Evangelical Church of the Palatinate
Evangelical Church of the Palatinate (German: Evangelische Kirche der Pfalz (Protestantische Landeskirche)) is a United Protestant church in parts of the German states of Rhineland-Palatinate and Saarland, endorsing both Lutheran and Calvinist orientations.
Evangelische Kirche der Pfalz | |
---|---|
Type | Landeskirche, member of the Protestant Church in Germany |
Classification | Protestant |
Orientation | United Protestant (Lutheran & Reformed) |
Director | Kirchenpräsident Dorothee Wüst |
Associations | Union Evangelischer Kirchen |
Region | 5.928 km² in Palatinate (in today's Rhineland-Palatinate, parts of Saarland) |
Headquarters | Speyer, Germany |
Origin | 1818; 1848 |
Members | 482.731 (2020) 30,6% of total population[1] |
Official website | https://www.evkirchepfalz.de |
The seat of the church is in Speyer, where Protestation at Speyer happened. During this historical event, German Lutheran princes protested the Reichsacht against Martin Luther and called for unhindered spread of the Protestant faith. As the Roman Catholic party urged for religious unity in the Holy Roman Empire, it dismissed all those participants who argued against an Imperial Ban on Luther as "Protestants"; it has since entered various other languages beside German language, and became a dominant term to describe churches coming out of the Reformation, as well as all these derived from them. It is the only EKD member church to formally use the word Protestant (protestantisch in German language) in its name, since most EKD member churches call themselves Evangelical (evangelisch in German language).
It is a full member of the Protestant Church in Germany (EKD). The current President of the Church ("Kirchenpräsident") is Dorothee Wüst. The Evangelical Church of the Palatinate is one of 20 Lutheran, United Protestant and Reformed churches of the EKD. As of December 2020, the regional church had 482,731 members in 431 parishes.
The Evangelical Church of the Palatinate is a member of the UEK and of the Community of Protestant Churches in Europe. In Speyer, the church has its own Evangelical academy. The principal church is the Gedächtniskirche in Speyer. Because the church has no bishop, it is not a cathedral.
History
Since 1816, the Palatine Reformed and Lutheran congregations were subordinate to the Protestant church administration of the Kingdom of Bavaria, of which the then Governorate of the Palatinate formed a part. Following the parishioners' plebiscite in 1817, all Palatine Lutheran and Reformed congregations merged into confessionally united Protestant congregations. In 1848, the Palatine Protestant congregations formed a regional church, then called Vereinigte protestantisch-evangelisch-christliche Kirche der Pfalz (Pfälzische Landeskirche) (i.e. United Protestant Evangelical Christian Church of the Palatinate [Palatine State Church]), independent of that regional church in the rest of Bavaria. In 1922, the United Church of the Palatinate counted 506,000 parishioners.[2]
The official Palatine church body became a destroyed church (German: zerstörte Kirche) since it was taken over by Nazi-submissive German Christians, who gained a majority in the synod by the unconstitutional election imposed by Adolf Hitler on 23 July 1933. Nazi opponents then formed the Confessing Church of the Palatinate. In 1976, the Palatine church renamed into Evangelische Kirche der Pfalz (Protestantische Landeskirche) (i.e. Evangelical Church of the Palatinate [Protestant State Church]). In 1941 the commander of the CdZ-Gebiet Lothringen subjected the Protestant congregations in that occupation zone of France to the jurisdiction of the United Church of the Palatinate.[3] In 1944 they returned to their previous umbrellas the Reformed Church of Alsace and Lorraine and the Protestant Church of Augsburg Confession of Alsace and Lorraine.
Practices
Ordination of women and blessing of same-sex marriages were allowed.[4] [5]
Elected leaders
The leading person is the "Kirchenpräsident" (Church President), until 1921 titled Konsistorialdirektor (consistorial director), which is elected from the synod for seven years.
- 1886 - 1896: Theodor Michael von Wand, Konsistorialdirektor
- 1896 - 1915: Ludwig von Wagner, Konsistorialdirektor
- 1915 - 1930: D. Dr. Karl Fleischmann, Konsistorialdirektor, since 1921 Kirchenpräsident
- 1930 - 1934: Jakob Kessler, Kirchenpräsident
- 1934 - 1945: Ludwig Diehl,
- 1946 - 1964: Dr. Hans Stempel, Kirchenpräsident
- 1964 - 1969: Dr. Theodor Schaller, Kirchenpräsident
- 1969 - 1975: Walter Ebrecht, Kirchenpräsident
- 1975 - 1988: Heinrich Kron, Kirchenpräsident
- 1988 - 1998: Werner Schramm (Speyer), Kirchenpräsident
- 1998 - 2008: Eberhard Cherdron, Kirchenpräsident
- 2008 - 2021: Christian Schad, Kirchenpräsident
- since 2021: Dorothee Wüst, Kirchenpräsidentin
Books
- Gesangbuch zum gottesdienstlichen Gebrauche für protestantisch-evangelische Christen, Speyer, 1823
- Evangelisch-protestantisches Gesangbuch für Kirche und Haus, Speier
- Gesangbuch für die vereinigte protestantisch-evangelische christliche Kirche der Pfalz, Speyer, 1861 ?
- Evangelisches Kirchen-Gesangbuch - Edition for Vereinigte, protestantisch-evangelische, christliche Kirche der Pfalz, Speyer,
- Evangelisches Gesangbuch, Edition for Evangelische Kirche der Pfalz (Protestantische Landeskirche), Speyer, 1994
Notes
- Evangelische Kirche in Deutschland – Kirchemitgliederzahlen Stand 31. Dezember 2020 EKD, November 2021
- Sebastian Müller-Rolli in collaboration with Reiner Anselm, Evangelische Schulpolitik in Deutschland 1918–1958: Dokumente und Darstellung, Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1999, (=Eine Veröffentlichung des Comenius-Instituts Münster), p. 30. ISBN 3-525-61362-8.
- Ernest Muller, "Maurer Charles", in: Dictionnaire du monde religieux dans la France contemporaine: 10 vols., Paris: Beauchesne, 1985-2001, vol. 2: 'L'Alsace' (1987), Jean-Marie Mayeur (ed.), pp. 285–287, here p. 287. ISBN 2-7010-1141-8.
- Queer.de: Evangelical Church of the Palatinate, May 22, 2019 (german)
- Protestant Church of the Palatinate (german) Archived September 15, 2005, at the Wayback Machine
External links
- https://www.evkirchepfalz.de (Protestant Church of the Palatinate)
- http://www.ekd.de (Protestant Church in Germany)