Evangelical Church of Westphalia

The Lutheran Church of Westphalia (German: Evangelische Kirche von Westfalen, EKvW) is a United Protestant church body in the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia.

Lutheran Church of Westphalia

The seat of the praeses (German: Präses, the head of the church) is Bielefeld. The EKvW emerged on June 13, 1945, when the ecclesiastical province of Westphalia within the Lutheran Church of the old-Prussian Union assumed its independence as church body of its own. The EKvW is a full member of the Lutheran Church in Germany (EKD),and the Reformed Alliance[1] and is a church whose bases are in a Union between parishes in Lutheran and Calvinistic traditions. The church is also a member of the Community of Protestant Churches in Europe. Because the church is not run by a "bishop" there is no cathedral. Präses (President) of the church is Annette Kurschus (2012). Annette Kurschus became the first female praeses of the Lutheran Church of Westphalia in 2011.

Präses (President)

  • 1834–1835: Jakob von der Kuhlen
  • 1835–1841: Christian Nonne
  • 1841–1843: Bernhard Jacobi
  • 1844–1874: Wilhelm Diedrich Albert
  • 1874–1902: Ludwig Polscher
  • 1902–1914: Friedrich König
  • 1914–1927: Heinrich Kockelke
  • 1927–1949: Karl Koch (until 1934 Präses der Provinzialsynode, 1934–1945 of Bekenntnissynode, since 1945 of synode)
  • 1949–1968: Ernst Wilm
  • 1969–1977: Hans Thimme
  • 1977–1985: Heinrich Reiß
  • 1985–1996: Hans-Martin Linnemann
  • 1996–2004: Manfred Sorg
  • 2004–2012: Alfred Buß
  • 2012–: Annette Kurschus

Practices

Ordination of women and blessing of same-sex marriages were allowed.[2][3][4]

References

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