Abstract
Pastor Ludwig Müller joined the NSDAP in 1931; he was a founder and
regional leader of the German Christian movement
[Glaubensbewegung Deutsche Christen].
After Hitler assumed the chancellorship, Müller acted as his
“Plenipotentiary for Protestant Church Matters” and was appointed Reich
Bishop on September 27, 1933. As the Third Reich’s highest-ranking
Protestant dignitary, he pursued the institutional and doctrinal
“coordination” [Gleichschaltung] of
the church from within. The synthesis of Christianity and racial theory
that Müller promoted, however, was rejected by segments of the
Protestant Church, especially the Confessing Church
[Bekennende Kirche]. Müller managed
to achieve neither ecclesiastical unity nor complete state control over
the Gospel. Starting in July 1935, the Nazi regime pursued these goals
by means of the newly-founded Ministry of Church Affairs under the
direction of Hanns Kerrl, who began a campaign of persecution and
oppression against oppositional theologians and clergy. At that point,
Müller lost almost all influence on Nazi ecclesiastical policy; he
committed suicide shortly after the war ended. The photo shows Müller
(left) with the head of the ministry, August Jäger (right).