Tomasz Młodzianowski
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Tomasz Młodzianowski (coat of arms Dąbrowa) (born 21 December 1622 near Ciechanów, died 3 or 9 October 1686 in Wolbrom) was a Polish Jesuit, preacher and writer.
Life
He was a member of Mazovian yeomanry (drobna szlachta). In 1637 he begun the Jesuit novitiate. In 1648 he received the holy orders. From 1654 to 1656 he was a missionary in Isfahan. While coming back he visited the Holy Land. He has been a lecturer in the colleges in various cities of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, and a chaplain. In 1673 he became the deputy provincial. From 1680 to 1683 he was the rector in the well-known college in Poznań. After his death king John III Sobieski said: The order of the Society has a great loss in this man. He was buried in the church of saint Peter and Paul in Kraków.
Works
He won the fame of a great preacher. In 1674 he was speaking in the coronation mass of John III Sobieski. He has written down 73 homilies and 179 sermons. He used to publish occasional speeches separately. The rest is collected in his Kazania i Homilie (Poznań 1681), with over 2,000 pages in folio in four volumes. He used to avoid macaronic language, speak clearly, make the lecture interesting through concepts, explain abstract ideas to the audience (e.g. comparing the apostles to the MPs), include proverbs. His other works are:
- Praelectiones (1666-1674) – a series of handbooks presenting full theology and philosophy
- Integer cursus theologicus et philosophicus – a revised and expanded version of the above
- Rozmyślania albo Lekcya duchowna – meditations, in 1680-1754 published 6 times
- Akty przygotowania się na śmierć – about good death, between 1685 and 1758 edited 7 times
See also
Bibliography
- Nowy Korbut, ed. Roman Pollak, v. 2, Warszawa 1964, p. 526-527.
- Kasper Niesiecki, Herbarz polski, v. VI, Leipzig 1841, p. 427-429.
- 1622 births
- 1686 deaths
- 17th-century Christian mystics
- 17th-century Latin-language writers
- Polish Jesuits
- Roman Catholic mystics
- 17th-century Polish people
- Polish male writers
- Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań
- 17th-century Roman Catholic priests
- 17th-century Jesuits
- Polish Roman Catholic missionaries
- Jesuit missionaries
- Roman Catholic missionaries in Iran
- 17th-century male writers
- Roman Catholic clergy stubs