In 1933, the
German Christians movement took leadership in some
member churches of the German Protestant Church Confederation. A new designation was voted on and adopted, with the organisation now being called the German Evangelical Church. In its early stages, it remained a loose confederation of churches just like its predecessor. It included the vast majority of
Protestants in what was now
Nazi Germany, excluding those affiliated with the
free churches like the
Evangelical Lutheran Free Church. In a 1933 vote to the
Reichssynode, the German Christians were able to elect
Ludwig Müller, a pro-Nazi pastor, to the office of '''' ("Reich Bishop"). On 20 December 1933, Müller merged the church's Protestant youth organisations into the
Hitler Jugend without consulting their leadership or any member churches. Many in the German Evangelical Church resisted this idea and a discussion began. Müller tried to silence it by introducing discipline and using the powers of the elected office. His attempts failed, prompting
Adolf Hitler to meet with Protestant leaders on 25 January 1934. Although the meeting ended with Protestant churches declaring their loyalty to the state, removing Müller was not a subject to discussion for Hitler. After that, member churches began to either reorganise or detach from the German Evangelical Church. Initially, there was little resistance to the attempt to introduce elements of Nazi ideology into church doctrine. Most of the resistance came from confessing communities (
bekennende Gemeinden) within "" and "" (see below) and the
Pfarrernotbund (Emergency Covenant of Pastors) led by pastor
Martin Niemöller. In consequence of the 1934 meeting, many member churches distanced themselves from the increasingly Nazi-controlled Reich Church due to controversies pertaining to its constitution, the
nazification of its theology, leadership, incorporation of its youth organisations into the Hitler Jugend, etc. Such churches became neutral or followed the Protestant opposition to Nazism that established an alternative
umbrella organisation of their own that became known as the
Confessing Church. The Reich Church ultimately ended up being a confederation of those
German Protestant churches that espoused a single doctrine named
Positive Christianity, which was compatible with
Nazism. Although it aimed to eventually become a unified
Protestant state church for all of
Nazi Germany, this attempt utterly failed as the German Evangelical Church became fractured into various groups that bore an unclear legal status in relation to each other: • churches with a German Christians-dominated governing board reorganising them into dioceses of the Reich Church led by
German Christians movement ("dioceses of the German Evangelical Church" [
Bistümer der Deutschen Evangelischen Kirche] in official usage, or "" [
zerstörte Kirchen] in the parlance of the Confessing Church) • churches with a governing board without a German Christian majority merging them as members of the Reich Church, but rejected Müller as its leader (the
Churches of Bavaria,
of Hanover,
of Westphalia, and
of Württemberg) ("" [
intakte Kirchen] in Confessing Church parlance) • the
Confessing Church that saw itself as the true Protestant church for all of Germany, provided resistance to the German Christians-led German Evangelical Church and to its so-called dioceses ("destroyed churches"), and acted on principles of the "1934 church emergency law of
Dahlem" that deemed the constitution of the German Evangelical Church "shattered" (the "Confessing Church",
Bekennende Kirche) Müller's influence declined after more constant clashes in the German Evangelical Church, triggering the foundation of the
Ministry for Church Affairs led by
Hans Kerrl on 16 July 1935. A decree, issued by Kerrl in September 1935, appointed a committee led by Wilhelm Zoellner (Church of Westphalia) to head the Reich Church instead of Müller. It was received positively by intact churches and even confessing parts of the German Evangelical Church. In 1936, the committee denounced the teachings of the German Christians-controlled
Church of Thuringia, and the regime feared that the
Confessing Church would gain more support due to this. In February 1937, the committee was removed by the Nazis and leading figures of the Protestant resistance like
Dietrich Bonhoeffer,
Martin Niemöller and others were arrested. In 1939, Müller tried to regain his position in the German Evangelical Church but failed to do so. After 1937, the German Evangelical Church was not considered an issue in the
Kirchenkampf by the Nazis as it became heavily controlled by the Ministry until 1945. In August 1945, the German Evangelical Church was officially dissolved by the council of the newly founded Protestant umbrella organisation called the
Protestant Church in Germany. ==Beginnings, German Christians and Nazi influence (1933–1934)==