In 1817,
King Frederick William III of
Prussia ordered the Lutheran and
Reformed churches in his territory to unite, forming the
Evangelical Church of the Prussian Union, a predecessor to today's
Union of Evangelical Churches. As the uniting of Lutheran and Reformed Christians in Germany proceeded, some Lutheran groups dissented and formed independent churches, especially in
Prussia,
Saxony, Hanover, and
Hesse. These Lutherans held that Reformed doctrine and Lutheran doctrine are contradictory on many points (especially on the nature of the
Real Presence of Christ in the
Lord's Supper), and that such doctrinal differences precluded altar fellowship. So in the 1820s and 1830s Lutherans in Prussia and their congregations formed a new Lutheran church, recognised by the king in 1845 as the
Evangelisch-Lutherische Kirche in Preußen (Evangelical Lutheran Church in Prussia). It was seated in
Breslau and presided over by the
Oberkirchenkollegium (Supreme Church Collegial Body). The confessional Lutherans were persecuted during the first half of 19th century by the state. Many of them were not allowed to hold church services or have their children baptized or confirmed according to the liturgy of the Lutheran Church. In some areas of Germany, it took decades until the Confessional Lutherans were granted religious freedom. In 1972, most of the Confessional Lutheran Church bodies in West Germany united to form the SELK. In 1991, the East German
Evangelisch-Lutherische (altlutherische) Kirche (the Evangelical-Lutheran (Old-Lutheran) Church) joined the SELK. == Doctrine ==