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Encyclopedia > George Cassander

George Cassander (or Cassant) (1513 - February 3, 1566), Flemish theologian, born at Pitthem near Bruges.


He went at an early age to Louvain and was teaching theology and literature in 1541 at Bruges and shortly afterwards at Ghent. About 1549 he removed to Cologne, where, after a profound study of the points of difference between the Catholic and reformed churches, he devoted himself to the project of reunion, thus anticipating the efforts of Leibniz.


In 1561 he published anonymously De officio pii ac publicae tranquillitatis vere amantis viri in hoc religionis dissidio (Basel), in which, while holding that no one, on account of abuses, has a right utterly to subvert the Church, he does not disguise his dislike of those who exaggerated the papal claims. He takes his standpoint on Scripture explained by tradition and the fathers of the first six centuries.


At a time when controversy drowned the voice of reason, such a book pleased neither party; but as some of the German princes thought that he could heal the breach, the emperor Ferdinand asked him to publish his Consultatio de Articulis Fidei lute, Catholicos et Protestantes Controversis (1565), in which, like Newman at a later date, he tried to put a Catholic interpretation upon Protestant formularies.


While never attacking dogma, and even favouring the Roman church on the ground of authority, he criticizes the papal power and makes reflections on practices. The work, attacked violently by the Louvain theologians on one side, and by Calvin and Beza on the other, was put on the Roman Index in 1617. He died at Cologne on the 3rd of February 1566. The collected edition of his works was published in 1616 at Paris.


This article incorporates text from the public domain 1911 Encyclopędia Britannica.


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Jean Bodin (9606 words)
Nevertheless, his criticisms of the Catholic Church should not be taken as signs of Bodin's adherence to the Reformed creed since the same views were expressed by a number of important jurists, theologians, and writers of the period; many of whom held an active interest in the new evangelical ideas.
Their Catholicism may not have conformed to the orthodoxy of Rome, but it was similar to the reformist program of the Erasmian School (see, for example, the cases of Charles Du Moulin, François Bauduin, Claude d'Espence, George Cassander, Jean de Monluc, and others).
Weill, Georges J., 1891, Les théories sur le pouvoir royal en France pendant les guerres de religion, Paris (1971).
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