Online Encyclopedia

HEINRICH PAULUS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V20, Page 964 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HEINRICH

PAULUS  EBERHARD" GOTTLOB (1761-1851), German rationalistic theologian, was born at Leonberg, near
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Stuttgart, on the 1st of September 1761 . His
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father, a Lutheran clergyman at Leonberg, dabbled in
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spiritualism, and was deprived of his living in r771 . Paulus was educated in the seminary at
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Tubingen, was three years master in a German school, and then spent two years in travelling through England, Germany, Holland and France . In 1789 he was chosen professor ordinarius of
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Oriental
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languages at
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Jena . Here he lived in close intercourse with Schiller, Goethe, Herder and the most distinguished
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literary men of the time . In 1793 he succeeded Johann Christoph Doderlein (1745–1792) as professor of exegetical
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theology . His
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special
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work was the exposition of the Old and New Testaments in the
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light of his
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great Oriental learning Ii and according to his characteristic principle of " natural explanation." In his explanation of the Gospel narratives Paulus sought to remove what other interpreters regarded as miracles from the Bible by distinguishing between the fact related and the author's opinion of it, by seeking a naturalistic exegesis of a narrative, e.g. that
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Earl ri7s flaXavvrts (Matt. xiv . 25) means by the
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shore and not on the sea, by supplying circumstances omitted by the author, by remembering that the author produces as miracles occurrences which can now be explained otherwise, e.g. exorcisms . His
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Life of Jesus (1828) is a synoptical
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translation of the Gospels, prefaced by an account of the preparation for the Christ and a brief
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summary of His
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history, and accompanied by very short explanations interwoven in the translation . The form of the work was fatal to its success, and the subsequent Exegetisches Handbuch rendered it quite superfluous . In this Handbuch Paulus really contributed much to a true interpretation of the Gospel narratives . In 1803 he became professor of theology and Consistorialrat at Wiirzburg .

After this he filled various posts in

south Germany—school director at
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Bamberg (1807), Nuremberg .(18o8),
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Ansbach (181o)—until he became professor of exegesis and church history at
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Heidelberg (1811–1844) . He died on the loth of August 1851 . His chief exegetical
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works are his Philologisch-kritischer and historischer Kommentar fiber das Neue Testament (4 vols., i800–1804); Philologischer Clavis caber die Psalmen (1791) ; and Philologischer Clavis fiber Jesaias (1793) ; and particularly his Exegetisches Handbuch fiber die drei ersten Evangelien (3 vols., 1830–1833 and ed., 1841–1842) . He also edited a collected small edition of
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Baruch Spinoza's works (1802–1803), a collection of the most noted Eastern travels (1792–1803), F . W . J . Schelling's Vorlesungen fiber d'e Offenbarus;.g (1843), and published Skizzen aus meiner Bildungsund Lebensgeschichte (1839) . See Karl Reichlin-Meldegg, H . E . G . Paulus and seine Zeit (1853), and article in Herzog-Hauck, Realencyklopkdie; cf . F .

Lichtenberger, History of German Theology in the Nineteenth

Century, pp . 21–24 .

End of Article: HEINRICH PAULUS
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