12
September 1805 A.D. Johann
Jakob Herzog Born—Reformed Professor of Church History & Co-Editor of Large
Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious
Knowledge
Graves, Dan. “John J. Herzog’s Huge
Church Encyclopedia.” Christianity.com. Jul 2007. http://www.christianity.com/church/church-history/timeline/1801-1900/john-j-herzogs-huge-church-encyclopedia-11630351.html. Accessed 21 May 2014.
One of a church-historian's
valuable resources is the Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge.
John Jacob Herzog--the Herzog of the encyclopedia title--was born on this day,
September 12, 1805, probably in Basel, Switzerland. The Herzog family had
recently moved there from Wurtemburg.
John was left an orphan at a young age and
relatives raised him. He showed himself an apt pupil of the sciences and then
of theology, studying with such notable
individuals as the mathematician Christoph Bernoulli and with theologians
Schleiermacher and Neander. He became an educator at Lausanne, specializing in
historical theology. John issued works on several of the major reformers,
including Zwingli, Calvin and Oecolampadius.
Christian thought often needs defenders because
scholarly and pseudo-scholarly attacks never cease. John stood for the faith
against damaging influences, including attempts to rewrite Christ's life so as
to rob Him of his deity. When Plymouth Brethren began spreading their message
in Germany, John opposed them because he considered their teaching as too
individualistic for the good of the church.
When the government made demands that overstepped
the bounds of church and state, John refused to go along. He resigned his
position at Lausanne and worked as a private scholar for much of 1846 and 1847.
He was glad to accept an invitation to teach at Halle, because he had had
little to live on during the previous months. At Halle, he developed a close
relationship with the well-known Protestant theologian Friedrich August Gottreu
Tholuck.
The same year that John resigned his job at
Lausanne, Roman Catholic scholars issued the first volume of the Catholic
Encyclopedia. Protestants immediately felt the need to produce an encyclopedia
of their own to counterbalance the Catholic version. Political troubles slowed
down the project and its editor died. Tholuck recommended Herzog for the vacant
position.
John was liked by all parties--in part because of
his generous treatment of Reformation figures. He got the job. His vast
knowledge of church history made him the perfect editor. In
fact, he wrote 500 of the articles that appeared in the first edition. Later,
he was co-editor of a second edition.
Philip Schaff was well-acquainted with John, who
asked him to adapt the encyclopedia for American use. Schaff agreed to
undertake the huge project. And that is how we got the famous and useful Schaff-Herzog
Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge. Herzog died in 1882.
Bibliography:
1. Freudenberg, Matthias.
"Herzog, Johann Jakob." Kirchenlexicon.
2. "Herzog, Johann Jakob."
The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, edited by F. L. Cross and E. A.
Livingstone. Oxford, 1997.
3. "Preface." Schaff-Herzog
Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Book House,
1954.
4. Various Encyclopedia and internet
articles.
Last updated July, 2007
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