Age, Biography and Wiki
Elisabeth Moltmann-Wendel is a German feminist theologian and author. She is best known for her work on the theology of the cross and her advocacy for the rights of women in the church. She was born in Herne, Rhine Province, Prussia, Germany on July 25, 1926.
Moltmann-Wendel studied theology at the University of Marburg and the University of Heidelberg, and was ordained as a minister in the Evangelical Church in Germany in 1954. She was the first woman to be ordained in the church.
Moltmann-Wendel has written extensively on the theology of the cross, and has argued that the cross is a symbol of liberation for women. She has also written on the role of women in the church, and has advocated for the ordination of women in the church.
Moltmann-Wendel has received numerous awards for her work, including the Theodor Heuss Prize in 1988, the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany in 1992, and the Right Livelihood Award in 2000. She is currently a professor emerita at the University of Heidelberg.
Popular As |
Elisabeth Wendel |
Occupation |
Pioneering feminist theologian |
Age |
90 years old |
Zodiac Sign |
Leo |
Born |
25 July 1926 |
Birthday |
25 July |
Birthplace |
Herne, Rhine Province, Prussia, Germany |
Date of death |
7 June 2016 - Tübingen, Baden-Württemberg, Germany Tübingen, Baden-Württemberg, Germany |
Died Place |
Tübingen, Baden-Württemberg, Germany |
Nationality |
Russia |
We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 25 July.
She is a member of famous feminist with the age 90 years old group.
Elisabeth Moltmann-Wendel Height, Weight & Measurements
At 90 years old, Elisabeth Moltmann-Wendel height not available right now. We will update Elisabeth Moltmann-Wendel's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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Not Available |
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Who Is Elisabeth Moltmann-Wendel's Husband?
Her husband is Jürgen Moltmann
Family |
Parents |
Not Available |
Husband |
Jürgen Moltmann |
Sibling |
Not Available |
Children |
5 |
Elisabeth Moltmann-Wendel Net Worth
Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Elisabeth Moltmann-Wendel worth at the age of 90 years old? Elisabeth Moltmann-Wendel’s income source is mostly from being a successful feminist. She is from Russia. We have estimated
Elisabeth Moltmann-Wendel's net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2023 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
Salary in 2023 |
Under Review |
Net Worth in 2022 |
Pending |
Salary in 2022 |
Under Review |
House |
Not Available |
Cars |
Not Available |
Source of Income |
feminist |
Elisabeth Moltmann-Wendel Social Network
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Timeline
Another important focus of her theological investigations lay in her engagement with the Political philosophy of Hannah Arendt and Arendt's work on "Natality". An appetite for new beginnings, deep curiosity about life and a simple "love for the world" were things that Moltmann-Wendel shared with Arendt. In a contribution during the 1990s to the anthology "Im Einklang mit dem Kosmos" ("In Harmony with the Cosmos") she included a plea in support of Arendt's personal compilation "Denken ohne Geländer", and thereby urged her readers to think through the doctrine of the Incarnation uncompromisingly to a conclusion. A deep love for everything corporeal-sensual and for the Earth ran through Moltmann-Wendel's thinking. Her autobiography demonstrates this vividly. In the context of the various New Testament stories of Jesus healing women, the importance of women's bodies for theological understanding becomes another interpretational key to her thinking.
In pursuit of her urge to communicate and to test her ideas, Elisabeth Moltmann-Wendel was a copious networker, especially with other female theologians. As early as the 1980s the Tübingen home that she shared with her husband - by this time a noted theological scholar on his own account - was a meeting location for theologians from Germany, Austria, Switzerland and further afield. Regular guests included her friend Herlinde Pissarek-Hudelist, a formidable theologian from Innsbrick, who in 1988 became the first ever female dean of a catholic theology faculty. Others included Catharina Halkes from Nijmegen, Helen Schüngel-Straumann from (originally) Switzerland and Elisabeth Gössmann who had received her doctorate in Theology from the University of Munich at the same time as Joseph Ratzinger. (1954 had been the first year in which doctorates in catholic theology were awaded in Germany.) Between 1955 and 1986 Gössmann had worked in Tokyo, but the final decades of her teaching career she spent back in Europe. In 1986 Moltmann-Wendel was one of thise involved in creating the "Europäische Gesellschaft für theologische Forschung von Frauen“ (ESWTR / "European Society of Women in Theological Research").
In order to secure and preserve the rapidly increasing fruits of researches in Feminist theology, Moltmann-Wendel joined with Pissarek-Hudelist and others to launch the "Wörterbuch der Feministischen Theologie" ("Dictionary of Feminist Theology") in 1980 which, now into its second edition, remains a standard work. She turned town invitations to help on preparing the feminist "Bibel in gerechter Sprache" ("Bible in the right language"). She shared the belief that "the language of the [Lutheran and later] bible(s), like the church itself [was] male-sexist", but she believed that the guidelines for this particular project were excessively rigid and one-sided.
One morning in August 1972, she later wrote, Moltmann-Wendel's world underwent a 180 ° about turn. This was her description of her "feminist-theological awakening". It seems to have followed an incremental build-up driven by various articles that friends brought her from the USA, concerning the feminist movement there and trends in theology (and sometimes on both of these at once). In terms of the iterative deductive reasoning familiar from traditional German teaching methods, this new material seemed to turn the thought-process on its head, starting not from some theological premise, but from women themselves, including their societal contexts and their lived experiences. Suddenly Moltmann-Wendel felt that she was included in something. In terms of her own theology, from this point concrete life experiences - especially the seemingly trivial daily experiences of women, became the starting point for all her theological reflections.
