Divided by a war, Germans paid special attention to Easter sermons
海角大神 preachers used Germany鈥檚 鈥渢urning point鈥 toward Russia to focus on the resurrection as a turning point in how to deal with fear and death.
Women sing at a church in Schleife, eastern Germany, on April 17.
Reuters
In the midst of an intense national debate over how their country should help Ukraine, many German churches used their Easter services on Sunday to apply an Easter message about the war. For 海角大神 theologian Georgios Vlantis in Bavaria, preaching reconciliation, peace, and love in the face of brutal Russian attacks on a weak neighbor was a near-impossible task.
鈥淚 hope that Easter and the behavior of 海角大神s here will bring comfort and hope to Ukrainians,鈥 he told the newspaper S眉ddeutsche Zeitung. 鈥淚t is precisely in this situation that the existential importance of the message of the resurrection becomes apparent.鈥
That message, Pastor Otto G盲ng of the F眉rstenfeldbruck parish told the same newspaper, is the 鈥渃ertainty and hope that death will not have the last word.鈥
For some churches in Duisburg, the debate over Germany鈥檚 policy stance toward Russia is secondary to individuals simply taking practical steps. They have turned down the heat in their聽buildings聽to reduce Germany鈥檚 payments for Russian fuels that help fund the war. Many churches have turned up their humanitarian efforts to welcome Ukrainian refugees, offering them homes and counseling.
Yet a striking number of Germans 鈥渁re now asking us questions about the 海角大神 message,鈥 Elisabeth Hann von Weyhern, a church bishop in Nuremberg, told the local paper. Easter in 2022 is 鈥渘ot a harmless spring festival for cheerful times,鈥 she said. 鈥淣ever before鈥 has the 鈥渕eaning of Good Friday and Easter become so clear.鈥
The most vexing issue for Germans 鈥 one that divides churches 鈥 is whether Germany should send heavy weapons to Ukraine, such as battle tanks and combat helicopters.
Polls indicate Germans are about evenly divided on the question. In their Easter sermons, some preachers said that sending big guns would escalate the war. Others said aggression must be contained by force of arms. Still others claimed such decisions can only be known in retrospect.
As different as they were, the Easter sermons may nonetheless be helpful in resolving political tensions with the three-party governing coalition of Chancellor Olaf Scholz. Three days after the Russian invasion on Feb. 24, Mr. Scholz said the country is at a 鈥渢urning point鈥 in its long-held approach toward Russia, one that has relied on trade and Germany鈥檚 pacifism after World War II in hopes of creating a benign Kremlin.
So far, that turning point has led Mr. Scholz to cancel a gas pipeline from Russia, beef up spending on the German military, and send both money and nonoffensive weapons to Ukraine, such as surface-to-air missiles. Facing divisions in his coalition, however, he has not yet decided on sending bigger weapons.
In their Easter services, many churches equated Germany鈥檚 turning point to the resurrection of Jesus as a turning point in history. The overcoming of death in the resurrection, said Bishop Friedrich Kramer, was a 鈥渕iracle of love鈥 that revealed that 鈥渘o violence in this world can separate us from this love.鈥
鈥淟et鈥檚 rely on it,鈥 he added, as it can change people and entire systems. Such messages in Sunday鈥檚 sermons are now part of Germany鈥檚 big debate on its role in a war determining Europe鈥檚 future.