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Hermannsburg Mission Seminary

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The Hermannsburg Mission Seminary (German: Missionsseminar Hermannsburg) is part of the Evangelical-Lutheran Mission in Lower Saxony (ELM), the common missionary work of the state churches of Hanover, Brunswick and Schaumburg-Lippe. In six to seven years, male and female pastors are trained for service in the worldwide church.

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History

The mission seminary in Hermannsburg was founded in 1849 by pastor Ludwig Harms, after several young men from Hermannsburg and the surrounding area expressed the wish to be sent out as missionaries and would not be accepted by the existing missionary societies because, as farmers and agricultural workers, they did not have the necessary academic education. So the Hermannsburg Mission began as a "farmers' mission" (Bauernmission).

Having qualified, The first "pupils" were sent overseas in 1854 and founded the work of the Hermannsburg Mission in South Africa, where the Evangelical-Lutheran Mission in Lower Saxony (ELM) is still active today.

Even after the Second World War, spiritual impulses went out from the mission seminary under seminary leader, Olav Hanssen. this resulted in the foundation of groups like Group 153, the Epiphaniaskreis and the Protestant Gethsemane Monastery in Riechenberg at Goslar. Between 1979 and 1993 the seminary was led by Dietrich Mann.

Well-known graduates

  • Reinhard Keding (b 1948), former bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Namibia (DELK)
  • Erich Hertel (b 1949), bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Namibia (DELK)
  • References

    Hermannsburg Mission Seminary Wikipedia