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Church of Lippe

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Calvinist church in Germany
Ambit of the Church of Lippe
among the ambits of otherProtestant regional churches in Germany
Ambit of the Church of Lippe
Basic data
Ambit area:1,157.74 km2 (447.01 sq mi)
Spiritual leader:Landessuperintendent
Dietmar Arends
Memberships:RB (as of 1884),EKD (as of 1945),
UEK (as of 2004),WCRC (as of 2010),
Reformed Alliance as of 2010
Classes:7
Parishes:69
Number of parishioners:148,749 (2020)[1]
Share of parishioners in
the overall population
in the ambit:
43.2% (2020)[1]
Website:www.lippische-landeskirche.de

TheChurch of Lippe (German:Lippische Landeskirche) is aReformed (Calvinist) member church of theProtestant Church in Germany that covers what used to be thePrincipality of Lippe.

The seat of the church administration isDetmold. The preaching venue of the spiritual leader (Landessuperintendent) of the Church of Lippe is the Redeemer Church in Detmold. The Church of Lippe comprises 69 congregations and 148,749 members. The Church of Lippe is mostly Reformed with a Lutheran minority (c. 30,000), 80% of the members belonging to one of the 59 Reformed parishes.

Creeds and memberships

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Its official Creeds are theAthanasian Creed,Nicene Creed,Apostles Creed,Belhar Confession,Heidelberg Catechism.Barmen Declaration along with Luther's Small Catechism.[2]The denomination is a member of theWorld Communion of Reformed Churches,[3] of theUnion of Evangelical Churches and of theProtestant Church in Germany, also theReformed Alliance.[4] The Lutheran classis, comprising the Lutheran parishes within the Lippe church, is member in theLutheran World Federation.

History

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Christ the Reedeemer Church in Detmold

Lutheran worship started inLemgo in 1522 and by 1533 all the County of Lippe adopted Lutheranism. In 1538 the LippeDiet adopted aChurch Order (constitution), which was adapted in 1571.Simon VI, Count of Lippe adopted the Reformed Faith in 1605 and promoted its spreading within his county, using his monarchic privilege ofcuius regio, eius religio. He prevailed, with his faith mostly superseding the previously dominant Lutheran faith. A minority, mostly in the city of Lemgo, remained Lutheran and in 1617 the city was granted the right to determine its faith independently of the ruling counts. The Church of Lippe was thestate church of the County andPrincipality of Lippe (elevated in 1789) until the end of the monarchy in 1918.

In 1854 the foundation of Roman Catholic parishes was allowed in Lippe and Reformed, Lutheran and Catholic Christians were granted equal rights. In 1877 the separation of church and state started by establishing church-wide bodies independent of the Lippe state government, such as thesynod. In 1882 the delegates of the Lutheran parishes joined the synod, the Lutheran parishes form within the Church of Lippe their ownclassis since 1888. As spiritual leader the Lutheran classis is headed by asuperintendent. The Reformed parishes are organised in six classes. AfterLeopold IV, Prince of Lippe abdicated on 12 November 1918 his role as supreme governor (summepiscopate; cf.Supreme Governor of the Church of England) of the Lippe church ended. The synod (church parliament) then gained full independence.

During Nazi period the church accepted into its ministry many pastors persecuted by the government.

Practices

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Ordination of women andblessing of same-sex marriages are allowed.[5][6][7]

Ambit

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The Lippe Church comprises 69 parishes within the territory of the formerFree State of Lippe, the republic established after the end of Lippe's monarchy, in its then borders.

Parishioners

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  • 1922: 143,000[8]
  • 2012: 177,000

Spiritual leaders

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Antonius Corvinus
Ferdinand Stosch
Johann Ludwig Ewald
Friedrich von Cölln
Georg Althaus
Adolf Koppen

The spiritual leaders of the Church of Lippe were titled general superintendent, in 1936 the title changed to state superintendent (Landessuperintendent). According to the church order of 1931 the Landessuperintendent is to be elected by the synod (i.e. general assembly). Before turning sixty-six years old the incumbent is supposed to retire. The Landessuperintendent represents the Church of Lippe to the outside and leads the church in times the synod does not hold its regular conventions. As to the Reformed members of the church the Landessuperintendent functions as the spiritual leader. As to the Lutherans in the Church of Lippe this function is fulfilled by the superintendent of the Lutheran classis. Since 1 May 2005 Andreas Lange is the Lutheran superintendent.

