlin, Magdeburg, Greifswald und Görlitz and the Evang. Landeskirche Anhalts/ Edition for the Evangelische Landeskirche Anhalt, Evangelische Kirche Berlin-Brandenburg, Evangelische Kirche des Görlitzer Kirchengebietes, Evangelische Landeskirche Greifswald, Evangelische Kirche der Kirchenprovinz Sachsen; since 1953
    • Evangelisches Gesangbuch - Edition for the Evangelische Landeskirche Anhalts, the Evangelische Kirche in Berlin-Brandenburg, the Evangelische Kirche der schlesischen Oberlausitz, the Pommersche Evangelische Kirche, the Evangelische Kirche der Kirchenprovinz Sachsen; since Mai 1994

References edit

  1. ^ Evangelische Kirche in Deutschland – Kirchemitgliederzahlen Stand 31. Dezember 2020 2021-12-21 at the Wayback Machine EKD, November 2021
  2. ^ EKBO.de: Die evangelische Kirche in Berlin-Brandenburg traut ab sofort Paare (German) 2017-04-22 at the Wayback Machine, June 2017

External links edit

  • Evangelical Church of Berlin-Brandenburg-Silesian Upper Lusatia
  • Protestant Church in Germany

evangelical, church, berlin, brandenburg, silesian, upper, lusatia, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verific. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Evangelical Church in Berlin Brandenburg and Silesian Upper Lusatia news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations April 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The Evangelical Church Berlin Brandenburg Silesian Upper Lusatia German Evangelische Kirche Berlin Brandenburg schlesische Oberlausitz EKBO is a United Protestant church body in the German states of Brandenburg Berlin and a part of Saxony historical region of Silesian Upper Lusatia The seat of the church is in Berlin It is a full member of the Protestant Church in Germany German Evangelische Kirche in Deutschland EKD and is a church of the Prussian Union The leader of the church is bishop Dr Markus Droge 2010 The EKBO is one of 20 Lutheran Reformed and United churches of the EKD and is itself a United church The church has 890 654 members December 2020 1 in 1 770 parishes The church is a member of the Union of Evangelical Churches German Union Evangelischer Kirchen UEK and the Community of Protestant Churches in Europe In Berlin and Gorlitz the church runs two academies St Mary s Church Berlin is the church of the bishop of the EKBO with the Berlin Cathedral being under joint supervision of all the member churches of the UEK Contents 1 Some theological statements 2 History 2 1 Evangelical Church in Berlin Brandenburg 2 2 Evangelical Church of Silesia n Upper Lusatia 3 Leading persons and bishops in history 3 1 Chairmen of the March of Brandenburg ecclesiastical province 3 1 1 Ecclesiastical Chairmen of Berlin City 3 1 2 General superintendent of Berlin Suburbia 3 1 3 General superintendents of the Kurmark 3 1 4 General superintendent for the Governorate of Frankfurt upon Oder 3 1 5 General superintendents of Lower Lusatia 3 1 6 General superintendents of the New March Lower Lusatia 3 1 7 Bishopric of the March of Brandenburg 3 1 7 1 Provincial Bishop for Brandenburg 3 1 7 2 Provincial Bishop for Berlin 3 1 7 3 Kurmark 1933 1945 3 1 7 4 New March Lower Lusatia 1933 1945 3 2 General superintendents since 1945 3 2 1 Berlin 3 2 1 1 Berlin I 3 2 1 2 Berlin II 3 2 1 3 Berlin reunited 3 2 2 Kurmark 1945 1963 Neuruppin 1963 2010 Potsdam since 3 2 3 New March Lower Lusatia 1945 1949 Cottbus 1949 2010 3 2 4 Eberswalde 1963 1996 3 2 5 Gorlitz since 2004 3 3 Bishops of the Evangelical Church in Berlin Brandenburg 3 4 Silesian general superintendents and bishops 3 4 1 General superintendents 1829 1924 3 4 2 General superintendent Liegnitz Region 1904 1935 3 4 3 General superintendent Breslau and Oppeln Regions 1904 1935 3 4 4 Bishops 1935 2003 3 5 Bishops of the Evangelical Church of Berlin Brandenburg Silesian Upper Lusatia 4 Synod 5 Books 6 References 7 External