September 25
303 On a voyage preaching the gospel,
Saint Fermin of Pamplona
was beheaded in Amiens, France.
1392
Sergius of Radonezh, Abbot of the Holy Trinity, died (b. Bartolomei Kirillovich,
ca. 1320).
1396
Ottoman Emperor
Bayezid I defeats a Christian army at the
Battle of Nicopolis.
1534
Pope Clement VII died (b. Giulio de' Medici, 26 May 1478).
1555 The Religious
Peace of Augsburg was signed in
Augsburg by
Holy Roman Emperor
Charles V (1500–1558) and the princes of the
Schmalkaldic League.
1588
Tilemann Heshusius
(Hesshus),
evangelical theologian, died (b. 3 November 1527). [German
Wikipedia article]
1602
Caspar Peucer, German reformer, died (b. 6 January 1525).
1626
Lancelot Andrewes
(b. 1555), Anglican church leader, died.
1635
Johann Gottfried Olearius,
hymnist, was born at Halle (d. 21 May 1711). [Bautz
Kirchenlexikon entry]
1643 The
Solemn League and Covenant
drawn up by the Scottish General Assembly in London at
Westminster Abbey, guaranteeing Presbyterians equal rights
with the Anglicans, was submitted to the English Parliament.
1727
Jacques Abbadie,
exponent of rationalistic-apologetic Calvinism, died (b.
1654).
1765 A charter was granted to the "United Swedish Lutheran Churches" on the Delaware River.
1782 The first complete English Bible known to be published in America was issued.
1789 The U.S. Constitution was amended by Congress to prohibit any establishment of a state religion or interference with the freedom in the exercise of religion.
1827
Emma Frances Bevan, hymn translator, was born at Oxford
(d. 13 February 1909, Cannes, France).
1836
Luther Rice,
missionary to India, died (b. 25 March 1783, Northborough,
Massachusetts).
1866
Cleland Boyd McAfee,
American Presbyterian clergyman and scholar, was born (d. 4
February 1944).
1869
Rudolf Otto,
German Lutheran theologian, was born in Hanover, Germany (d.
6 March 1937).
1872
Peter Cartwright (b.
1 September 1785), early American Methodist circuit rider,
died.
1876
David Frederick Bittle, president of Roanoke College (Lutheran), died (b.
January 1811).
1893 Publisher
Louis Lange (b. 1829) died in Saint
Louis. He was the publisher of both Die Abendschule
and Die Rundschau.
1932
Glenn
Gould, Canadian pianist noted especially for his
recordings of the music of
Johann Sebastian Bach, was born (d. 4 October 1982).
1920
John Nathan Kildahl, seminary professor and president of Saint Olaf College, died (b. 4 January 1857, in Beitsteden,
Norway).
1996 The last of the
Magdalene Asylums was closed in
Ireland. Magdalene Asylums were homes for "fallen" women,
most of them operated by different orders of the Roman
Catholic Church. It has been estimated that around 30,000
women were admitted during the 150-year history of these
institutions, often against their will.