Margot Käßmann (born June 3, 1958) is a Lutheran theologian and the current bishop of the Evangelical Church of Hanover. On October 28, 2009, she was elected to lead the Evangelical Church in Germany. (In the German context, "Evangelical" corresponds roughly to "mainline Protestant" rather than to "Evangelicalism" as that is understood in English-speaking countries.)
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Käßmann was born Margot Schulze in Marburg. After sitting the Abitur in 1977, at the Elisabethschule Marburg, Käßmann studied Protestant theology at the universities of Tübingen, Edinburgh, Göttingen and Marburg. During her studies, she participated among other things in archaeological excavations in 1978 of several weeks' duration in Akko, Israel. In 1983 she became a vicar (which in Germany is a minister in training) in Wolfhagen, near Kassel. She also attended the Hotchkiss School on a scholarship by ASSIST.
She participated as a youth delegate in the 1983 plenary assembly of the World Council of Churches (WCC) in Vancouver, where she became the youngest member of the central committee. Between 1991 and 1998, she was a member of the executive committee of the WCC.
After her ministerial ordination in 1985, she became the village pastor of Frielendorf-Spieskappel, in the Schwalm-Eder-Kreis, together with her husband, from whom she was divorced in 2007. The diocese includes the Spieskappel monastery (Kloster Spieskappel).
Käßmann earned her Ph.D. under Konrad Raiser, at the Ruhr University Bochum, with a thesis on the topic "Poverty and Wealth as an Inquiry into the Unity of the Church". In 1990, she was assigned to the Evangelical Church's volunteer service, and from 1992 to 1994, she was director of studies at the Evangelical Academy at Hofgeismar. Between 1994 and 1999, she was General Secretary of the Deutscher Evangelischer Kirchentag (German Protestant Church Congress). In 1999, she was elected bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran [regional] Church of Hanover; she is the first woman to hold this office. She still holds this position. In 2006 she underwent a breast cancer operation.
In 2002 she resigned from the WCC Central Committee after the results of a Special Commission on the participation of Orthodox churches in the WCC recommended that the term "ecumenical worship" be dropped, and that there be much clearer guidelines about what was termed "interconfessional common prayer". [1] She is currently a member of the central committee of the Conference of European Churches.
Margot Käßmann currently sits on the Advisor Board for the German Foundation for World Population. In addition, she was involved as an ambassador for the 2006 Football World Cup for people with mental handicaps, held in Germany.
Käßmann is vocal in her objections to the political far right. She argued for a ban on the National Democratic Party of Germany claiming that the church ought not to "avert its eyes" as it had in 1933. She asked: "How can we tell young people that they should not support this party, if it is officially permitted?"
In January 2009 Käßmann expressed the opinion that it might be better to tear down former and unused churches than to allow them to be used for purposes that could damage their image. As examples of such purposes, she mentioned conversion into restaurants, discotheques, or mosques. A reassignment to a synagogue, however, she found positive. After protests from Muslims, she slightly relativized her statement, stating: "If a Christian community is convinced that its use as a mosque can happen in deepest peace, I agree, but at the moment I do not see that this is possible."[2]
She is a member of the Council of the Evangelical Church in Germany, and on October 28, 2009, she was elected Chair of the Council, the first woman in that position. She received 132 of the 142 votes cast, and said she wants the church to be more contemporary, and hopes to attract more people to it.[3]
Her election provoked negative reactions from the leadership of the Russian Orthodox Church, which declared that it was ready to suspend its dialogue with German Lutherans because of Käßmann's non-traditional views and her unusual status as a female Protestant bishop.[4]
Käßmann has four daughters. She was the first German bishop to file for divorce, in 2007, and on 6 August 2007, it was communicated to the church senate of the regional church that her divorce was legally valid.[5] The church senate, and the leadership of the Hanover regional church, supported Käßmann and endorsed her continued tenure of the bishop's office, as did the leader of a conservative center.[6]
Käßmann promotes larger emphasis on Christianity in the Protestant church, compared to past decades; for example, she is concerned by the fact that lessons for confirmation candidates focus more on cults and drugs than on the Bible. She argues for a clearer spiritual profile in church-run facilities, for example, more Bible stories being told in Protestant kindergartens rather than only secular songs being sung. In her opinion, children and adults should pray more, and churches should look like churches and not like noncommittal community centers.
She also criticises a number of positions of the Roman Catholic Church, for example, the Catholic teachings about homosexuality, action on reducing the spread of AIDS, ordination of women and celibacy.[7]
Margot Käßmann in the German National Library catalogue (German)
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