Balthasar Cellarius Explained

Lothar Berthold
Birth Date:10 October 1640
Birth Place:Rottleben, Duchy of Brunswick-Lüneburg
Death Date:15 September 1689
Death Place:Helmstedt, Duchy of Brunswick-Lüneburg
Occupation:theologian
university teacher
Spouse:Elisabeth Gesenius
Children:Justus Cellarius

Balthasar Cellarius (10 October 1614 - 15 September 1689) as a German Lutheran theologian and preacher. He wrote prolifically.[1] [2] [3] In 1642 he moved to the University of Helmstedt where became a professor in New Testament studies.[2]

Life

The son of a rural pastor, Balthasar Cellarius was born in Rottleben, a village in the hills west of Leipzig and north of Erfurt. He grew up in modest circumstances, obtaining his schooling atfrom the Gymnasium in Gera. In 1632 he moved on to Jena where he studied Theology, emerging in 1638 with a Magister ("Masters") degree. Between 1637 and 1641 he supported himself as a teacher and author.[2] He spent around a year working in Wittenberg during 1641/42 and then went to Rudolstadt near Jena, where he was employed as a "mentor" by Friedrich Hofer von Uhrfahren, a leading citizen of the town.[2]

In 1642 he joined the University of Helmstedt, where he became a lecturer. Here he met Georg Calixtus, later described as his tutor, and Konrad Hornejus. The three began to exchange ideas.[2] After two years, on 5 July 1644, apparently at the instigation of Georg Calixtus, Cellarius was summoned to move to Braunschweig to become a preacher at the St.-Ulrici church.[2] [4] Two years later he was called back to Helmstedt to take up the office of General Superintendent, and the associated Theology professorship. A senior colleague, Justus Gesenius, objected to the appointment, believing that Cellarius had yet to pass all the necessary examinations. In the event the appointment was deferred for two years, but went ahead in 1648.[2] An intriguing further detail is that around this time Balthasar Cellarius married Elisabeth, one of the daughters of Justus Gesenius. Justus Cellarius, the couple's son, was born towards the end of 1649.[5] [6]

Cellarius now took on a second professorship at Helmstedt, and gave lectures on the New Testament, focusing on the Pericopes. He also joined in the polemics against the Roman Church. In 1650 the University of Helmstedt received a visitation in the course of which doctorates were conferred on Balthasar Cellarius, along with Gerhard Titius. At the same time he was appointed Abbot of the monastery at Marienthal. He managed largely to steer clear of the Syncretistic controversy with the so-called Orthodox Luterhans.[2]

On 10 April 1656 Cellarius delivered the funeral oration for his old teacher, the controversialist Georg Calixtus. Cellarius himself died on 15 September 1689.[2]

Output (selection)

Notes and References

  1. [Gerhard Müller (Lutheran theologian)|Gerhard Müller]
  2. Web site: Cellarius: Balthasar C., geb. 10. October 1614 zu Rottleben bei Frankenhausen im Schwarzburgischen .... . Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie. . 4. 1876. 79–80 . 27 January 2018.
  3. Web site: Balthasar Cellarius (1614-1689). Post-Reformation Digital Library. Junius Institute, Calvin Theological Seminary, Grand Rapids, Michigan. 27 January 2018.
  4. Book: Balthasar Cellarius . Allgemeine Staats- Kriegs- Kirchen- und Gelehrten-Chronicke, In welcher alle geist- und weltliche Denckwürdigkeiten und Geschichte, so sich vom Anfange der Welt bis auf unsere Zeit zugetragen ... aus bewährter und berühmter Männer Schrifften und Bibliothecken mühsam zusammen getragen, und ans Licht gestellet. 1742. Verlegts Johann Heinrich Zedler . 962.
  5. Web site: Justus Cellarius. Ali Hassan Khalil (compiler). MyHeritage Ltd. (Geni). 28 January 2018.
  6. Joachim Schmid: Cellarius, Justus. In: Horst-Rüdiger Jarck, Dieter Lent u. a. (Hrsg.): Braunschweigisches Biographisches Lexikon – 8. bis 18. Jahrhundert. Appelhans Verlag, Braunschweig 2006,, p.136 f.