After its takeover of power the Nazi Reich's government aimed at streamlining the
Protestant regional church bodies, recognising the
Faith Movement of the German Christians (, DC) as its means to do so (see
Struggle of the Churches, ). On 4 and 5 April 1933 representatives of the
German Christians convened in Berlin and demanded the dismissal of all members of the executive bodies of the then 28 Protestant regional church bodies in Germany, then rather loosely associated with each other in the
Deutscher Evangelischer Kirchenbund (German Protestant Church Confederation). The
German Christians demanded their ultimate merger into a uniform
Protestant Reich Church, to be named
German Protestant Church (), led according to the Nazi
Führerprinzip by a Reich's Bishop (), abolishing all democratic participation of parishioners in presbyteries and
synods. The
German Christians announced the appointment of a Reich's Bishop for 31 October 1933, the highly symbolic
Reformation Day public holiday. In a mood of an emergency through an impending Nazi takeover functionaries of the then officiating executive bodies of the 28 Protestant regional church bodies stole a march on the
German Christians. Functionaries and activists worked hastily on negotiating between the 28 Protestant regional church bodies a legally indoubtable unification. On 25 April 1933 three men convened, , president of the old-Prussian
Evangelical Supreme Church Council – representing
United Protestantism –,
August Marahrens, state bishop of the
Evangelical Lutheran State Church of Hanover (for the
Lutherans), and the
Reformed , director of the preacher seminary in
Wuppertal, to prepare the constitution of a united church which they called the German Protestant Church too. This caused the later confusion when the streamlined Reich church and the
Confessing Church alike identified as being the legitimate church of that name. The Nazi government compelled the negotiators to include its representative, the former
army chaplain Ludwig Müller, a devout
German Christian, betting on his prevalence. The plans were to dissolve the
German Evangelical Church Confederation and the 28 church regional bodies and to replace them by a uniform Protestant Reich church. On 27 May 1933 representatives of the 28 church bodies gathered in Berlin and against a minority, voting for Ludwig Müller, Friedrich von Bodelschwingh, Jr., a member of the
Evangelical Church of the old-Prussian Union, was elected Reich's Bishop, a newly created title. The
German Christians strictly opposed that election, because Bodelschwingh was not their partisan. Thus the Nazis, who were permanently breaking the law, stepped in, using the competent streamlined Prussian government led by
Hermann Göring, and declared the functionaries had exceeded their authority. Once the Nazi government had figured out that the Protestant church bodies would not be streamlined from within using the
German Christians, they abolished the constitutional
freedom of religion and religious organisation, declaring the election of Bodelschwingh had created a situation contravening the constitutions of the Protestant regional churches, and on these grounds, on 24 June the Nazi Minister of Cultural Affairs,
Bernhard Rust appointed
August Jäger as
Prussian State Commissioner for the Prussian ecclesiastical affairs (). This act clearly violated the status of the Protestant regional churches as statutory bodies (), subjecting them to Jäger's orders. Bodelschwingh resigned as Reich's Bishop the same day. On 28 June Jäger appointed Müller as new Reich's Bishop and on 6 July as leader of the
Evangelical Church of the old-Prussian Union. ==Opposition to other Nazi policies==