January 6
The Epiphany of Our Lord
1412
Joan of
Arc, French heroine, was born in Domremy (traditional
date; d. 30 May 1431).
1493
Olavus (Olaus) Petri, Swedish reformer, was born at
Örebro, Sweden (d. 1552).
1494 The first Roman Catholic mass in North
America was celebrated on Isabella Island, Haiti.
1505 Martin Luther received his master of arts
degree and began the study of law.
1525
Caspar
Peucer, Reformation physician and a Melanchthonian, was
born at Bautzen, Germany (d. 25 September 1602).
1536 The Tlateloco school for Indian children
opened in the suburbs of Mexico City.
1542 Martin Luther wrote his last will and
testament.
1579 The
Union
of Arras in the Low Countries of Europe was signed.
Catholics, outraged by Calvinist destruction of their
churches and images, resubmitted to Spain, breaking the
unity of the Dutch resistance against the Spaniards.
1699
Philipp Friedrich Hiller, pastor and writer of hymns and
devotions, was born at Mühlhausen on the Enz, Germany (d. 24
April 1769).
1714
John Christopher Hartwick, Lutheran pastor who helped
organize the Pennsylvania Ministerium, was born in
Saxe-Gotha, Germany (d. 17 July 1796).
1719
William Hammond, hymnist, was born in Battle, Sussex,
England (d. 19 August 1783, London).
1740
John Fawcett, Baptist clergyman and educator, was born
in Yorkshire, England (d. 25 July 1817, Hebden Bridge,
Yorkshire, England).
1793 The Virginia Special (Lutheran) Conference
was organized.
1800
James Cameron, missionary to Madagascar, was born in
Scotland (d. 3 October 1875).
1804
Johan N. Brun (1745–1816),
hymnist, became bishop of Bergen.
1827
Johann Christoph Wilhelm Lindemann, president of the
Evangelical Lutheran Teachers Seminary (Addison, Illinois),
was born in Goettingen, Hanover (d. 15 January 1879).
1832 French artist
Gustave
Doré was born in Strasbourg,
France (d. 23 January 1883).
1835 The
Swedish Missionary Society
was founded.
1835
John Henry Wilburn Stuckenberg, professor at Wittenberg
College (Springfield, Ohio), was born in Bramsche, near
Osnabrueck, Hannover, Germany (d. 28 May 1903).
1851
John Nicum, professor at Wagner Lutheran College (Staten
Island, New York), was born in Winnenden, Wuerttemberg,
Germany (d. 1 November 1909).
1852
Louis
Braille, developer of the printing system for the blind,
died (b. 4 January 1809).
1853 The first conference of
Swedish Lutheran congregations was held in Moline,
Illinois.
1858 Sick in bed on Epiphany while convalescing
from a serious illness,
William C. Dix
(1837–1898) read the
Gospel for the day and by evening had composed
“As with Gladness Men of
Old” based on that
Gospel.
1870
Ambrose Henkel, founder of the
Henkel Press and translator of Luther’s
Small Catechism into English, died (b. 11 July 1786).
1875
Enno A. Duemling, Synodical Conference institutional
missionary in Milwaukee, was born in Fort Wayne, Indiana (d.
22 October 1946).
1884
Gregor
Johann Mendel (b. 20 July 1822), Austrian-born (modern
Czechoslovakia) Roman Catholic Augustinian monk whose
observations became the basis of the theory of heredity,
died.
1887
Virgil P. Brock, American music evangelist, was born (d.
1978).
1896 Vergilius T. A. Ferm, American Lutheran
theologian, was born in Sioux City, Iowa. As professor of
philosophy for many years at the College of Wooster in Ohio,
Ferm authored and edited many important works on religion,
including The Encyclopedia of Religion (1945).
1902
Edith Warner, a Presbyterian missionary, set out from
Asaba (Nigeria) to become the first white woman to visit the
East Niger (d. 1925).
1906
Legal
separation of church and state in France
began.
1911
Samuel Alfred Ort, president of the General Synod, died
(b. 11 November 1843 at Lewistown, Pennsylvania).
1921
Alexander Whyte, who was influential in the Free Church
of Scotland, died (b. 13 January 1836, Kirriemuir,
Forfarshire).
1934
Peter Deyneka and four other men founded the
Slavic
(Russian) Gospel Association in Chicago.
1948
Janani
Luwum was converted to Christianity in Uganda.
Eventually he became an archbishop and was killed by the
brutal dictator Idi Amin in 1977.
1957 The first baptisms took place in the Missouri
Synod mission at Irelya, New Guinea. There were seventy-nine
of them.
1966 Harold Robert Perry became the auxiliary
bishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New Orleans. He
was the second African American since 1875 to be elevated to
a bishopric in the U.S.
1977
Bishop
Hanns Lilje, Lutheran World Federation president and
ecumenist, died in Hanover, Germany (b. 1899).
1979 Frederick W. Lorberg, president of Missouri
Synod's Florida-Georgia District (1957–1963),
died in Orlando, Florida (b. 18 October 1907). In 1931
Lorberg began a mission congregation in Jacksonville,
Florida. He served as pastor of Grace Lutheran Church for
thirty-three years. He was executive secretary of missions
and church extension of the Florida-Georgia District from
1964 to 1973. During his retirement from 1973 to 1976,
Lorberg served as assistant pastor of Prince of Peace
Lutheran Church in Orlando. After his full retirement in
1976, Lorberg served many Florida congregations as vacancy
pastor. He was a 1926 graduate of Saint John’s
College (Winfield, Kansas) and a 1931 graduate of Concordia
Seminary (Saint Louis).
1982
Jonathan Udo Ekong, founding father of the Lutheran
Church of Nigeria, died in Ibesikpo, Nigeria.