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Evangelical Church of the Augsburg Confession in Poland

The Evangelical Church of the Augsburg Confession in the Republic of Poland (Polish: Kościół Ewangelicko-Augsburski w Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej) is a Lutheran denomination and the largest Protestant body in Poland with about 61,000 members and 133 parishes.[1]

Evangelical Church of the Augsburg Confession in the Republic of Poland
Kościół Ewangelicko-Augsburski w Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej
ClassificationProtestant
OrientationLutheranism
PolityEpiscopal
Bishop of the ChurchJerzy Samiec
AssociationsConference of European Churches,
Lutheran World Federation,
Polish Ecumenical Council,
World Council of Churches
RegionPoland
Origin16th century
Separated fromCatholic Church
Members61,217[1]
Official websiteOfficial website
Holy Trinity Church, Warsaw, of Evangelical Church of Augsburg Confession in Poland.
Lutheran Church of Peace in Jawor- UNESCO World Heritage Site

History edit

The Evangelical Church of the Augsburg Confession stems from the Reformation which began in October 1517. The first Lutheran sermons took place in 1518, and in 1523 the first Lutheran dean, Johann Heß, was called to the city of Breslau, whence Lutheranism spread through the Polish lands.

In interwar Poland the Evangelical-Augsburg church was the largest Protestant denomination, with about half a million followers, but unlike in post-WWII Poland it was not the only Lutheran church in the country.[2] It competed for the hearts of Lutherans living in the territory of the revived Polish state with the Evangelical Union Church [pl] in Greater Poland (part of the former Prussian territory), with the Augsburg and Helvetic Evangelical Church [de] in the areas of the Austrian partition, and with other churches.[3] Its adherents dominated in the Protestant circles in central Poland, which had formed part of Russia prior to 1918, while the other churches were based in the south and west of the newly established country.[4] In 1918 the Lutheran parishes of Cieszyn Silesia were incorporated into the structures of the Evangelical-Augsburg church, raising the overall number of its followers by about 100,000, although about half of these parishes left the church in 1920 when a significant section of the area became part of Czechoslovakia following the Polish-Czechoslovak War of January 1919. They were later reincorporated in 1938 when Poland annexed Trans-Olza following the Munich Agreement.[2]

The greatest challenge for the church before the outbreak of World War II in 1939 was the problem of nationalism, as about three quarters of all adherents in 1939 were German, and the remaining quarter Polish.[3][5] In the diocese of Łódź, largest in terms of the Lutheran population, more than 98% Lutherans were German, while in Silesia, comparable in terms of the number of adherents, more than 80% were Polish.[5] German believers accused bishop Juliusz Bursche (bishop from 1936) of Polonizing the church,[3] which faced the danger of a split along national lines.[6]

An important moment for the Evangelical-Augsburg church was the issuing of a presidential decree in 1936 which established the nature of the relationship between the church and the state and the former's internal structure.[6] The decree affirmed the territorial division of the church into ten dioceses (Warsaw, Płock, Kalisz, Piotrków, Lublin, Łódź, Volhynia, Vilnius, Silesia and Greater Poland) with a total of 117 parishes.[7]

The church in Poland suffered during and after World War II. The ranks of pastors, teachers and other church leadership diminished due to persecution, imprisonment, and death.[6][8] The majority of ethnic Germans moved west from 1944 onwards. During the early postwar years, a number of church properties were taken over[by whom?] for other purposes, and the connections of Protestant Lutheranism to the German cultural sphere made authorities and Polish locals inimical towards the remaining Lutherans. Gradually, the Evangelical Church of Augsburg Confession in Poland has reshaped itself into an active body. On 12 October 2008, Polish president Lech Kaczyński—himself of the Catholic faith—visited the Lutheran Protestant Jesus Church in Cieszyn, becoming the first President of Poland ever to visit a Protestant place of worship.[9][10]

Women first began administering baptism, serving as deacons, and leading services in the church in 1999.[11] In 2022 the church ordained women as pastors for the first time.[11]

Contemporary edit

The church's six dioceses form a wide swath from north to south down the middle of Poland—from Warmia-Masuria and Gdańsk in the north, near the Baltic, to the region west and southwest of Kraków in the south, toward the Czech Republic border. Direct descendants of Reformation forebears live in the south, around Upper Silesia. That is also where most Polish Lutherans can be found, with c. 47,000 of the church's followers (about three quarters of all adherents) living in Silesian Voivodeship.[12] The 2011 census data points to a very uneven distribution of the Polish Lutheran population across the country, particularly scarce in the eastern provinces.[13]

The church has 133 parishes, 186 churches and 151 chapels, and is served by 153 pastors and other church workers.[14] Many pastors serve multiple preaching points and are challenged by diverse demands as well as the need for innovation in a rapidly changing society. The congregations are self-governing, and each has its own parish council.

