All the writers of his time agree in calling him a learned, industrious, and upright man. In 1529 he took part in the Conference of Marburg between the theologians of Switzerland, Saxony, Suabia, and other southern German provinces. Lambert became its first professor of theology. The convents were closed up, and their revenues employed to establish four hospitals and a Protestant academy at Marburg. The latter were declared vanquished and driven out of Hesse. Here, in a synod held in October of the same year, he argued in Latin, and Adam Craton, or Crafft, in German, against the tenets of the Roman Catholic Church as defended by Nicholas Herborn and John Sperber. In 1524 he went to Metz, and afterwards to Strasburg, where he remained until called to Hombourg by the landgrave, Philip of Hesse, in 1526. In January, 1523, he joined Luther at Wittenberg, where he wrote his commentaries on Hosea and other books. In 1522 he held public conferences at Eisenach, and was greatly instrumental in propagating the Reformation in Thuringia and Hesse. He thereupon cast aside the dress of his order, took the name of John Serranus, and began preaching the reformed principles in the several cities of Switzerland and Germany. On a visit to Switzerland he was received by Sebastian de Monte Falcone, prince-bishop of Lausanne, and went to Berne and Zurich, where he had a public conference with Zwingle. Refused by his superiors, he left his order in 1522, and embraced the doctrines of Luther, whose writings he had secured and carefully studied. He soon, however, tired of the world, and, thinking to find peace of mind in stricter seclusion, he asked permission to join the Carthusians. At the age of sixteen he became a Gray Friar, was then ordained priest, and preached for a while with great success. L RUG01 L RUG01 m BOOK x UB 1 CA20 2 BIB 3 BIB.V.Lambert, Francis (generally known as Lambert of Avignon, the name of his native place), also called JOHN SERRANUS, a French theologian, and one of the early apostles of the Reformation, was born in 1487. 2 fast 0 (OCoLC)fst01411636Ī Monumenta humanistica belgica v v. in quibus de Purgatorio & Indulgentiis.Ī Catholic Church. De Sacramento Eucharistiæ, & de audienda Missa. & Dé magnitudine Dominicæ passionis, Libri duo. cum sugjectis exemplaribus, Fratribus in monte D. Tractatus de cohibendis cogitationibus, & modo constituendarum meditationum, qui Scala Meditationis vocatur. (source)fast (OCoLC)fst01411636Ī (OCoLC)712913311 z (OCoLC)2550085 z (OCoLC)221337811 z (OCoLC)630121273Ī Facsimile of the Edition Groningen 1614Ī Tractus de Oratione, cum luculentissima Dominicæ orationis interpretatione. Dewey: 282.08 Alternative call numbers: 08.23 bcl Subject: Catholic Church. Series: Monumenta humanistica belgica 1 Note: Facsimile of the Edition Groningen 1614 Contents: Tractus de Oratione, cum luculentissima Dominicæ orationis interpretatione. Author: Gansfort, Johann Wessel, 1420?-1489 Publisher: Nieuwkoop : B.
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