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HEINRICH PAULUS See also: EBERHARD" GOTTLOB (1761-1851), See also: German rationalistic theologian, was See also: born at Leonberg, near See also: Stuttgart, on the 1st of See also: September 1761
.
His See also: father, a Lutheran clergyman at Leonberg, dabbled in See also: spiritualism, and was deprived of his living in r771
.
Paulus was educated in the seminary at See also: Tubingen, was three years master in a German school, and then spent two years in travelling through See also: England, See also: Germany, See also: Holland and
See also: France
.
In 1789 he was chosen professor ordinarius of See also: Oriental See also: languages at See also: Jena
.
Here he lived in close intercourse with Schiller, Goethe, Herder and the most distinguished See also: literary men of the See also: time
.
In 1793 he succeeded Johann Christoph Doderlein (1745–1792) as professor of exegetical See also: theology
.
His See also: special See also: work was the exposition of the Old and New Testaments in the See also: light of his See also: 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 See also: 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 See also: Earl ri7s flaXavvrts (Matt. xiv
.
25) means by the See also: shore and not on the See also: 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 See also: Life of Jesus (1828) is a synoptical See also: translation of the Gospels, prefaced by an account of the preparation for the Christ and a brief See also: summary of His See also: history, and accompanied by very See also: short explanations interwoven in the translation
.
The See also: 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 See also: south Germany—school director at See also: Bamberg (1807), See also: Nuremberg .(18o8), See also: Ansbach (181o)—until he became professor of exegesis and See also: church history at
See also: Heidelberg (1811–1844)
.
He died on the loth of See also: August 1851
.
His chief exegetical See also: 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 See also: Baruch See also: 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 See also: seine Zeit (1853), and article in Herzog-Hauck, Realencyklopkdie; cf
.
F
.
Lichtenberger, History of German Theology in the Nineteenth Century, pp . 21–24 . |
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