January 30
1536
Menno Simons
(1496–1561) left the Roman Catholic
church over his doubts about transubstantiation and
converted to the Anabaptist movement, which he would soon
led. The Mennonite churches are named after him.
1563
Franciscus Gomarus, Dutch theologian, a strict Calvinist
and opponent of the teaching of
Jacobus Arminius (and his followers), was born (d. 11
January 1641).
1603
David Denicke, hymnist, was born in
Zittau, Saxony (d. 1 April 1680).
1649 England's
King Charles I, a devout Catholic who staunchly defended the
divine right of kings while oppressing the Puritans, was
executed by members of Oliver Cromwell’s army
(b. 19 November 1600).
1808
Friedrich Layriz, hymnologist and composer, was born in
Nemmersdorf, Bavaria (d. 1859).
1813
Samuel P. Tregelles, English Bible
scholar, was born in Falmouth, England (d. 24 April 1875).
1815
Karl Friedrich von Gerok, Christian lyric poet and eloquent preacher,
was born at Vaihingen, Württemberg (d.
14 January 1890).
1816
Phineas R. Hunt, missionary
printer to Madras, India (1839), and Peking, China (1868),
was born in Arlington, Vermont (d. 29 May
1878).
1860
Wilhelm Zoellner,
president of the deaconess institution at Kaiserswerth and
superintendent-general of the church province of Westphalia,
was born in Minden, Westphalia (d. 16 July 1937). [German
Wikipedia article]
1867 The American branch of the
Evangelical Alliance was organized at the Bible House in New
York City.
William E. Dodge
(1805–1883) was elected
president.
1869
Charlotte Barnard (b.
23 December 1830), English
student of music and hymnist, died.
1877 Responding to Henry Stanley’s plea for
“some pious, practical missionary" to follow up David
Livingstone’s missionary foray into Uganda, three members of
Alexander Mackay’s
(1849–1890) Church Missionary Society team arrived at
King Mutesa’s court.
1891 William J. Schaefer, hymn
translator, was born in Manitowoc, Wisconsin. He was educated at Northwestern College (Watertown, Wisconsin) and Concordia Theological Seminary (Springfield, Illinois), from which he graduated in 1913. He served as pastor at Garrison, Nebraska; Colome,
South Dakota; and Milwaukee, Wisconsin. In 1935 he was
appointed associate editor of the Northwestern Lutheran, the official periodical of the Wisconsin Synod, and became managing editor in 1939. He was a member of the Intersynodical
Committee on Hymnology and Liturgics, which prepared The Lutheran Hymnal.
1904
George Minor (b.
7 December 1845), American Baptist sacred music publisher,
died.
1907
Alexander Heidel was born in Entre Rios, Argentina (d. 19 June 1955, Chicago). He attended Colegio Concordia in Porto Alegre,
Brazil, before graduating from Concordia Seminary (Saint
Louis) in 1929. He received a Ph.D. in 1936 from the
University of Chicago and was the author of several books
including Babylonian Genesis. He taught at Concordia College (Austin, Texas) from 1929 to 1931 and was on the faculty of the University of Chicago from 1932 to 1955. He was a member of the Oriental Institute and did research in Iraq on a Fulbright Scholarship.
1912
Francis Schaeffer,
American Presbyterian apologist for Protestant
fundamentalism, Evangelical missionary, philosopher, author
and lecturer, was born in Germantown, Pennsylvania (d. 15
May 1984).
1930 Rodolfo Hasse opened
Missouri Synod mission work in Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil.
1950 The first Lutheran high school in
Nigeria
opened.