linksSome theological statements editThe theology of the church goes back to Martin Luther and the Protestant Reformation Since 1927 the ordination of women has been allowed and the blessing of same sex unions has been allowed by the synod but depends on the local presbytery German Gemeindekirchenrat History editAfter the Second World War the integrated Evangelical Church of the old Prussian Union under this name 1922 1953 then renamed into Evangelical Church of the Union was transformed into an umbrella organization In 1947 its ecclesiastical provinces German Kirchenprovinzen as far as their territories were not annexed by Poland or the Soviet Union became independent church bodies of their own Evangelical Church in Berlin Brandenburg edit The March of Brandenburg ecclesiastical province including Berlin but after 1945 without the territory east the Oder Neisse line which until 1933 was headed in rotation by the general superintendents of Kurmark Neumark Lower Lusatia and Berlin became the Evangelical Church in Berlin Brandenburg After 1945 the church covered only the territory still in Germany From 1972 on this church body ran double administrative structures in West Berlin and East Berlin also competent for Brandenburg because the communist government of East Germany did not allow pastors and church functionaries to travel freely between East and West The two church bodies reunited in 1991 Evangelical Church of Silesia n Upper Lusatia edit In 1946 the Silesian ecclesiastical province presided over by Ernst Hornig held its first post war provincial synod in then already Polish Swidnica formerly Schweidnitz But on 4 December 1946 Poland deported Hornig from Wroclaw formerly Breslau beyond the Lusatian Neisse where he took his new seat in the German part of the now divided city of Gorlitz of the former Prussian province of Lower Silesia In 1947 the Polish government also expelled the remaining members of the Silesian consistory which temporarily could continue to officiate in Wroclaw Gorlitz became the seat of the tiny territorial rest of the Silesian ecclesiastical province constituting on May 1 1947 as the independent Evangelical Church of Silesia German Evangelische Kirche von Schlesien comprising the small parts of Silesia remaining with Germany after 1945 All of the church property east of the Oder Neisse Line parochial and provincial alike was expropriated without compensation and the church buildings were mostly taken over by the Roman Catholic Church in Poland A small number of Silesian churches are owned today by Protestant congregations of the Evangelical Augsburg Church in Poland see e g Churches of Peace On April 9 1968 East Germany adopted its second constitution accounting for the de facto transformation into a communist dictatorship Thus the East German government deprived the church bodies of their status as statutory bodies German Korperschaft des offentlichen Rechts and abolished the church tax by which parishioners contributions had been automatically collected as a surcharge on the income tax Now parishioners would have to fix the level of their contributions and to transfer them again and again on their own This together with ongoing discrimination of church members which resulted in many people leaving the church effectively eroded the financial situation of the church bodies in the East In 1968 churches were reclassified as civic associations and the East German government required the Evangelical Church of Silesia to remove the word Silesia from its name The church body then chose the new name Evangelical Church of the Gorlitz Ecclesiastical Region With the end of the East German dictatorship in 1989 the things changed decisively In 1992 the Evangelical Church of the Gorlitz Ecclesiastical Region dropped its unwanted name and chose the new name of Evangelical Church of Silesian Upper Lusatia Due to increasing irreligion the low birth rates in Germany since the 1970s and low numbers of Protestant immigrants the Protestant church bodies in Germany are undergoing a severe shrinking of parishioners and thus of parishioners contributions So church bodies are forced to reorganise their efforts also with respect to the financial situation In 2004 the Evangelical Church of the Silesian Upper Lusatia merged with the Evangelical Church in Berlin Brandenburg to become the present church body The Ordination of women were allowed In June 2017 the church votes to allow same sex marriages in its churches 2 Leading persons and bishops in history editToday the leading bishop is elected for ten years from the synod and can be reelected for a second term Since 1817 when the Lutheran Calvinist and newly founded united congregations formed a common administrative umbrella later called Evangelical Church in Prussia s older Provinces the area comprised by today s church body formed part of the two old Prussian ecclesiastical provinces of Silesia German Kirchenprovinz Schlesien and of the March of Brandenburg German Kirchenprovinz Mark Brandenburg Until 1933 1934 the spiritual leaders of the Evangelical church were called general superintendents German Generalsuperintendent en with regional competences The adulteration of the church constitution by the Nazi submissive German Christians was accompanied by new titles provincial bishop German Provinzialbischof with hierarchical supremacy over parishioners and church employees and renamings provosts German Propst instead of general superintendents After 1945 the offices of general superintendents as spiritual leaders were reconstituted The two ecclesiastical provinces assumed independence as the Evangelical Church of Silesia as of 1947 and the Evangelical Church in Berlin Brandenburg as of 1948 when their respective provincial synods legislated new church constitutions Both independent regional Protestant church bodies created its office of an elected chairperson called bishop in Protestant tradition of course without hierarchical supremacy After the merger of both churches in 2004 Wolfgang Huber has been elected the first bishop of the merged Evangelical Church in Berlin Brandenburg Silesian Upper Lusatia German Evangelische Kirche Berlin Brandenburg schlesische Oberlausitz EKBO Chairmen of the March of Brandenburg ecclesiastical province edit The general superintendents for the different areas were rotating in the spiritual leadership within the provincial consistory seated in Berlin Ecclesiastical Chairmen of Berlin City edit 1823 1865 D Daniel Amadeus Gottlieb Neander bearing the title Provost of St Peter s Church then the highest ecclesiastical rank in Berlin in 1830 King Frederick William III of Prussia bestowed him with the merely honorary title Bishop 1865 1871 not restaffed before Neander s death in 1869 then vacancy 1871 1892 D Bruno Bruckner bearing the title General Superintendent Gen Supt 1893 1911 Gen Supt D Wilhelm Faber 1912 1918 Gen Supt D Friedrich Lahusen 1918 1921 vacancy 1921 1927 Gen Supt D Georg Burghart 1928 1933 Gen Supt D Emil Karow furloughed by State Commissioner August Jager after Hermann Goring s Prussian government usurped the factual power in the church body General superintendent of Berlin Suburbia edit The general superintendency was called in German Berlin Land und Kolln Land 1911 1933 D Wilhelm Haendler created in 1911 dissolved after Haendler retired General superintendents of the Kurmark edit 1540 1550 Jacob Stratner unknown 1550 1550 1566 Johannes Agricola 1494 1566 1566 1581 Andreas Musculus 1514 1581 1581 1594 Christoph Cornerus also Corner Korner or Korner 1519 1594 1595 1633 Christoph Pelargus also Storch 1565 1633 1633 1829 vacancy the function of general superintendent was taken by the recently formed Marcher Consistory Markisches