As of 2018, there were 61,217 adherent faithful in the church.[1] Though numbers of church members are currently lower than they were in the past (87,300 baptized members in 2000, 77,500 in 2005),[15] the Evangelical Church of the Augsburg Confession still remains the largest Protestant body in Poland.

As a Lutheran church in a country that is nearly 90 percent Roman Catholic, the church faces challenges in upholding a Protestant education at various levels, whether in Sunday schools, catechetical instruction, or in connection with the public schools, where Catholic religious education is part of the curriculum. The main priorities of the church are in deaconic work among single, old, and disabled persons; women's and youth work; and in evangelism.

Followers of the Evangelical Church of the Augsburg Confession in the Republic of Poland according to the 2011 census
Voivodeship Number of adherents %
POLAND 70766 100
Lower Silesian 2140 3.0
Kuyavian-Pomeranian 688 1.0
Lublin 339 0.5
Lubusz 630 0.9
Łódź 1462 2.1
Lesser Poland 994 1.4
Masovian 3593 5.1
Opole 1601 2.3
Subcarpathian 100 0.1
Podlaskie 187 0.3
Pomeranian 921 1.3
Silesian 51009 72.1
Holy Cross 142 0.2
Warmian-Masurian 4466 6.3
Greater Poland 1300 1.8
West Pomeranian 1194 1.7

Leadership edit

The senior ordained member of the denomination is called the Bishop of the Church. The office is filled by election, and the Bishop of the Church serves for ten years. He is based at the Church headquarters in Warsaw. The Church's official website describes the role of the Bishop of the Church as: "His service is to minister the Word of God and the Sacraments. He also guards the whole Church (episcope), so that God's Word is proclaimed faithfully and clearly. The Bishop of the Church is the “Pastor of the pastors” (Pastor pastorum)."[16] The office is currently held by Bishop Jerzy Samiec.

Under the Bishop of the Church there are four authoritative bodies. The House of Bishops consists of the Bishop of the Church (Primate) and the six diocesan bishops. The Church Synod is the main decision-making body, and consists of all ordained bishops, 15 representative ordained pastors, and 30 members of laity from across the diocesan synods. The Synod Council is a small standing committee, competent to conduct certain synodical functions between meetings of the full Church Synod. The Consistory of the Church is a senior steering group which has authority to make wide-ranging decisions in terms of the day to day administration of the church. It is chaired by the Bishop of the Church, together with a Vice-President, and six other members (three ordained, three lay).

 
Jerzy Samiec
In office Bishop
1 1904–1942 ks. dr Juliusz Bursche
- 1945–1951 ks. prof. Jan Szeruda
2 1951–1959 ks. dr Karol Kotula
3 1959–1975 ks. prof. Andrzej Wantuła
4 1975–1991 ks. dr Janusz Narzyński
5 1991–2001 ks. dr Jan Szarek
6 2001–2010 ks. Janusz Jagucki
7 2010– ks. Jerzy Samiec

