Otto Riethmüller


Otto Riethmüller was a German Lutheran minister, writer, and hymnwriter. He was the president of Protestant youth organisations from 1928, published songbooks, and was a leading member of the Confessing Church. He designed the Protestant youth organization's logo, the Cross on the Globe, which is still used today.

Life and career

Born in Cannstatt, Riethmüller studied theology at the University of Tübingen and was especially influenced by Adolf Schlatter. He held several offices as parish minister, including from 1919 in Esslingen am Neckar. He married Anna née von Heider on 17 June 1919. The couple had two sons and a daughter.
In 1928, Riethmüler became director of the national Protestant organisation of young women in the Burckhardthaus in Berlin-Dahlem, which was founded by Johannes Burckhardt in 1889.
From 1930, a yearly motto for the church was chosen on his initiative. He selected for the first year from Romans 1:16: "Ich schäme mich des Evangeliums von Jesus Christus nicht". He published in 1932 a songbook for young people, Ein neues Lied, with songs such as his compilation "Sonne der Gerechtigkeit", meant to wake up in the face of Nazi doctrines winning acceptance. He also translated Latin hymn such as Verbum supernum prodiens and wrote new songs including "Herr, wir stehen Hand in Hand", printed in the songbook Der helle Ton of 1934. In 1935, he became president of the section for young people of the Bekennende Kirche. He was among the first to sign a protest to accept the Aryan paragraph for the church.
While he was president of the , he created their logo, the Cross on the Globe, in 1935. It is still the logo of Protestant youth organisations.
Riethmüller died on 19 November 1938 in Berlin and was buried at the in Bad Cannstatt.
The Otto-Riethmüller-Haus in Weidenthal, a house for recreation and education of Protestant youth groups, was named after him, and also the Otto-Riethmüller-Haus in Stuttgart, a Protestant vacation retreat in a forest.

Songs

The following songs, which Riethmüller wrote or edited, are part of the Protestant hymnal Evangelisches Gesangbuch of 1993. They were all published in 1932, with the exception of "Du Schöpfer aller Wesen" which appeared in 1934: