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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: CHA-CHR |
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CHEMNITZ (or KEMNITZ), MARTIN (1522-1586) , German Lutheran theologian, third son of Paul Kemnitz, a cloth-worker of noble extraction, was born at Treuenbrietzen, Brandenburg, on the 9th of November 1522. Left an orphan at the age of eleven, he worked for a time at his father's trade. A relative at Magdeburg put him to school there (1539-1542). Having made a little money by teaching, he went (1543) to the university of Frankfort-on-Oder; thence (1545) to that of Wittenberg. Here he heard Luther preach, but was more attracted by Melanchthon, who interested him in mathematics and astrology. Melanchthon gave him (1547) an introduction to his son-in-law, Georg Sabinus, at Konigsberg, where he was tutor to some Polish youths, and rector (1548) of the Kneiphof school. He practised astrology; this recommended him to Duke Albert of Prussia, who made him his librarian (1550). He then turned to Biblical, patristic and kindred studies. His powers were first brought out in controversy with Osiander on justification
call
Joachim
pastoral
critical period, did much to secure strictness of doctrine and compactness of organization in the Lutheran Church. Against Crypto-Calvinists he upheld the Lutheran view of the eucharist in his Repetitio sanae doctrinae de Vera Praesentia (156o; in German, 1561). To check the reaction towards the old religion he wrote several works of great power, especially his Theologiae Jesuit arum praecipua capita (1562), an incisive attack on the principles of the society, and the Examen concilii Tridentini (four parts, 1565-66-72-73), his greatest work. His Corpus doctrinae Prutenicum (1567), drawn
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Formula
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Lives of Chemnitz are numerous, e.g. by J. Gasmerus (1588), T. Pressel (1862), C. G. H. Lentz (1866), H. Hachfeld (1867), H. Schmid in J. J. Herzog's Realencyklopadie (1878), J. Kunze in A. Hauck's Realencyklop. fur prot. Theol. and Kirche (1897) ; that by Hausle, in I. Goschler's Dict. encyclopedique de la theol. cath. (1858), gives a Roman Catholic view. (A. Go. *) End of Article: CHEMNITZ (or KEMNITZ), MARTIN (1522-1586) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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