Konsistorium consisting of Lutheran and Reformed Calvinist members 1829 1853 D Daniel Amadeus Gottlieb Neander in personal union Provost of St Peter s Church Berlin 1853 1873 D Wilhelm Hoffmann also court preacher 1873 1879 1879 1891 Theodor Johannes Rudolf Kogel 1829 1896 also Berlin royal court preacher since 1863 1892 1903 D Ernst Hermann von Dryander 1843 1922 1903 1921 David Hennig Paul Kohler 1848 1926 1921 1924 Karl Theodor Georg Axenfeld 1869 1924 1925 1933 D Dr Otto Dibelius furloughed by State Commissioner August Jager General superintendent for the Governorate of Frankfurt upon Oder edit 1829 1836 Wilhelm RossThe general superintendency of Frankfurt was merged with Lower Lusatia into New March Lower Lusatia in 1836 General superintendents of Lower Lusatia edit The general superintendency was seated in Lubben The general superintendency of Frankfurt was merged with Lower Lusatia into New Narch Lower Lusatia in 1836 1711 1715 Johann Christian Adami 1715 1811 1811 1836 Friedrich Brescius 1766 1842 still appointed by the Saxon governmentGeneral superintendents of the New March Lower Lusatia edit The general superintendency was seated in Cottbus 1836 1842 Friedrich Brescius 1766 1842 1842 1853 1853 1884 Carl Buchsel 1884 1900 1900 1909 D Theodor Braun 1911 1909 1925 Hans Kessler 1856 1939 1925 1933 D Ernst Vits pensioned off by State Commissioner August Jager Bishopric of the March of Brandenburg edit In 1933 the Prussian government imposed new leaders who reshaped the structures The evangelical church then named Evangelical Church of the old Prussian Union underwent a schism into a schismatic streamlined Nazi obedient branch and a steadfast truly Protestant branch clinging to the Confessing Church The bishops were subordinate to the newly instituted State Bishop German Landesbischof of the Evangelical Church of the old Prussian Union Ludwig Muller During Church Affair Minister Hanns Kerrl s attempt to force the Confessing Church and the officially recognised hierarchy to reunite 1935 1937 many outspoken Nazi protagonists were furloughed After the attempts to compromise the Confessing Church opposition turned out less successful than expected many functions remained simply vacant and the Church Affair Ministry and its favourites usurped direct influence by orders and ordinances Provincial Bishop for Brandenburg edit 1933 September November Joachim Hossenfelder 1933 November 1945 vacancy due to the struggle of the churches Provincial Bishop for Berlin edit 1933 1934 D Emil Karow resigned in opposition to the Nazi obedient State Bishop Ludwig Muller 1934 1945 vacancy due to the struggle of the churches Kurmark 1933 1945 edit While the Nazi streamlined provost was subordinate to the Bishopric of Berlin the general superintendent ignored his illegitimate furlough and continued to serve however accepted only by the non schismatic Confessing Church congregations 1933 1936 Provost Fritz Loerzer 1936 1939 Provost Georg Heimerdinger 1875 1967 1939 1945 Provost Fritz Loerzer 1934 1945 Gen Supt D Dr Otto Dibelius New March Lower Lusatia 1933 1945 edit The Nazi streamlined provost was subordinate to the Bishopric of Berlin 1933 1935 Provost Otto Eckert 1935 1945 vacancy due to the struggle of the churchesGeneral superintendents since 1945 edit In 1945 the pre 1933 structures were provisionally restituted The provisionally leading advisory council German Beirat reconfirmed Dibelius as general superintendent of the Kurmark i e Electoral March The Beirat also commissioned Dibelius to serve per pro the vacant general superintendencies of Berlin and the New March Lower Lusatia The Soviet occupational power agreed that Dibelius would use the title of Bishop better recognisable for the Soviets as clerical title than the term general superintendent mostly unknown in Russian In 1949 the Kurmark ceded deaneries to the New March Upper Lusatia