Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Heinrich Bullinger’s Early Life . Bullinger was a second generation Reformer. He was the fifth son born to Heinrich Bullinger senior and his wife Anna ( née Wiederkehr). Heinrich senior was a parish priest in the church at Bremgarten, a city in central Switzerland, when Heinrich junior was born in 1504.

  2. 18 de jul. de 2022 · Born 18 July 1504, the fifth son of the priest, Henry Bullinger, Heinrich was sent to study at the prestigious Emmerich Seminary on the Rhine, at aged 12. At 15 years old, he enrolled at the University in Cologne, earning his Bachelor of Arts the next year. It was at this time that he was converted to the Reformed faith through studying the ...

  3. Heinrich Bullinger (1504–1575): Life - Thought - Influence. Throughout the year 2004 a Quincentenary Jubilee was held in Zurich to mark the birth of Heinrich Bullinger, Swiss Reformer and successor (Der Nachfolger) to Huldrych Zwingli after the latter’s death at the battle of Kap-pel in 1531. Bullinger served as Antistes (Prelate) of the ...

  4. 1 de ene. de 2007 · Books. Heinrich Bullinger. Emidio Campi. Theologischer Verlag Zürich, Jan 1, 2007 - Religion - 1005 pages. Aus Anlass des 500. Geburtstages von Heinrich Bullinger (1504-1575) fand im Jahre 2004 ein internationaler wissenschaftlicher Kongress in Zurich statt, organisiert durch das Institut fur Schweizerische Reformationsgeschichte der ...

  5. Ethelbert William Bullinger. Multimedia w Wikimedia Commons. Johann Heinrich Bullinger (ur. 18 lipca 1504 w Bremgarten w szwajcarskiej Argowii, zm. 17 września 1575 w Zurychu) – szwajcarski reformator religijny i teolog protestancki [1]. Jego potomkiem był Ethelbert William Bullinger . Johann Heinrich był nieślubnym synem proboszcza ...

  6. Heinrich Bullinger: An Introduction to His Life and Theology. By Donald K. McKim and Jim West. Eugene, OR: Cascade Books, 2022. xxvii + 162 pp. 26.00 paper. - Volume 92 Issue 2

  7. 8 de oct. de 2020 · Heinrich Bullinger’s Decades, presented as a set of sermons on the major points of Christian doctrine, was one of the first comprehensive statements of Reformed theology. The 50 sermons provide a robust defence of the orthodoxy of the Zurich church by demonstrating its adherence to the historical teachings of the early church.