22.05.2012 10:53

European Church Leaders Meet in Ostrava, Czech Republic

  Churches must be global citizens addressing issues that can only be tackled at the worldwide level, Rev. Martin Junge ( photo ), general secretary of The Lutheran World Federation (LWF) told Lutheran leaders from Europe. In a keynote...
15.05.2012 17:12

Partnership meeting in the Kačaba

  On Tuesday, 1 st March, the representatives of the Church district of Bayreuth, of the West-Bohemian presbytery and of the synodal council met in Pilsen for a continuation of the discussions about cross-border cooperation in this region. The...
02.05.2012 16:50

Visiting the Lusatian Sorbs in Bautzen

  Four representatives of the Evangelical Church of Czech Brethren met in Bautzen (Germany) with Jan Malink, pastor of one of the ten parishes in which Sorbian-German church services take place, and Trudla Malinkowa, the chief editor of the...
15.03.2012 11:26

Five hundred trees worldwide and in the Luther Garden

  „Even if I knew that the world would end tomorrow, I still would plant an apple tree today!“ This saying, ascribed to Dr. Martin Luther has inspired people and Churches for hundreds of years to plant one, or many, trees. Not always an apple...
17.01.2012 14:06

Partial compensation for injustice inflected upon religious organizations by the communist regime

After the communist take-over, church property that was not used directly for religious purposes and which in part secured the livelihood of individual parishes and communities, was confiscated. This applied mostly to buildings used mostly for educational, social and charitable purposes, as well as some real estate (such as woods, fields etc.). Parishes, churches and community buildings remained under the ownership of the church and were not confiscated. Property confiscation however resulted in the establishment of a new law, according to which the State agreed to financially support church activities (clergy salaries, administrative expenses, moving expenses, others).

This law was renewed in 1989 and the State's obligation to pay for religious life, remained within it. Since that time, the State has covered only the barest minimum necessities, namely mostly clergy salaries. The remainder depends upon the national budget. A parliamentary ruling in the nineties, subsequently returned 170 buildings to the Church; remaining property was blocked and placed under the jurisdiction of a new law. Its purpose was to deal with injustices of the communist regime, determine future financial support of the Church by the State, eliminate the validity of the original law and release (unblock) all previous Church properties.

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