general superintendency which had lost almost all the New March Polish annexed in March 1945 by the flight and expulsion of its parishioners living there The New March Upper Lusatia general superintendency was renamed into Cottbus after its seat In 1963 the new Eberswalde general superintendency was partitioned from the Kurmark which was renamed on that occasion to Neuruppin and again into Potsdam in 2010 The Eberswalde general superintendency remerged in that of Neuruppin in 1996 In 2003 with the merger of the Evangelical Church in Silesian Upper Lusatia its region became a subdivision of the EKBO Berlin edit 1945 1946 D Dr Otto Dibelius per proBerlin I edit The general superintendency was seated in Berlin West 1946 1955 Gerhard Jacobi 1955 1961 Immanuel Pack 1961 1975 Hans Martin HelbichThe general superintendency of Berlin I was then merged in the function of the Bishop in Berlin Brandenburg western region Berlin II edit The general superintendency was seated in Berlin East 1946 1955 Friedrich Wilhelm Krummacher 1956 1963 Fritz Fuhr 1904 1963 1964 1974 Gerhard Schmitt 1974 1982 Hartmut Grunbaum 1982 1993 Gunter Krusche resigned after revealing his Stasi collaboration Berlin reunited edit 1993 1996 Ingrid Laudien 1934 2009 1996 2008 Martin Michael Passauer 2008 2011 Ralf Meister 2011 date Ulrike TrautweinKurmark 1945 1963 Neuruppin 1963 2010 Potsdam since edit The general superintendency is seated in Potsdam In 1963 the general superintendency of Eberswalde was partitioned from the Kurmark renamed into Neuruppin on that occasion In 1996 Eberswalde remerged in Neuruppin 1945 1946 D Dr Otto Dibelius 1946 1963 Walter Braun 1892 1973 1963 1978 Horst Lahr 1913 2008 1979 1996 Gunter Bransch 1931 1997 2010 Hans Ulrich Schulz 2010 date Heilgard AsmusNew March Lower Lusatia 1945 1949 Cottbus 1949 2010 edit 1945 1946 D Dr Otto Dibelius per pro 1946 1972 Gunter Jacob 1973 1981 Gottfried Forck 1982 1993 Reinhardt Richter 1928 2004 1995 2004 Rolf Wischnath 2004 2010 Heilgard AsmusIn 2010 the general superintendency was dissolved and its area partitioned between Potsdam and Gorlitz Eberswalde 1963 1996 edit In 1963 the Eberswalde district Sprengel Eberswalde was partitioned from the Kurmark 1963 1972 Albrecht Schonherr 1972 1978 Hermann Theodor Hanse 1912 1999 1978 1983 Erich Schuppan 1983 1996 Leopold Esselbach 1931 Gorlitz since 2004 edit In 2003 the Evangelical Church of Silesian Upper Lusatia merged with the Evangelical Church in Berlin Brandenburg its region forms a unit within the merger called EKBO 2004 2011 Regional Bishop Hans Wilhelm Pietz 2011 date Gen Supt Martin HercheBishops of the Evangelical Church in Berlin Brandenburg edit In 1948 the first post war elected provincial synod of the March of Brandenburg ecclesiastical province of the Evangelical Church of the old Prussian Union constituted as an independent church body named Evangelical Church in Berlin Brandenburg The new constitution provided for a chairperson to bear the title bishop 1948 1966 D Dr Otto Dibelius 1966 1972 D Kurt ScharfWest 1972 1991 competent for West Berlin 1972 1976 D Kurt Scharf 1976 1991 Dr theol Martin Kruse b 1929 East 1972 1991 competent for East Berlin and Brandenburg 1972 1981 D h c Albrecht Schonherr 1911 2009 1981 1991 Dr theol Gottfried Forck 1923 1996 Reunited church body since 1991 1991 1993 Dr theol Martin Kruse 1994 2003 Prof Dr theol Wolfgang HuberOn January 1 2004 the church body merged with the Evangelical Church of Silesian Upper Lusatia Silesian general superintendents and bishops edit General superintendents 1829 1924 edit 1829 1830 Johann Gottfried Bobertag 1830 1832 1832 1843 Ernst Friedrich Gabriel Ribbeck 1844 1863 August Hahn 1864 1900 David Erdmann 1901 1903 Hugo Nehmiz 1845 1903 General superintendent Liegnitz Region 1904 1935 edit 1905 1924 Wilhelm Haupt 1924 1933 Martin Schian deposed by State commissioner Jager 