Online Encyclopedia

JOHANN BRENZ (1499–1570)

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Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 497 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JOHANN

BRENZ (1499–1570)  , Lutheran divine, eldest son of Martin Brenz, was born at Weil,
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Wurttemberg, on the 24th of
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June 1499 . In 1514 he entered the university of
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Heidelberg, where Oecolampadius was one of his teachers, and where in 1518 he heard Luther discuss . Ordained priest in 1520, and appointed preacher (1522) at Hall in Swabia, he gave himself to biblical exposition . He ceased to celebrate mass in 1523, and re-organized his church in 1524 . Successful in resisting the peasant insurrection (1525), his fortunes were affected by the Schmalkaldic War . From Hall, when taken by the imperial forces, he fled on his birthday in 1548 . Protected by Duke
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Ulrich of Wurttemberg, he was appointed (
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January 1553) provost of the collegiate church of
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Stuttgart . As organizer of the reformation in Wurttemberg he did much fruitful
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work . A strong advocate of Lutheran
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doctrine, and author of the Syngramma Suevicum (
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October 21, 1525), which set forth Luther's doctrine of the Eucharist, he was
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free from the persecuting tendencies of the age . He is praised and quoted (as Joannes Witlingius) for his
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judgment against applying the
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death penalty to anabaptists or other heretics in the De Haereticis, an sint persequendi (1554), issued by Sebastian Castellio under the pseudonym of Martinus Bellius . An incomplete edition of his
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works (largely expository) appeared at
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Tubingen, 1576–1590 . Several of his sermons were reproduced in contemporary
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English versions .

A

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volume of Anecdote Brentiana was edited by Pressel in 1868 . He died on the 11th of September 1570, and was buried in his church at Stuttgart; his
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grave was subsequently violated . He was twice married, and his eldest son, Johann Brenz, was appointed (1562) professor of
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theology in Tubingen at the early age of twenty-two . See Hartmann and J5ger, Johann Brenz (184o–1842) ; Bossert, in Hauck's Realencyklop . (1897) . (A .

End of Article: JOHANN BRENZ (1499–1570)
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