List of Bishops edit

Churches edit

Notable Polish Lutherans edit

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b c "Niektóre wyznania religijne w Polsce w 2018 r. (Selected religious denominations in Poland in 2018)". Mały Rocznik Statystyczny Polski 2019 (Concise Statistical Yearbook of Poland 2019) (PDF) (in Polish and English). Warszawa: Główny Urząd Statystyczny. 2019. p. 114. ISSN 1640-3630.
  2. ^ a b Ciecieląg, Jóźwiak and Godfrejów-Tarnogórska, p. 54.
  3. ^ a b c Szczucki, p. 1798.
  4. ^ Ciecieląg, Jóźwiak and Godfrejów-Tarnogórska, p. 55.
  5. ^ a b Ciecieląg, Jóźwiak and Godfrejów-Tarnogórska, p. 65.
  6. ^ a b c Szczucki, p. 1799.
  7. ^ "Dekret Prezydenta Rzeczypospolitej z dnia 25 listopada 1936 r. o stosunku Państwa do Kościoła Ewangelicko-Augsburskiego w Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej". Act No. 88/613 of 25 November 1936 (PDF) (in Polish).
  8. ^ Bartel, pp. 35-36.
  9. ^ (in Polish) Lech Kaczyński w Wiśle i Cieszynie 2011-07-18 at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ (in Polish) Prezydent w kościele Jezusowym
  11. ^ a b "Poland: First nine women ordained as pastors". The Lutheran World Federation. May 9, 2022.
  12. ^ Ciecieląg, Jóźwiak and Godfrejów-Tarnogórska, p. 25.
  13. ^ Ciecieląg, Jóźwiak and Godfrejów-Tarnogórska, p. 69.
  14. ^ Statistics: Lutherans in Poland (official website of The Evangelical Church of the Augsburg confession in Poland)
  15. ^ Ciecieląg, Jóźwiak and Godfrejów-Tarnogórska, p. 67.
  16. ^ English language version of official website.
  17. ^ a b (in Polish) Większość ewangelików w Polsce jest dumna z tego, że są ewangelikami
  18. ^ (in Polish) MAŁYSZ: Bogu dziękuję!

References edit

  • Bartel, Oskar (1963). Protestantyzm w Polsce (in Polish). Warszawa: Wydawnictwo Zwiastun.
  • Ciecieląg, Paweł; Jóźwiak, Ewa; Godfrejów-Tarnogórska, Agnieszka, eds. (2017). (PDF) (in Polish). Warszawa: Główny Urząd Statystyczny. ISBN 978-83-7027-667-6. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-07-09. Retrieved 2018-07-08.
  • Szczucki, Lech (2004). "Poland". In Hillerbrand, Hans J. (ed.). The Encyclopedia of Protestantism. Vol. 3. New York: Routledge. pp. 1792–1802. ISBN 0-203-57509-1.

External links edit

  • Official website of the Evangelical Church of Augsburg Confession in Poland
  • Brief information about ECACP by KALME 2014-07-23 at the Wayback Machine

