David Pareus

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

David Pareus (30 December 1548 – 15 June 1622) was a German

Protestant theologian
and reformer.

Life

He was born at

Frankenstein in Schlesien
on 30 December 1548. At some point, he hellenized his original surname, Wängler (meaning "cheek"), as Parēus (from Greek παρειά or παρηή, "cheek").

He was apprenticed to an apothecary and again to a shoemaker. In 1564 he entered the school of Christoph Schilling at Hirschberg, whom he accompanied to Amberg, in 1566; but immediately entered the Collegium Sapientiae, at Heidelberg. His father disinherited him because of the opinions that David formed during his studies, under Zacharias Ursinus. On 13 May 1571 he became pastor at Niederschlettenbach and six months later a teacher in the Paedagogium at Heidelberg. On 24 August 1573 he resumed the pastorate in the previously Roman Catholic village of Hemsbach; where, with the consent of the congregation, he reconstructed the church along Reformed lines.

Dismissed from his office after the death of

Frederick V, Elector Palatine
returned temporarily to the Palatinate, Pareus returned to Heidelberg, in May 1622, where he died on 15 June 1622.

He was survived only by his son Philipp (1576-1648), who issued his father's writings, to which he prefixed a biography (Frankfurt, 1647).

Works

David Pareus. Operum Theologicorum Partes quatuor. Frankfurt: Rosa, Jonas, 1647.

Pareus began his literary activity with a tract against the doctrine of

Jakob Andrea
, in his Christliche Erinnerung (Tabingen, 1589), styled this publication an "arrant piece of knavery"; while Pareus, in Rettung der Neustadter Bibel (Neustadt, 1589), answered in a more moderate tone.

Pareus further contended against

Egidius Hunnius
, in 1593-99, who accused him of the judaizing error of the Reformed party, with Clypeus veritatis catholicae de sacrosancta trinitate and Orthodoxus Calvinus. He also issued various tracts against the papacy (1604–17).

Despite these many literary battles, Pareus was by nature

irenic. In constructive activity were the many editions, after 1593, of his Summarische Erklärung der Katholischen in der Churpfalz geübten Lehre; and his numerous commentaries on the Old and New Testament Scriptures (published 1605-1618). In the Irenicum sive de unione et synodo evangelicorum liber votivus (Heidelberg, 1614-1615), he proposed a general synod of all Evangelicals to unite the Lutherans and the Calvinists, who, he represents, were surely at one in every essential. On only one point, however, not affecting the foundation of belief, was there divergence. This appeal of Pareus brought little response from his contemporaries, and his overture for peace was rejected by the Lutheran theologians Hutter
and Siegwart.

Pareus advocated calling rulers to account for their actions. These opinions were viewed with suspicion by the absolute monarchy of

James I of England. In 1622, authorities in Oxford
were ordered to search libraries and bookshops and to burn every copy of his work.

References

Attribution

Public Domain This article incorporates text from a publication now in the

New Schaff–Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge
(third ed.). London and New York: Funk and Wagnalls.