March 14
1415 John Hus
(ca. 1370–1415)
was excommunicated for heresy.
1537 Martin Luther returned to
Wittenberg from
Smalcald.
1733 Jacob
Henkel, early American Lutheran pastor, was born (d. 14
February 1779).
1776 Johannes
Reinhard, who helped organize the Ohio Synod, was born
(d. 7 June 1861).
1803 Friedrich
Gottlieb Klopstock, German poet and author of "Messiah,"
died (b. 2 July 1724, Quedlinburg, Germany).
1826 William
Fisk Sherwin, American music scholar and chorister, was
born in Buckland, Massachusetts (d. 14 April 1888,
Boston).
1835
William F. Moulton, biblical
scholar, was born at Leek, in Staffordshire, England (d. 5
February 1898).
1835
Henry
Barclay Swete, Anglican Bible scholar, was born in
Bristol (d. 10 May 1917).
1841 David
Livingstone (1813–1873), missionary, arrived in Cape
Town, South Africa.
1865 Justus
Heinrich Naumann, president of the Minnesota Synod, was
born in Dresden, Germany (d. 5 February 1917).
1872 Journalist Henry
Stanley (1841–1904) and explorer-missionary David
Livingstone parted company, having spent the previous five
months in Africa together.
1895 Adolf Friedrich Michalk was born in
Thorndale, Texas (d. 1975). He graduated from Concordia
Seminary (Saint Louis) in 1919 before serving parishes in
Texas and France. From 1930 to 1940 he was a circuit
counselor for the Texas District. From 1940 to 1948 he was a
member of the Texas District's Board of Missions. From 1949
until 1958 he served as the vice-president of the Eglise
Lutheran Libre, France.
1897 The Polish
National Catholic Church of America was formally
organized at Scranton, Pennsylvania.
1902 The Nathaniel W. Taylor Lectureship
was established at the Yale University Divinity School in
memory of the Rev. Nathaniel
W. Taylor (1786–1858), who was professor of systematic
theology and chairman of the faculty (1822–1858).
1912 Albert
L. Peace (b. 26 January 1844), English church organist,
died.
1937 The first radio sermon was
delivered in Porto Alegre, Brazil, by Professor P.
Schelp.
1937 Pope Pius
XI (1857–1939) issued an encyclical against the Nazi
“cult”:
“Race,
nation, state … all have an essential and honorable place
within the secular order,” he wrote.
“To abstract them,
however, from the earthly scale of values and make them the
supreme norm of all values, including religious ones, and
divinize them with an idolatrous cult, is to be guilty of
perverting and falsifying the order of things created and
commanded by God.”
1946 Canadian Lutheran World
Relief was organized.
1949 Robert P. Evans chartered the
European Bible Institute in Chicago, Illinois. In 1952 its
name was changed to Greater Europe
Mission.
1961 The
New English Bible New Testament
was published simultaneously by Oxford and Cambridge
University Presses. The Old Testament was completed in
1970.