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German Baptists

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Baptists in Germany can be documented as having existed since 1834, the year in which the first congregation was formed by Johann Gerhard Oncken , Barnas Sears and others, in Hamburg that became the nucleus of the Baptist movement in continental Europe . Together with Oncken, Gottfried Wilhelm Lehmann and Julius Köbner formed the "Baptist cloverleaf" of Germany, having a great impact on the movement. Most German Baptists belong to the Union of Evangelical Free Churches , which is part of the Baptist World Alliance through the European Baptist Federation . Other German Baptist congregations, some with Russian-German roots, joined together in new unions beginning in the 1980s. In addition, other smaller congregational networks and a number of so-called free Baptist congregations emerged.

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12-509: (Redirected from German Baptist ) German Baptists may refer to: Baptists in Germany Schwarzenau Brethren , commonly called German Baptists, an Anabapist tradition Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title German Baptists . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change

24-572: A subordinate role. They have no function in relation to hierarchy, but serve primarily to deal with tasks that a single congregation cannot accomplish. These include, among other things, mission work , diaconia and the theological training of full-time and volunteer staff. The following is a selection of Baptist unions and movements in Germany. The Union of Evangelical Free Churches in Germany ( Bund Evangelisch-Freikirchlicher Gemeinden , BEFG; Baptist and Brethren congregations) has its origins in

36-624: A theological correspondence course and a theological evening school. The International Baptist Convention goes back to church plantings by American soldiers. In Germany, 25 English-speaking congregations belong to it. From its beginnings in Wiesbaden and Frankfurt , a loose working group was formed in 1958, the Association of Baptists in Continental Europe, which was joined by other congregations and, from 1961, supported by

48-546: A total membership for "Free Baptist and Mennonite congregations" of about 290,000 in "550 free congregations" in 2012. According to this, most members come from the area of the former Soviet Union. Apart from the fact that these are explicitly not only Baptists, this figure, with the exception of the Union of Evangelical Free Churches, likely also includes some if not all of the above-mentioned groupings. Mennonite Brethren Church Too Many Requests If you report this error to

60-740: The Arbeitsgemeinschaft der Evangeliumschristen-Baptisten in the Union of Evangelical Free Churches or is united with Mennonite Brethren congregations in the Bund Taufgesinnter Gemeinden ('Union of Baptist-Minded Congregations'). In addition, there are also congregations outside of congregational associations. The congregations in the Bund Taufgesinnter Gemeinden  [ de ] ('Union of Baptist-Minded Congregations'; BTG) have partly Baptist, partly Mennonite roots. The federation

72-659: The Brethren movement , and thereby took its present name. According to a census published by the association in 2023, it claimed 786 churches and 75,767 members. The Evangeliumschristen-Baptisten  [ de ] ('Evangelical Christians-Baptists') are mostly of Russian-German origin. They were formed in 1944 from the merger of Evangeliums-Christen with the Baptists. Later, other evangelical free churches joined them. In contrast to their Eastern European countries of origin, no unified union of Evangelical Christians-Baptists

84-970: The Baptists in the Union of Evangelical Free Churches. The main differences are their positions on women's ordination , the charismatic movement and ecumenism , as well as the understanding of the Bible. The churches of the Missionsdienstes der Freien Baptisten and other free Baptist churches are associated with the Konferenz für Gemeindegründung  [ de ] ('Conference for Church Planting'; KfG). Around 30 congregations are affiliated. The Bibel-Baptisten ('Bible Baptists') include about 50 churches. The Reformed Baptists , who are strongly influenced by Calvinism , include about ten congregations in Germany. The Religionswissenschaftlicher Medien- und Informationsdienst or REMID ('German Religious Studies Media and Information Service') gives

96-610: The North American congregational association of the Southern Baptist Convention . In 1964, the Association adopted its current name. The Missionsdienst der Freien Baptisten ('Free Baptist Mission Service') works together with Baptist Mid-Missions . About ten congregations belong to it. According to their own statements, the Free Baptist congregations are more "theologically conservative" than

108-660: The first Baptist church in Hamburg founded by the German missionary Johann Gerhard Oncken in 1834. Founded in 1849, the Union of United Congregations of Baptized Christians in Germany and Denmark ( Bund der vereinigten Gemeinden getaufter Christen in Deutschland und Dänemark ; later: Bund deutscher Baptistengemeinden , Union of German Baptist Congregations) merged in 1942 with the Union of Free Church Christians ( Bund freikirchlicher Christen , BfC), which originated in

120-590: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=German_Baptists&oldid=1147519773 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Baptists in Germany Baptists are congregationalists , which means that their congregations are autonomous. Therefore, regional and supra-regional alliances play only

132-462: Was formed in 1989 from the merger of originally six Baptist-oriented congregations, which were primarily located in the region of Ostwestfalen-Lippe . The BTG has about 6000 members spread over 30 congregations. The Bibelseminar  [ de ] ('Bible seminary '), the theological training center of this association of congregations, is located in Bonn and offers a regular study program as well as

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144-482: Was founded in Germany. Some of the newly formed congregations have come together in congregational associations such as Bruderschaft der Freien Evangeliums Christen Gemeinden  [ de ] ('the Brotherhood of Free Evangelical Christian Congregations') or the Arbeitsgemeinschaft evangelikaler Gemeinden ('Working Group of Evangelical Congregations'). Another part is connected with German Baptists through

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