List of incumbents

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The data concerning incumbents until 1881 follow August Dreves.[9]

  • 1538–1563: no appointment
  • 1563–1599: Johann von Exter/Joannes Exterus, last Lutheran general superintendent
  • 1599–1618: Henrich Dreckmeyer/Heinrich Dreckmeier (died 1618)
  • 1619–1626: Erasmus Phoenius (died 1640)
  • 1626–1631: Johann Mutius (died 1631, aged 42)
  • 1631–1637: Johann Obenolius
  • 1638–1650: Henrich Thulemeyer (died 1657), contested due to his temperament, furloughed
  • 1650–1677: Conrad Sustmann/Sostmann (died 1677, aged 65)
  • 1677–1691: Jacob Zeller/Johann Jakob Zeller (Zürich, 2 March 1626 – 12 October 1691, Detmold)
  • 1692–1714: Johann Vineator/Johann Weingärtner (died 1714)
  • 1715–1722: Johann Conrad Schieß (died 1725 in England), suspended in late summer 1721 due to "scandalous behaviour and obnoxious way of life", in 1722 illicit emigration
  • 1722–1727: Hermann Diederich Rickmeyer (1678–1751), deposed due to neglect of duty
  • 1728–1743: Dietrich Köhleraus
  • 1744–1746: Friedrich Christian Müller (died 1746)
  • 1746–1761: Caspar Curtius (1700–1761)
  • 1762–1770: Christoph Philipp Erp-Brockhausen (1712–1770)
  • 1771–1780:Ferdinand Stosch [de] (1717–1780)
  • 1781–1796:Johann Ludwig Ewald [de] (1747/1748–1822)
  • 1796–1804:Ludwig Friedrich August von Cölln [de] (1753–1804)
  • 1805–1837:Ferdinand Weerth
  • 1837–1857: Georg Althaus (1789–1863), resigned
  • 1857–1860: vacancy
    • 1857–1860: August von Cölln,consistorial councillor, per pro
  • 1860–1865: August von Cölln (died 1865)
  • 1866–1868: Friedrich August Wessel/Weßel (1813–1868)
  • 1869–1886: Adolf Koppen (1827–1902)
  • 1886–1901: Johannes Credé (1827–1904)
  • 1901–1930: August Wessel/Weßel (1861–1941)
  • 1930–1936: vacancy
  • 1936–1958: Wilhelm Neuser (1888–1959)
  • 1959–1970: Udo Smidt (1900–1978)
  • 1970–1979:Fritz Viering [de] (1910–1979)
  • 1980–1996:Ako Haarbeck (born 1932)
  • 1996–2005:Gerrit Noltensmeier (born 1941)
  • 2005–2013:Martin Dutzmann [de] (born 1956)
  • 2014–to date:Dietmar Arends [de] (born 1963)

References

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  1. ^abEvangelische Kirche in Deutschland – Kirchemitgliederzahlen Stand 31. Dezember 2020 EKD, November 2021
  2. ^"Address data base of Reformed churches and institutions".
  3. ^www.wcrc.ch/node/164Archived August 8, 2012, at theWayback Machine
  4. ^"Geschichte". Archived fromthe original on 2014-04-13. Retrieved2014-04-13. www.reformierter-bund.de/side.php?news_id=113&part_id=0&navi=1
  5. ^UnsereKirche.de:Synode in Lippe, Lippische Kirche erwägt Segnung von Homo-PaarenArchived 2016-01-10 at theWayback Machine (German)
  6. ^Segnungsgottesdienste, Landessynode beschließt: Segnung für Menschen in eingetragener Lebenspartnerschaft in öffentlichem Gottesdienst möglich (German)
  7. ^WDR.de: Lippische Kirche traut jetzt auch homosexuelle Ehepaare (German), 14 June 2019
  8. ^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.
  9. ^August Dreves,Geschichte der Kirchen, Pfarren, geistlichen Stiftungen und Geistlichen des Lippischen Landes, Lemgo: Wagener, 1881, especially the chapter'Die Generalsuperintendenten' on pp. 30seqq., retrieved on 5 April 2013.

External links

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Media related toLippische Landeskirche at Wikimedia Commons

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