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The Evangelical Church of the Augsburg Confession in the Republic of Poland Polish Kosciol Ewangelicko Augsburski w Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej is a Lutheran denomination and the largest Protestant body in Poland with about 61 000 members and 133 parishes 1 Evangelical Church of the Augsburg Confession in the Republic of PolandKosciol Ewangelicko Augsburski w Rzeczypospolitej PolskiejClassificationProtestantOrientationLutheranismPolityEpiscopalBishop of the ChurchJerzy SamiecAssociationsConference of European Churches Lutheran World Federation Polish Ecumenical Council World Council of ChurchesRegionPolandOrigin16th centurySeparated fromCatholic ChurchMembers61 217 1 Official websiteOfficial websiteHoly Trinity Church Warsaw of Evangelical Church of Augsburg Confession in Poland Lutheran Church of Peace in Jawor UNESCO World Heritage Site Contents 1 History 2 Contemporary 3 Leadership 4 List of Bishops 5 Churches 6 Notable Polish Lutherans 7 See also 8 Footnotes 9 References 10 External linksHistory editThe Evangelical Church of the Augsburg Confession stems from the Reformation which began in October 1517 The first Lutheran sermons took place in 1518 and in 1523 the first Lutheran dean Johann Hess was called to the city of Breslau whence Lutheranism spread through the Polish lands In interwar Poland the Evangelical Augsburg church was the largest Protestant denomination with about half a million followers but unlike in post WWII Poland it was not the only Lutheran church in the country 2 It competed for the hearts of Lutherans living in the territory of the revived Polish state with the Evangelical Union Church pl in Greater Poland part of the former Prussian territory with the Augsburg and Helvetic Evangelical Church de in the areas of the Austrian partition and with other churches 3 Its adherents dominated in the Protestant circles in central Poland which had formed part of Russia prior to 1918 while the other churches were based in the south and west of the newly established country 4 In 1918 the Lutheran parishes of Cieszyn Silesia were incorporated into the structures of the Evangelical Augsburg church raising the overall number of its followers by about 100 000 although about half of these parishes left the church in 1920 when a significant section of the area became part of Czechoslovakia following the Polish Czechoslovak War of January 1919 They were later reincorporated in 1938 when Poland annexed Trans Olza following the Munich Agreement 2 The greatest challenge for the church before the outbreak of World War II in 1939 was the problem of nationalism as about three quarters of all adherents in 1939 were German and the remaining quarter Polish 3 5 In the diocese of Lodz largest in terms of the Lutheran population more than 98 Lutherans were German while in Silesia comparable in terms of the number of adherents more than 80 were Polish 5 German believers accused bishop Juliusz Bursche bishop from 1936 of Polonizing the church 3 which faced the danger of a split along national lines 6 An important moment for the Evangelical Augsburg church was the issuing of a presidential decree in 1936 which established the nature of the relationship between the church and the state and the former s internal structure 6 The decree affirmed the territorial division of the church into ten dioceses Warsaw Plock Kalisz Piotrkow Lublin Lodz Volhynia Vilnius Silesia and Greater Poland with a total of 117 parishes 7 The church in Poland suffered during and after World War II The ranks of pastors teachers and other church leadership diminished due to persecution imprisonment and death 6 8 The majority of ethnic Germans moved west from 1944 onwards During the early postwar years a number of church properties were taken over by whom for other purposes and the connections of Protestant Lutheranism to the German cultural sphere made authorities and Polish locals inimical towards the remaining Lutherans Gradually the Evangelical Church of Augsburg Confession in Poland has reshaped itself into an active body On 12 October 2008 Polish president Lech Kaczynski himself of the Catholic faith visited the Lutheran Protestant Jesus Church in Cieszyn becoming the first President of Poland ever to visit a Protestant place of worship 9 10 Women first began administering baptism serving as deacons and leading services in the church in 1999 11 In 2022 the church ordained women as pastors for the first time 11 Contemporary editThe church s six dioceses form a wide swath from north to south down the middle of Poland from Warmia Masuria and Gdansk in the north near the Baltic to the region west and southwest of Krakow in the south toward the Czech Republic border Direct descendants of Reformation forebears live in the south around Upper Silesia That is also where most Polish Lutherans can be found with c 47 000 of the church s followers about three quarters of all adherents living in Silesian Voivodeship 12 The 2011 census data points to a very uneven distribution of the Polish Lutheran population across the country particularly scarce in the eastern provinces 13 The church has 133 parishes 186 churches and 151 chapels and is served by 153 pastors and other church workers 14 Many pastors serve multiple preaching points and are challenged by diverse demands as well as the need for innovation in a rapidly changing society The congregations are self governing and each has its own parish council As of 2018 there were 61 217 adherent faithful in the church 1 Though numbers of church members are currently lower than they were in the past 87 300 baptized members in 2000 77 500 in 2005 15 the Evangelical Church