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  1. 28 de abr. de 2024 · Baltasar Hubmaier fue considerado heresiarca tanto en el Índice de libros prohibidos elaborado por el Concilio de Trento (1545-1563) como por el Índice de la Inquisición española (1583-1584).

  2. Introduction. Hubmaier and the Reformation. Dr. Balthasar, the Catholic -- From priest to Reformer -- Reformation and confrontation in Waldshut -- The Schaffhausen exile -- A new day for Waldshut -- Swabian union as mediator -- Between Zwinglianism and Anabaptism -- Hubmaier and Anabaptism.

  3. Hubmaier’s Eighteen Articles In April 1524, Hubmaier organized a debate in Waldshut, at which time he introduced his first work called, “Achtzehn schluß rede so betreffende ein gantz Cristlich leben, waran es gelegen ist” (Eighteen Articles About the Entire Christian Life, And What They Consist Of). 4 It consists of eighteen articles which deal with the entirety of Christian life.

  4. Balthasar Hubmaier 1480-1528. Hubmaier was born of poor parents in Augsburg, Germany. Although little is known of his early life, he was an unusual student, receiving the Master’s degree in 1511 from the University of Freiburg and the Doctor of Theology degree two years later from the University of Ingolstadt, where he became professor of theology.

  5. Balthasar Hubmaier was an Anabaptist theologian who earned a theological doctorate at the University of Ingolstadt with John Eck and served as an early colleague of Huldrych Zwingli. He opposed Martin Luther's doctrine of the bondage of the human will.

  6. 30 de mar. de 2012 · With this approach, Hubmaier turned to the Eucharist, second only to justification as the most divisive doctrine of the sixteenth century. 3 Hubmaier objected to Roman Catholic transubstantiation, Lutheran consubstantiation, and Zwinglian sacramentarianism on the grounds that all of them, in their concern with the status of the elements, had lost sight of the internal transformation that ...

  7. Balthasar Hubmaier is often called ‘the theologian of the Anabaptists’ for he was the only early Anabaptist leader with an earned doctorate. The former Catholic priest embraced the reforming thought of Erasmus, Zwingli, and eventually Zwingli’s former pupils (the Anabaptists) and led the Moravian city of Nikolsburg to become a bastion of Anabaptist thought and practice.