Feminist theology had already emerged in North America through during 1960s by the time Moltmann-Wendel discovered it. She built on what she learned of it in a series of books and other publications, focusing on a succession of sub-topics and developing themes for each. Even among scholars, the concept of feminist theology was largely unfamiliar in West Germany in 1972. During the mid-1970s there were many mainstream theologians who found the underlying base concepts of feminist theology more than strange. Twn years later some of the conservatives had been won round, while most others implicitly acknowledged its legitimacy. The contention that Feminism and Theology were mutually exclusive was no longer on the agenda in university faculties.
Another Göttingen student was Jürgen Moltmann. Weber was supervising Elisabeth Wendel's doctoral dissertation, and Moltmann would later write that he had asked Weber to supervise, in addition, his own doctorate "in order to be closer to her". Jürgen Moltmann and Elisabeth Wendel were married in a civil ceremony at Basel on 17 March 1952. The couple's first baby was stillborn for reasons that would never be established. Between 1955 and 1963 the marriage produced four daughters, all of whom survived, however. Much later, in a work of autobiography, Elisabeth Moltmann-Wendel would recall that she had enjoyed pregnancy: "I was no longer 'a nobody', in the way that was sometimes enforced on me by 'just a wife' existence.... But barely perceptibly and slowly I moved into a role that I could never have imagined".
By the time of the marriage Wendel had received her doctorate, becoming just the second woman to achieve this distinction at the University of Göttingen. Her project concerned the life and theological contributions of the Amsterdam theologian Hermann Friedrich Kohlbrugge. Jürgen's doctorate, on Moses Amyraut and his teaching on predestination, would follow a few months later, still in 1952.
Between 1952 and 1972 Elisabeth Moltmann-Wendel had very little public profile. As a married woman, there were fewer job opportunities available to her within church institutions than there would have been if she had remained single. Looking after her infant daughters kept her busy during the 1950s and 1960s. There were frequent house moves in connection with her husband's career. During the 1960s she nevertheless found time to research and publish the occasional scholarly paper relating to theology. By 1970 the family were living in Tübingen: that was where the Moltmanns would continue to live for the rest of Elisabeth's life.
The tide of the war had turned against Germany in 1942, and the security services had become more intolerant than ever of signs of political dissent on the home front. It was important than ever for Wendel and her family that she should avoid mentioning her membership of the "Bekennende Kirche" at school. In effect, like many in Germany, as a teenager she led two carefully separated parallel lives. In 1944 it was the turn of Wendel and her classmates to be conscripted for military service and she spent the year undertaking labouring work in support of the army until the Soviet army arrived and in Potsdam the Nazi nightmare was replaced by a new set of horrors and uncertainties. After May 1945 she was able to travel from her Potsdam home to Berlin, some 15 miles / 25 kilometers away, to attend lectures in Protestant Theology, initially at a Church College and subsequently at the "Friedrich Wilhelm University" (as it was still known at that time). In 1945 Berlin had been divided for administrative purposes between the armies of the USA, Britain, France and the Soviet Union: the university had ended up administered as part of the Soviet occupation zone. As the Soviet military administration became established she and her contemporaries found themselves under increasing pressure to choose between a version of God and a version of Marx. Many chose Marx, but Wendel chose God. For Wendel, progressing her study of Theology would become easier in the American or British occupation zones than if she remained in Potsdam. At some stage she secured a place at the prestigious University of Tübingen. She was, however, "disappointed with the Theology Faculty there", and while sources are vague over time lines in respect of this period, Wendel's stay at Tübingen was relatively brief, and is indeed ignored by some sources. In 1947 Elisabeth Wendel switched to Göttingen where she continued her studies in Theology. She was, in particular, encouraged in her studies by Otto Weber, the University Professor in Protestant Theology.
Elisabeth Wendel was born at Herne, a large industrial town a short distance to the west of Dortmund. The entire surrounding region was at that time heavily dependent on mining. She was just 6 in 1933 when the Hitler government took power. Her parents were traditionalist nationalists who detested everything about National Socialism, but as far back as she could ever remember she understood that she must avoid repeating at school everything that was said at home. In 1934 her father died through illness and her mother relocated with the children to Potsdam, just outside Berlin. In 1936, by now aged 10, she found she had become a member of the Hitler Youth organisation after a leather-working club of which she was a member became subsumed into it. (Hitler Youth membership became mandatory at her school a year later.) In Potsdam her mother became increasingly involved with the so-called "Bekennende Kirche" ("Confessing Church"), which had emerged during the 1930s as a reaction by protestant churchmen (and others), such as Karl Barth, Dietrich Bonhoeffer and Wilhelm Busch, to government moves to unify Germany's traditionally fragmented protestant church organisations into a single semi-nationalised "Deutsche Evangelische Kirche" ("Church of Germany"). Elisabeth Wendel herself joined the "Bekennende Kirche" in 1942 and was thereafter, according to her obituarist Brigitte Enzner-Probst, spiritually moulded by it.
Elisabeth Moltmann-Wendel (25 July 1926 in Herne - 7 June 2016) was a German feminist theologian, best remembered as the founder of the European Society of Women in Theological Research (ESWTR) in 1986. Her publications translated into English include Liberty, Equality, Sisterhood: The Women around Jesus, A Land Flowing with Milk and Honey, I Am My Body, and Rediscovering Friendship.