Johannes Lähnemann

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Born (1941-06-15) June 15, 1941 (age 84)
Knownfor
  • pioneering interreligious education in Germany
  • contributions to Christian-Islamic dialogue
Spouses
  • Susanne Dörner
    (m. 1967; died 2004)
  • Sabine Schulz-Pillgram
    (m. 2008)
Children
Johannes Lähnemann
Johannes Lähnemann at the award ceremony for the Federal Cross of Merit, Munich, 2008
Born (1941-06-15) June 15, 1941 (age 84)
Known for
  • pioneering interreligious education in Germany
  • contributions to Christian-Islamic dialogue
Spouses
  • Susanne Dörner
    (m. 1967; died 2004)
  • Sabine Schulz-Pillgram
    (m. 2008)
Children
Academic background
Education
ThesisDer Kolosserbrief: Komposition, Situation und Argumentation (1968)
Doctoral advisorWilli Marxsen
Academic work
Disciplinetheologian
Sub-discipline
Main interests
WebsiteLehrstuhl für Religionspädagogik und Didaktik des evangelischen Religionsunterrichts

Johannes Lähnemann (born 15 June 1941, Schellerten) is a German Protestant theologian and professor of religious education.[1]

Lähnemann studied Protestant theology in Bethel, Heidelberg, Vienna, and Münster and passed his 1st and 2nd theological exams in 1965/1969.[2] In 1967 he married Susanne Lähnemann, née Dörner (1942–2004), daughter of Friedrich Karl Dörner and Eleonore Dörner, greatgreatgranddaughter of Albert Agathon Benary. His eldest daughter Henrike Lähnemann is a medievalist at the University of Oxford.[3] She and the two younger daughters Charlotte Flügel (Director of the Kaulberg-Schule, Bamberg)[4] and Luise Westner (actor and hospital clown,[5] Berlin) each contributed an essay for his Festschrift.[6] He gained his doctorate in the New Testament at the University of Münster in 1968 under Willi Marxsen with a thesis on the Epistle to the Colossians and was a research assistant in Münster from 1968 to 1973.[7] From 1973 to 1980, he was Lecturer at the Pedagogical College (now Leuphana University) of Lüneburg. During his time there, he completed his habilitation in practical theology/religious education in Bern in 1977 with a thesis on world religions in the classroom.[8] In 1981, he was appointed to the Chair of Religious Education and Didactics of Protestant Religious Education at University of Erlangen–Nuremberg, which he held until his retirement in 2007.[1] In 2008, he married Sabine Lähnemann, née Schulz-Pillgram. He has lived in Goslar since 2010.[2]

Lähnemann's work and research focusses on world religions in the classroom, interreligious learning and religions and peace education.[2] In Nuremberg, together with his colleague Werner Haußmann, he initiated the Nuremberg Forums on Education for Cultural Encounters, which brought together theologians, religious scholars, educationalists, politicians and cultural workers.[9] They took place every three years and were continued after his retirement together with his successor Manfred Pirner. Together with Hans Küng, he built up the educational work of the Global Ethic Foundation/Tübingen. Together with his colleagues Hartmut Bobzin and Mathias Rohe, he founded the Interdisciplinary Centre for Islamic Religious Education, one of the first German training centres for Islamic religious education teachers. Together with Klaus Hock and Wolfram Reiss, he carried out the research project 'The representation of Christianity in textbooks in Islamic countries'.[10] In 2008, he was awarded the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany and the Mohammad Nafi Tschelebi Peace Award for services to Christian-Islamic dialogue.[1]

Lähnemann acts as a consultant and expert on issues of interreligious dialogue and interreligious education at national and international level. From 1999 to 2019, he was Chairman of the Peace Education Standing Commission (PESC) of Religions for Peace (RfP), which documented interreligious peace education projects and brought them into dialogue with each other,[11] as well as a board member of the German section of Religions for Peace (RfP) of which he wrote a history.[12] He founded the Nuremberg group of Religions for Peace in 1988 and leading it until 2023. He is Deputy Managing Director of the Round Table of Religions in Germany[13] and a member of the Standing Commission Interreligious Education of Religions for Peace International, which was established in 2020.

Prizes and awards

Publications

Academic tributes

References

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