The Evangelical Church of the Augsburg Confession stems from the
Reformation which began in October 1517. The first
Lutheran sermons took place in 1518, and in 1523 the first
Lutheran dean,
Johann Heß, was called to the city of
Breslau, then under
Bohemia, whence from Lutheranism spread through the
Polish lands. In
interwar Poland the Evangelical-Augsburg church was the largest Protestant denomination, with about half a million followers, but unlike in post-WWII Poland it was not the only Lutheran church in the country. It competed for the hearts of Lutherans living in the territory of the revived Polish state with the in
Greater Poland (part of the former Prussian territory), with the in the areas of the
Austrian partition, and with other churches. Its adherents dominated in the Protestant circles in central Poland, which had formed part of Russia prior to 1918, while the other churches were based in the south and west of the newly established country. In 1918 the Lutheran parishes of
Cieszyn Silesia were incorporated into the structures of the Evangelical-Augsburg church, raising the overall number of its followers by about 100,000, although about half of these parishes left the church in 1920 when a significant section of the area became part of
Czechoslovakia following the
Polish-Czechoslovak War of January 1919. They were later reincorporated in 1938 when Poland annexed
Trans-Olza following the Munich Agreement. In the diocese of
Łódź, largest in terms of the Lutheran population, more than 98% Lutherans were German, while in Silesia, comparable in terms of the number of adherents, more than 80% were Polish. An important moment for the Evangelical-Augsburg church was the issuing of a presidential decree in 1936 which established the nature of the relationship between the church and the state and the former's internal structure. The church in Poland suffered during and after
World War II. The ranks of pastors, teachers and other church leadership diminished due to persecution, imprisonment, and death. The majority of ethnic Germans
moved west from 1944 onwards. During the early postwar years, a number of church properties were taken over by the Communist authorities to be used for other purposes, and the connections of Protestant Lutheranism to the
German cultural sphere made authorities and Polish locals inimical towards the remaining Lutherans. Gradually, the Evangelical Church of Augsburg Confession in Poland has reshaped itself into an active body. On 12 October 2008,
Polish president Lech Kaczyński—himself of the
Catholic faith—visited the Lutheran Protestant
Jesus Church in
Cieszyn, becoming the first President of Poland ever to visit a Protestant place of worship. Women first began administering baptism, serving as deacons, and leading services in the church in 1999. In 2022 the church ordained women as pastors for the first time. offered the first documented blessings by pastors of same-sex couples in Poland. == Contemporary ==