The EAK was founded in 1952 at the instigation of
Hermann Ehlers in
Siegen. The actual trigger for the formation of the EAK was the dispute between
Konrad Adenauer and
Gustav Heinemann, a leading Protestant-evangelical member of the Christian-democrats (
CDU) at that time, on the issue of rearmament. Heinemann, who opposed the rearmament of (western) Germany for religious and conscience reasons, had resigned as interior minister, and finally formed the
All-German People's Party (Gesamtdeutsche Volkspartei, (GVP)) which was seen as a serious challenge to the CDU. Heinemann was also
provost of the
Synod of the
Evangelical Church in Germany (EKD), and thus one of the leading Protestant representatives in Germany. This alarmed the Protestant Union politicians. The failure of the Gesamtdeutschen Volkspartei in the general election in 1953 was seen by the CDU as a success of the newly formed EAK. At the time,
Gerhard Schroeder, chairman of the EAK, widely received attention and was considered a potential successor to Adenauer. With the increasing secularization since the late 1960s there was a change in the character of the EAK and there was a relative decline in importance of the organization. == Hermann-Ehlers medal ==