of the Augsburg Confession still remains the largest Protestant body in Poland As a Lutheran church in a country that is nearly 90 percent Roman Catholic the church faces challenges in upholding a Protestant education at various levels whether in Sunday schools catechetical instruction or in connection with the public schools where Catholic religious education is part of the curriculum The main priorities of the church are in deaconic work among single old and disabled persons women s and youth work and in evangelism Followers of the Evangelical Church of the Augsburg Confession in the Republic of Poland according to the 2011 census Voivodeship Number of adherents POLAND 70766 100Lower Silesian 2140 3 0Kuyavian Pomeranian 688 1 0Lublin 339 0 5Lubusz 630 0 9Lodz 1462 2 1Lesser Poland 994 1 4Masovian 3593 5 1Opole 1601 2 3Subcarpathian 100 0 1Podlaskie 187 0 3Pomeranian 921 1 3Silesian 51009 72 1Holy Cross 142 0 2Warmian Masurian 4466 6 3Greater Poland 1300 1 8West Pomeranian 1194 1 7Leadership editThe senior ordained member of the denomination is called the Bishop of the Church The office is filled by election and the Bishop of the Church serves for ten years He is based at the Church headquarters in Warsaw The Church s official website describes the role of the Bishop of the Church as His service is to minister the Word of God and the Sacraments He also guards the whole Church episcope so that God s Word is proclaimed faithfully and clearly The Bishop of the Church is the Pastor of the pastors Pastor pastorum 16 The office is currently held by Bishop Jerzy Samiec Under the Bishop of the Church there are four authoritative bodies The House of Bishops consists of the Bishop of the Church Primate and the six diocesan bishops The Church Synod is the main decision making body and consists of all ordained bishops 15 representative ordained pastors and 30 members of laity from across the diocesan synods The Synod Council is a small standing committee competent to conduct certain synodical functions between meetings of the full Church Synod The Consistory of the Church is a senior steering group which has authority to make wide ranging decisions in terms of the day to day administration of the church It is chaired by the Bishop of the Church together with a Vice President and six other members three ordained three lay nbsp Jerzy Samiec In office Bishop1 1904 1942 ks dr Juliusz Bursche 1945 1951 ks prof Jan Szeruda2 1951 1959 ks dr Karol Kotula3 1959 1975 ks prof Andrzej Wantula4 1975 1991 ks dr Janusz Narzynski5 1991 2001 ks dr Jan Szarek6 2001 2010 ks Janusz Jagucki7 2010 ks Jerzy SamiecList of Bishops editBishop of the Church Primate and Metropolitan Bishop of Cieszyn Bishop of Katowice Bishop of Masuria Bishop of Pomerania Greater Poland Bishop of Warsaw Bishop of WroclawChurches editHoly Trinity Church Warsaw Jesus Church Cieszyn St Matthew s Church Lodz Evangelical Augsburg Church LublinNotable Polish Lutherans editJuliusz Bursche the first Bishop of the Evangelical Church of the Augsburg Confession in Poland Jerzy Buzek 17 prime minister of Poland from 1997 to 2001 President of the European Parliament 2009 to 2012 Adam Malysz 17 18 Polish former ski jumper one of the most successful ski jumpers in the history of the sport Jerzy Pilch one of the most important contemporary Polish writers and journalistsSee also editList of Lutheran dioceses and archdiocesesFootnotes edit a b c Niektore wyznania religijne w Polsce w 2018 r Selected religious denominations in Poland in 2018 Maly Rocznik Statystyczny Polski 2019 Concise Statistical Yearbook of Poland 2019 PDF in Polish and English Warszawa Glowny Urzad Statystyczny 2019 p 114 ISSN 1640 3630 a b Ciecielag Jozwiak and Godfrejow Tarnogorska p 54 a b c Szczucki p 1798 Ciecielag Jozwiak and Godfrejow Tarnogorska p 55 a b Ciecielag Jozwiak and Godfrejow Tarnogorska p 65 a b c Szczucki p 1799 Dekret Prezydenta Rzeczypospolitej z dnia 25 listopada 1936 r o stosunku Panstwa do Kosciola Ewangelicko Augsburskiego w Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej Act No 88 613 of 25 November 1936 PDF in Polish Bartel pp 35 36 in Polish Lech Kaczynski w Wisle i Cieszynie Archived 2011 07 18 at the Wayback Machine in Polish Prezydent w kosciele Jezusowym a b Poland First nine women ordained as pastors The Lutheran World Federation May 9 2022 Ciecielag Jozwiak and Godfrejow Tarnogorska p 25 Ciecielag Jozwiak and Godfrejow Tarnogorska p 69 Statistics Lutherans in Poland official website of The Evangelical Church of the Augsburg confession in Poland Ciecielag Jozwiak and Godfrejow Tarnogorska p 67 English language version of official website a b in Polish Wiekszosc ewangelikow w Polsce jest dumna z tego ze sa ewangelikami in Polish MALYSZ Bogu dziekuje References editBartel Oskar 1963 Protestantyzm w Polsce in Polish Warszawa Wydawnictwo Zwiastun Ciecielag Pawel Jozwiak Ewa Godfrejow Tarnogorska Agnieszka eds 2017 500 lat Reformacji w Polsce PDF in Polish Warszawa Glowny Urzad Statystyczny ISBN 978 83 7027 667 6 Archived from the original PDF on 2018 07 09 Retrieved 2018 07 08 Szczucki Lech 2004 Poland In Hillerbrand Hans J ed The Encyclopedia of Protestantism Vol 3 New York Routledge pp 1792 1802 ISBN 0 203 57509 1 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Evangelical Augsburg Church in Poland Official website of the Evangelical Church of Augsburg Confession in Poland Brief information about ECACP by EEMN Brief information about ECACP by KALME Archived 2014 07 23 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Evangelical Church of the Augsburg Confession in Poland amp oldid 1177686264, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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