January 29
904
Sergius III came out of retirement to take over the
papacy from the deposed
antipope Christopher.
993
Ulric (890–973), bishop of Augsburg from 923, was formally
canonized by Pope John XV, the first recorded canonization
by a pope.
1336
Pope Benedict XII
(ca. 1280–1342) issued the bull Benedictus Deus, which decided the dispute regarding the
Beatific Vision.
1499
Katharina von Bora,
wife of Martin Luther, was born
near Leipzig (d. 20 December 1552).
1523
Huldrych Zwingli
(1484–1531) defended his 67 theses before an audience of
more than six hundred people gathered at the first Zurich
Disputation.
1535 The French
royal family, church officials and many other dignitaries
joined in an immense torch-lit procession from the Louvre to
Notre Dame in an attempt to purge Paris from the defilement
caused by
overzealous Protestants and their placards.
1597
Elias Ammerbach, German organist and arranger of organ
music of the Renaissance, who published the earliest printed
book of organ music in Germany, died (b. ca. 1530).
1688
Emanuel Swedenborg, Swedish
mystic and scientist, was born in Stockholm, Sweden (d.
29 March 1772).
1718
Paul Rabaut, French Huguenot pastor, was born (d. 25
September 1794).
1739
Thomas Shepherd (b. 1665),
nonconformist English clergyman and hymnist, died.
1815
Thomas
Jefferson (1743–1826) wrote to Charles Clay about "the loathesome
combination of Church and State."
1824
Nils Olsen
Brandt, professor at Luther College (Decorah, Iowa), an
editor and an organizer of the Norwegian Synod, was born in
Norway (d. 1921).
1850
Rufus H. McDaniel, American
Christian Church clergyman and hymnist, was born in Brown
County, Ohio (d. 13 February 1940, Dayton, Ohio).
1851 Andreas Schroedel, president
of the Minnesota District of the Wisconsin Synod, was born
in Neustadt, Bavaria, Germany (d. 21 November 1909). He came
to America in 1853 and was educated at Northwestern College
(Watertown, Wisconsin) and Concordia Seminary (Saint Louis).
He served as pastor at Naugart and Ridgeville (serving also
Norwalk and Tomah), Wisconsin. He became a professor at
Northwestern College in 1889, then returned to the parish as
a pastor in Saint Paul, Minnesota, in 1893. He was president
of the Minnesota District from 1906 to 1909.
1854
Ernst Carl Ludwig Schulze, president of the Atlantic
District of the Missouri Synod, was born in Huellhorst,
Rheinberg, Westphalia (d. 9/10 October 1918).
1860
Ernst
Moritz Arndt, historian, hymnist and poet, died (b. 26
December 1769).
1866 The English church
worker
Katherine Hankey
(1834–1911) penned the words to the Gospel song
“Tell Me the Old, Old Story.”
1880
Frederick Oakeley (b.
5 September 1802), one of the Tractarian authors during the
Oxford Movement in England, died.
1907
Martin Hans Franzmann,
hymnist and theologian, was born in Lake City, Minnesota (d.
28 March 1976, Cambridge, England).
1957
The University of Chicago Press published the first edition
of its English translation of Walter Bauer's
New Testament
Greek lexicon (A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament
and Other Early Christian Literature).
1979 Federico Lange, president of Concordia
Seminary in Argentina from 1946 to 1965, died in Buenos
Aires. Lange had joined the clergy of the Argentine District
of the Missouri Synod in 1929. He served as a professor of
the Old Testament at the seminary and authored an
introduction to the Old Testament in Spanish. Lange edited a
theological magazine for Spanish-speaking pastors in Latin
America and in the U. S. called Revista Teologica. He was president of an
inter-Lutheran committee that prepared and published seven
volumes of Luther’s works in Spanish, using the facilities
of Argentine publication houses. Lange was an active
participant in the Argentine Bible Society and had helped
promote Scripture sales at national book fairs. A musician
also, he wrote or translated hymns in Spanish and directed
the Lutheran Chorus of Buenos Aires. Lange was a 1929
graduate of the Evangelical (Lutheran) Seminary of Zehlendorf near
Berlin.