23
November 1531 A.D. Johann
Oecolampadius Dies—Swiss Reformer
Johann Oecolampadius, German Johannes Huszgen (born
1482, Weinsberg, Württemberg [now in Germany]—died Nov. 23, 1531, Basel, Switz.), German
humanist, preacher, and patristic scholar who, as a close friend of the Swiss
Reformer Huldrych Zwingli,
led the Reformation in Basel.
A student at Heidelberg, Oecolampadius left in 1506 to become tutor to the
sons of the Palatinate’s elector and in 1510 became preacher at Weinsberg. In
1513 he went to Tübingen for further study; he became versatile in Greek,
Latin, and Hebrew and came into contact with Humanism. In 1515 Oecolampadius
moved to Basel, where he assisted the Humanist scholar Desiderius Erasmus
(c. 1466–1536) in preparing his edition of the Greek New Testament. Over the
next several years, Oecolampadius produced translations of works by various
Greek Fathers of the church, including Gregory of Nazianzus, Basil, John of
Damascus, Chrysostom, and Theophylact. In 1518 he became cathedral preacher at Augsburg. His mystical leanings
and scholarly temperament led him to enter the Brigittine monastery at
Altomünster in 1520, but his growing disillusionment with the Roman Catholic
view that the bread and wine of the Eucharist are transubstantiated into the
body and blood of Christ and his increasing admiration for Martin Luther caused him to
leave in 1522. After serving briefly as chaplain at Ebernburg castle at the
invitation of the German nobleman Franz von Sickingen,
he returned to Basel, and in 1523 he became lecturer and
professor at the university, where he had earned a doctorate in 1518.
Lecturing in three languages to large audiences and preaching at Saint-Martin’s Church,
Oecolampadius soon became the dominant figure in the city. At Baden in 1526, he
debated for the Reformation against Roman
Catholicism, and again in 1528 he supported the Reformers at the disputation at
Bern. During this period
Oecolampadius became renowned as a preacher. In a series of writings,
particularly in De genuina verborum domini expositione (1526; “On the Correct Interpretation of the Words of the Lord”), he
supported Zwingli’s view that the Eucharist was only a remembrance and not a
reenactment of Christ’s sacrifice on the cross. After helping to shape the
local ordinances promulgated at Easter in 1529 to establish the
Reformation in Basel, Oecolampadius defended Zwingli’s position again at the Colloquy of Marburg
(October 1529), where he debated Luther. Returning to Basel, in 1530 he opposed
the dominant role of local authorities in church affairs and preached in favour
of a church discipline in which pastors and lay elders shared in church
government. When, in 1531, Zwingli was slain in the Battle of Kappel, the result of political
divisiveness over efforts to expand the Reformation, Oecolampadius was
overwhelmed by shock and died soon afterward.
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