February 28
468
Pope Saint Hilary (a.k.a. Hilarus, Hilarius),
46th Bishop of Rome according to Roman Catholic tradition,
died.
1066 Westminster
Abbey, the most famous church in England, opened its
doors for the first time.
1551 Martin
Bucer, reformer of Strasbourg, died in England (b. 11
November 1491 Sélestat).
1638 The National Covenant was signed by
the Scottish Presbyterians (called
Covenanters
because of their solemn agreements for religious and
political purposes).
1759 Pope
Clement XIII (1693–1769) granted permission for the Bible to be
translated into all the languages of the Roman Catholic
states.
1784 The English founder of Methodism,
John
Wesley (1703–1791), formally chartered the movement thereafter known
as Wesleyan Methodism.
1795 Benjamin
Kurtz, president of the General Synod, was born in
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania (d. 29 December 1865).
1799 Samuel
Simon Schmucker, Gettysburg theological professor, was
born in Hagerstown, Maryland (d. 26 July 1873).
1807
Robert
Morrison (1782–1834) sailed from Britain to become the
first Protestant missionary to China.
1815 Karl
Heinrich Graf, German Protestant Old Testament critic,
was born at Muhlhausen, in Alsace (d. 16 July 1869).
1835 “Our Heavenly Father, Hear” was
written by James
Montgomery (1771–1854).
1846 Carl
Adolf Frank, clergyman and first editor of The
Lutheran Witness, was born in Wimpfen,
Germany (d. 18 January 1922).
1853 Paul John Theodor Roesener was born
in Berlin, Germany (d. 17 February 1939, Mokena, Illinois). He immigrated to America in
1874 and graduated from Concordia Seminary (Saint Louis). He
served congregations in Rose Hill, Texas; New Orleans,
Louisiana; Altenburg, Missouri; and New York City. His
served as president of the Western District of the Missouri
Synod, vice-president of the Atlantic District and a member
of the Missouri Synod Board of Indian Missions, the Board of Higher
Education and the Board of Control for Concordia College
(Bronxville, New York).
1857 Alfred
Loisy, French Roman Catholic theologian, was born in
Marne (d. 1 June 1940).
1865
Wilfred
T. Grenfell, medical missionary to Labrador, was born at
Parkgate (Cheshire), England (d. 9 October 1940).
1870 The first physical plant for
Concordia Publishing House (Saint Louis) was dedicated.
1873 The
Society of Mary (the Marist
Fathers) was officially sanctioned by Pope Pius IX. This
Roman Catholic religious order, founded in 1816, seeks to
unite the work of education with missions.
1875
Jean-Claude Marie Colin, who
founded the Marist Fathers in 1816, died (b. 7 August 1790).
1880
Friedrich Wilhelm Tobias Steimle, who
helped found the German Evangelical Lutheran Synod of New
York, died (b. 1827, Württemberg).
1898 Edwin T. Bernthal was born in Saint
Louis, Missouri (d. 21 November 1970, Winter Haven, Florida). He
graduated from Concordia Seminary (Saint Louis) in 1920 and
served his entire fifty-year ministry as pastor of the
Lutheran Church of the Epiphany, Detroit, Michigan. During World War II he was appointed by
LCMS President Behnken to represent the Missouri Synod in
Washington, D.C. He coordinated work for the synod’s Army
& Navy Commission. He also served on the Board of
Directors of the synod from 1953 to 1969 and was a member of
the Valparaiso University board of directors for many years.
1906 Henry
W. Buck, leader in the Lutheran Laymen's League and
member of the Missouri Synod Board of Directors was born (d.
20 April 1960).
1944 Ernst
Henry Engelbrecht, professor at Concordia Teachers
College (River Forest, Illinois) and field secretary for the
Walther League, died (b. 23 December 1870, Farmers Retreat,
Indiana).
1944 Nazi soldiers invaded the home of
Dutch Christian Corrie
ten Boom (1892–1983) and
arrested the family on the charge of harboring Jews.
1960 The first meeting of congregational
delegates from the LCMS mission effort in Hong Kong was
held.