Showing posts with label Reformation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reformation. Show all posts

Monday, October 31, 2016

All Hallow's Eve

It was a mere 499 years ago today that 
Martin Luther kicked up quite a stir in Wittenberg.
Simply 95 theses to change  the world.

Happy Reformation Day
Go post some theses- but not on a church door.
You might get arrested for that.

To satisfy your need for theses, here are 9 minus 5 "dumbed down" theses from Ph.D. dissertations. (Link)
  • Does music express emotions or just elicit them? Read the next 200 pages to not find out.
  • When I get rid of this gene, it messes the brain up. A lot.
  • My experimental drug does NOT cure addiction.
  • Sand washes away, don't build important stuff on it

Thursday, October 29, 2015

Calendar of Saints: John Wyclif (2)

Twice a week I post a quote from saints from the Episcopal Calendar of Saints that week. They are to be meditative and mindful, playful and thought inducing. I hope they are helpful in your spiritual journeys.

John Wyclif (1330 - 1384)
Translator and Reformer
October 30



Wyclif is chiefly remembered and honored for his role in Bible translating. In the early 1380's he led the movement for a translation of the Bible into English, and two complete translations (one much more idiomatic than the other) were made at his instigation. (How much of the translating he did himself, if any, remains uncertain.) He proposed the creation of a new religious order of Poor Preachers who would preach to the people from the English Bible.

-Link

Tuesday, October 27, 2015

Calendar of Saints: John Wyclif (1)

Twice a week I post a quote from saints from the Episcopal Calendar of Saints that week. They are to be meditative and mindful, playful and thought inducing. I hope they are helpful in your spiritual journeys.

John Wyclif (1330 - 1384)
Translator and Reformer
October 30



John Wyclif (also spelled Wycliffe, Wycliff, Wicliffe, or Wiclif) was born in Yorkshire around 1330, and was educated at Oxford, becoming a doctor of divinity in 1372.

In 1374, King Edward III appointed him rector of Lutterworth, and later made him part of a deputation to meet at Brussels with a papal deputation to negotiate difference between King and Pope. About this time Wyclif began to argue for "dominion founded on grace." By "dominion" he meant both the right to exercise authority in church or state and the right to own property. He maintained that these rights were given to men directly from God, and that they were not given or continued apart from sanctifying grace. Thus, a man in a state of mortal sin could not lawfully function as an official of church or state, nor could he lawfully own property. He argued that the Church had fallen into sin and that it ought therefore to give up all its property and that the clergy should live in complete poverty. This disendowment was to be carried out by the king. Later generations saw him as a precursor of the Protestant Reformation of the 1500's, but his direct influence on the beginnings of that movement appear to be surprisingly slight. (Only John Hus seems to have read any of his work.)

-Link

Thursday, October 30, 2014

Always Ready for Reformation






Tomorrow is Reformation Day, the anniversary of the day in 1517 that a German monk named Martin Luther nailed a copy of his 95 Theses (Disputation of Martin Luther on the Power and Efficacy of Indulgences) on the church door in Wittenburg, Germany.