10 October 1559 A.D. Jacobus Arminius Born—“Conditional Election,” Justification by My Works, and Anti-Reformed Churchman
10
October 1559 A.D. Jacobus Arminius Born—“Conditional
Election,” Justification by My Works,
and Anti-Reformed Churchman
Editors. “Jacobus Arminius.”
Encyclopedia Britannica. 15 Octo 2014.
http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/35399/Jacobus-Arminius. Accessed 30 May 2014.
Jacobus Arminius, Dutch Jacob Harmensen or Jacob Hermansz
(born October 10, 1560, Oudewater, Netherlands—died October 19, 1609, Leiden), theologian and minister of the Dutch
Reformed Church who opposed the strict Calvinist
teaching on predestination and who developed in reaction a theological system known later as Arminianism.
His
father died when Arminius was an infant, and one Theodore Aemilius adopted the child and provided
for his schooling in Utrecht. On the death of Aemilius in 1575, Rudolf Snellius (Snel van Roijen,
1546–1613), a professor at Marburg and a native of Oudewater, became the patron for his further education at
the universities of Leiden (1576–82), Basel, and Geneva (1582–86).
After
brief stays at the University of Padua, in Rome, and in Geneva, Arminius went
to Amsterdam. He was ordained there in 1588. In 1603 Arminius was called to a
theological professorship at Leiden, which he held until his death. These last
six years of his life were dominated by theological controversy, in particular
by his disputes with Franciscus
Gomarus, his colleague at Leiden.
Considered
a man of mild temperament, Arminius was forced into controversy against his own
choice. He had earlier affirmed the Calvinist view of predestination,
which held that those elected for salvation were so chosen prior to Adam’s
fall, but he gradually came to have doubts about this teaching. To him predestination
seemed too harsh a position, because it did not provide a place for the
exercise of human free will in the process of salvation. Hence, Arminius came
to assert a conditional election, according to which God elects to eternal life
those who will respond in faith to the divine offer of salvation. In so doing,
he meant to place greater emphasis on God’s mercy.
After
his death some of his followers gave support to his views by signing the Remonstrance,
a theological document written by Johannes Uyttenbogaert, a minister from
Utrecht, in 1610. Remonstrant
Arminianism was debated in 1618–19 at the Synod
of Dort (Dordrecht), an assembly of the Dutch Reformed Church. The
synod included delegates from Reformed churches in England, Germany, and
Switzerland, as well as delegates from the Dutch church, all of whom were
supporters of Gomarus. Arminianism was discredited and condemned by the synod,
the Arminians present were expelled, and many others suffered persecution.
Comments
Post a Comment