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[[de:Andreas Musculus]]
[[de:Andreas Musculus]]
[[ru:Андреас Мускулус]]


{{BD|1514|1581|Musculus, Andreas}}
{{BD|1514|1581|Musculus, Andreas}}

Revision as of 12:15, 9 May 2008

Andreas Musculus (151429 September 1581), was a German Lutheran theologian. The name Musculus is a Latinized form of Meusel.

Musculus was born in Schneeberg, Saxony, and educated in Leipzig and Wittenberg. He became professor in university of Frankfurt an der Oder. As a theologian he was Gnesio-Lutheran and polemic against the Interim, Andreas Osiander the Elder, Franciscus Stancarus, Philipp Melanchthon and John Calvin [1].

Musculus was one of the co-authors of the Formula of Concord. He was also one of the most remarkable defenders of Eucharistic adoration in early Lutheranism. His main work on this subject is Propositiones de vera, reali et substantiali praesentia, Corporis & Sanguinis IESU Christi in Sacramento Altaris, Francofordiae ad Oderam, 1573. He also edited prayer books with the classical hymns for the adoration of the Sacrament[2]. He died in Frankfurt (Oder).

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