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6 unusual facts about Evangelical Church in Germany


Adalbert Brunke

In 1939 the Lutheran Church of Germany sent him to Tanzania.

Bibel TV

16 Christian organizations were a part of the founding of Bibel TV: among them are a subsidiary of the television arm of the Evangelical Church in Germany, a subsidiary of the Roman Catholic Church in Germany, the association of Free churches (including Baptist, Methodist, Mennonite, Pentecostal, Salvation Army), the German Billy Graham Association, Campus Crusade for Christ in Germany and the German Bible Society, called Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft.

Evangelical Church in Germany

#Evangelical Church in the Rhineland (Evangelische Kirche im Rheinland), a united church body in the Rhineland

Evangelical Theology Student Council

The SETh maintains relations to the Evangelical Church in Germany (German: Evangelische Kirche in Deutschland), the assembly of the Evangelical Theological Faculties in Germany (German: Evangelisch-Theologischer Fakultätentag), the Standing Conference of the Ministers of Education and Cultural Affairs of the Länder in the Federal Republic (German: Kultusminsterkonferenz), and other related organisations.

Joachim Illies

In addition to his scientific activities, as a councilor of the Evangelical Church in Germany he published around forty popular books on themes concerning anthropology and theology.

Marie Juchacz

After finishing school in Landsberg an der Warthe (now Gorzów Wielkopolski, Poland), Juchacz, whose beliefs were Protestant, began work in 1893, first as a maid, and then for a short time as factory staff.


Gemünden, Westerwaldkreis

The Evangelical monastery church came into being most likely about the year 1100 and offers visitors, among other things, remnants of Romanesque painting from the 12th century.

Ilse Junkermann

Ilse Junkermann (born 1957 in Dörzbach an der Jagst) is the current German bishop of the Evangelical Church in Central Germany, a member church of the Evangelical Church in Germany.

Ober Kostenz

The Evangelical parish of Ober Kostenz, to which Schwarzen also belonged, merged in 1978 with the parish of Todenroth, while at the same time Kludenbach and Metzenhausen passed to Ober Kostenz.


see also