German Evangelical Alliance

The German Evangelical Alliance (German: Deutsche Evangelische Allianz) is a national evangelical alliance, member of the World Evangelical Alliance.

History

The German Evangelical Alliance (German: Deutsche Evangelische Allianz) has been active since 1851 in Germany.

At present the German EA has members who are closely connected. They are connected to the EA-Organisation or welfare services, who are a part of the "Evangelische Allianz".

Before 1990 in Germany there were two separate organisations, since the division of the country. In the GDR there was the "Evangelische Allianz in der DDR" and the "Deutsche Evangelische Allianz e. V." in the West, based in Stuttgart.

In the course of reunification of Germany both organisations also merged. The offices of the "Deutschen Evangelische Allianz" were until November 2004 in Stuttgart. Being pushed for money, the Organisation moved to Bad Blankenburg.

Today the German EA is a state-approved organisation (eingetragener Verein or e.V.), with a conference center, recreation home and hotel.

There are 1,200 local churches, free churches or free groups who support the alliance.

Deputies of the Evangelische Allianz meet once a year in Bad Blankenburg for the Alliance-Conference (German: Allianzkonferenz).

The affiliated “Institute for the Islamic Question” (German: Institut für Islamfragen) gives a special service of information about Islam from a Christian point of view.

The "Deutsche Evangelische Allianz" is an accredited organisation by German law and is represented in the Bundestag (German parliament) by Wolfgang Baake as Commissioner of the German EA.

The congress centre in Bad Blankenburg

Literature

  • Cochlovius, Joachim (1982), "Evangelische Allianz", Theologische Realenzyklopädie (in German), vol. 10, pp. 650–56.
  • Westerheide, Rudolf (January 2004), EINS – Wie wir als Christen glaubwürdig werden. Impulstour 2004 (in German), Born, ISBN 3-417-24817-5.

Publications of Evangelische Allianz

  • Magazine EiNS - Gemeinsam Glauben, Miteinander Handeln, frequency 4x a year
  • Giveaway to special themes, per example Islam
  • Statements to ethic and political question of principle
  • Newsletters

See also

Evangelical Alliance

References

    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.