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Martin Bucer
(Also called BUTZER.)
One of the leaders in the South German Reformation movement, b. 11 November,
1491, at Schlettstadt, Alsace; d. 28 February, 1551, at Cambridge, England. He
received his early education at the Latin School of his native place, where at
the age of fifteen (1506) he also entered the Order of St. Dominic. Later he was
sent to the University of Heidelberg to prosecute his studies, and matriculated,
31 January, 1517. He became an ardent admirer of Erasmus, and soon an
enthusiastic disciple of Luther. He heard the Saxon monk at a public disputation,
held at Heidelberg in 1518, on the occasion of a meeting of the Augustinian
order, became personally acquainted with him, and was immediately won over to
his ideas. Having openly adopted the new doctrine he withdrew from the Dominican
order, in 1521, became court chaplain of Frederick the Elector Palatine, and
laboured as secular priest at Landstuhl, in the Palatinate (1522), and as a
member of the household of Count Sickengen and at Weissenburg, Lower Alsace
(1522-23). During his incumbency at Landstuhl he married Elizabeth Silbereisen,
a former nun. When, in 1523, his position became untenable at Weissenburg, he
proceeded to Strasburg. Here his activity was soon exercised over a large field;
he became the chief reformer of the city and was connected with many important
religio-political events of the period. His doctrinal views on points
controverted between Luther and Zwingli at first harmonized completely with the
ideas of the Swiss Reformer. Subsequently he sought to mediate between Lutherans
and Zwinglians. The highly questionable methods to which he resorted in the
interest of peace drew upon him the denunciation of both parties. In spite of
the efforts of Bucer, the Conference of Marburg (1529), at which the divergent
views of Luther and Zwingli, especially the doctrine regarding the Eucharist,
were discussed, failed to bring about a reconciliation. At the Diet of Augsburg,
in the following year, he drew up with Capito the Confessio Tetrapolitana
, or
Confession of the Four Cities (Strasburg, Constance, Memmingen, and Lindau).
Later on, moved by political considerations, he abandoned this for the Augsburg
Confession. In 1536, he brought about the more nominal than real Concordia of
Wittenberg
among German Protestants. He gave his own, and obtained Luther's and
Melanchthon's approbation for the bigamy of the Landgrave Philip of Hesse,
attended in 1540 the religious conference between Catholics and Protestants at
Hagenau, Lower Alsace, and in 1541 the Diet of Ratisbon. The combined attempt of
Bucer and Melanchthon to introduce the Reformation into the Archdiocese of
Cologne ended in failure (1542). Political troubles and the resistance of Bucer
to the agreement arrived at by Catholics and Protestants in 1548, and known as
the Augsburg Interim
, made his stay in Strasburg impossible. At the invitation
of Archbishop Cranmer, he proceeded to England in 1549. After a short stay in
London, during which he was received by King Edward VI (1547-53), he was called
to Cambridge as Regius Professor of Divinity. His opinion was frequently asked
by Cranmer on church matters, notably on the controversy regarding
ecclesiastical vestments. But his sojourn was to be of short duration, as he
died in February, 1551. Under the reign of Queen Mary (1553-58) his remains were
exhumed and burned, and his tomb was demolished (1556), but was reconstructed in
1560 by Queen Elizabeth (1558-1603).
Bucer was, after Luther and Melanchthon, the most influential of German
Reformers. For a clear statement of doctrine he was ever ready to substitute
vague formulas in the interest of unity, which even his able efforts could not
establish among the Reformers. He forms a connecting link between the German and
the English Reformation. Of the thirteen children he had by his first marriage,
only one, a weak-minded son, survived. Wibrandis Rosenblatt, the successive wife
of several Reformers (Cellarius, Oecolampadius, Capito, and Bucer), whom he
married after his first wife died from the plague in 1541, bore him three
children, of whom a daughter survived. Only one of the ten folio volumes in
which his works were to appear was published (Basle, 1577). It is known as
Tomas Anglicanus
because its contents were mostly written in England.
BAUM, Capito und Butzer (Elberfeld, 1860); MENTZ AND ERICHSON, Zur 400 jahrigen Geburtsfeier Martin Butzers (Strasburg, 1891); STERN, Martin Butzer (Strasburg, 1891); PAULUS, Die Strasburger Reformatoren (Freiburg, 1895); SCHAFF, History of the Christian Church (New York, 1904), VI, 571-573 and passim; WARD in Dict. of Nat. Biog., VII, 172-177.
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