Friedrich Rittelmeyer

Friedrich Rittelmeyer
Born(1872-10-05)5 October 1872
Died23 March 1938(1938-03-23) (aged 65)
OccupationTheologian
Spouse
Julie Kerler
โ€‹
(m. 1904)โ€‹

Friedrich Rittelmeyer (5 October 1872 โ€“ 23 March 1938) was a Lutheran German minister, theologian and the principal founder and first leader of The Christian Community. Rittelmeyer came to prominence in the early 20th century as a leading academic liberal theologian and priest in Germany and wrote several books that advocated a socially engaged "Christianity of deeds" (Tatchristentum). During the First World War he eventually became one of the most high-profile clergymen in Germany to publicly oppose the war. From the 1910s his thinking was gradually influenced by the philosopher Rudolf Steiner, and in 1922 a group of mainly Lutheran priests and theology students led by Rittelmeyer founded The Christian Community as an ecumenically oriented Christian community inspired by Steiner's writings; The Christian Community is primarily a liturgical community with only a loose creed, and for that reason rejects Christian dogmas. Rittelmeyer saw it as a continuation of the liberal Christian tradition of which he was the foremost representative in Germany in the early 20th century.