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  1. Juan von Staupitz fue el superior de los agustinos observantes de Alemania, el mentor y confesor de Lutero, y también el decano de teología en la Universidad de Wittenberg. Staupitz tuvo un rol crucial, aunque involuntario, en la Reforma. Cuando un conflicto antiguo dentro de los agustinos surgió una

  2. The Front-Runner of the Catholic Reformation: The Life and Works of Johann von Staupitz (PDF) The Front-Runner of the Catholic Reformation: The Life and Works of Johann von Staupitz | Franz Posset - Academia.edu

    • Franz Posset
  3. Johann von Staupitz und Martin Luther (Mainz 1991). 8 Adolar Zumkeller , OSA Johannes von Staupitz und seine chris-tliche Heilslehre (Würzburg 1994). 9 Staupitz fu e vicario general d I a congregación aleman los augustinos en los años 1503-1520. 525 Universidad Pontificia de Salamanca

  4. Johann von Staupitz OSA ( c. 1460 – 28 December 1524) was a German Catholic priest and theologian, university preacher, [1] and Vicar General of the Augustinian friars in Germany, [2] who supervised Martin Luther during a critical period in his spiritual life.

  5. Despite Luther's defection from Rome, he was to remain on good terms with the orthodox Staupitz who was consistently at the forefront of reformation within the Catholic Church. This book sheds light on the spiritual and theological beliefs of Staupitz, placing him in the midst of the late medieval reform efforts in the Augustianian order.

    • Franz Posset
  6. Tübingen, Johann von Staupitz, the vicar general of the German Augustinian Observantines, was appointed dean of the theological faculty at the newly founded University of Wittenberg in 1502. At the Augustinian cloister in Erfurt, Staupitz counseled the tormented monk Martin Luther to look to God’s love instead of his countless and continuous

  7. Subject. History of Christianity Christian Theology. Collection: Oxford Scholarship Online. Johannes Von Staupitz was Luther's superior in the Augustinian order, his predecessor in the chair of Bible at the University of Wittenberg, and his adviser in an especially critical period of his theological development.