1933 1935 vacancy Otto Zanker per pro General superintendent Breslau and Oppeln Regions 1904 1935 edit 1904 1925 Theodor Nottebohm 1850 1931 1925 1935 Otto Zanker since 1933 also per pro in the Liegnitz Region Bishops 1935 2003 edit 1935 1941 1945 D Otto Zanker due to his siding with the Confessing Church he was involuntarily pensioned off in 1941 but ignored that however accepted only by the non schismatic Confessing Church congregations The Nazi authorities expelled him from Silesia in January 1945 1941 1945 1946 vacancy 1945 1946 D Praeses Ernst Hornig per pro 1946 1963 D Ernst Hornig 1964 1979 D Hans Joachim Frankel 1979 1985 Hanns Joachim Wollstadt 1986 1994 Joachim Rogge 1994 2003 Klaus WollenweberBishops of the Evangelical Church of Berlin Brandenburg Silesian Upper Lusatia edit 2004 2009 Wolfgang Huber 2009 2019 Markus Droge 2019 present Christian StableinSynod editThe election of the synod Landessynode is for six years The synod meets each year in Berlin The leader of the synod is called Prases English praeses Books editBerlin Brandenburg Gesangbuch zum gottesdienstlichen Gebrauch fur evangelische Gemeinen Berlin 1829 Evangelisches Gesangbuch nach Zustimmung der Provinzialsynode vom Jahre 1884 zur Einfuhrung in der Provinz Brandenburg mit Genehmigung des Evang Oberkirchenrats herausgegeben vom Koniglichen Konsistorium Berlin 1884 Evangelisches Gesangbuch for Brandenburg and Pommern Berlin and Frankfurt Oder eingefuhrt durch Beschlusse der Provinzialsynoden der Kirchenprovinz Pommern 1925 and 1927 and Mark Brandenburg 1927 and 1929 and nach der Notverordnung des Kirchensenats from August 7 1931 published from the Provinzialkirchenraten Brandenburg and Pommern 1931 Evangelisches Kirchengesangbuch Edition for the Evangelische Kirche in Berlin Brandenburg Ausgabe fur die Konsistorialbezirke Berlin Magdeburg Greifswald und Gorlitz und der Evang Landeskirche Anhalts bzw Evangelisches Kirchengesangbuch Ausgabe fur die Evangelische Landeskirche Anhalt Evang Kirche Berlin Brandenburg Evang Kirche des Gorlitzer Kirchengebietes Evang Landeskirche Greifswald Evang Kirche der Kirchenprovinz Sachsen Evangelisches Gesangbuch Edition for the Evangelische Landeskirche Anhalts die Evangelische Kirche in Berlin Brandenburg die Evangelische Kirche der schlesischen Oberlausitz die Pommersche Evangelische Kirche die Evangelische Kirche der Kirchenprovinz Sachsen Berlin Leipzig eingefuhrt am Reformationstag 31 Oktober 1993 Silesian Upper Lusatia Gesangbuch fur Evangelische Gemeinden Schlesiens since 1878 Schlesisches Provinzial Gesangbuch since 1908 Evangelisches Kirchen Gesangbuch EKG Edition for the Konsistorialbezirke Berlin Magdeburg Greifswald und Gorlitz and the Evang Landeskirche Anhalts Edition for the Evangelische Landeskirche Anhalt Evangelische Kirche Berlin Brandenburg Evangelische Kirche des Gorlitzer Kirchengebietes Evangelische Landeskirche Greifswald Evangelische Kirche der Kirchenprovinz Sachsen since 1953 Evangelisches Gesangbuch Edition for the Evangelische Landeskirche Anhalts the Evangelische Kirche in Berlin Brandenburg the Evangelische Kirche der schlesischen Oberlausitz the Pommersche Evangelische Kirche the Evangelische Kirche der Kirchenprovinz Sachsen since Mai 1994References edit Evangelische Kirche in Deutschland Kirchemitgliederzahlen Stand 31 Dezember 2020 Archived 2021 12 21 at the Wayback Machine EKD November 2021 EKBO de Die evangelische Kirche in Berlin Brandenburg traut ab sofort Paare German Archived 2017 04 22 at the Wayback Machine June 2017External links editEvangelical Church of Berlin Brandenburg Silesian Upper Lusatia Protestant Church in Germany Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Evangelical Church in Berlin Brandenburg and Silesian Upper Lusatia amp oldid 1184331169, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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