Samuel Maresius

Samuel Des Marets or Desmarets (Latin: Maresius; Oisemont, 1599 – Groningen, 18 May 1673) was a French Protestant theologian.[1][2][3]

Samuel Maresius (1599–1673) (Jacob van Meurs (I), 1655)

Life

He was born in Picardy, northern France. He studied in Paris, in Saumur Academy under Gomarus, and in Geneva at the time of the Synod of Dort. He was ordained in 1620, and preached at Laon until a controversy with Roman Catholic missionaries. Feeling his life was in danger, he left in 1624. which led to an attack on his life.

He became professor at the Academy of Sedan (1625), pastor at Maastricht (1632), pastor and professor at 's-Hertogenbosch (1636), and at Groningen (1643). He won a reputation that led to calls to Saumur, Marburg, Lausanne, and Leiden. He died at Groningen on 18 May 1673.

Works

He wrote more than one hundred works, including a Systhema theologiae (Groningen, 1645; 4th ed., 1673, with an appendix giving a list of his writings), worked out in scholastic fashion, which was much used as a textbook. His literary activity was chiefly polemical, against Roman Catholics, Socinians, Arminians, Amyraldism as represented by Dallaeus, Chiliasm and other views.

Notes

  1. Emile Haag La France protestante, 1853, p. 250: "réformée, la famille Des Marets n'avait pas cessé un instant de se montrer fort attachée aux doctrines évangéliques. Lambert, homme ... avoir été jamais malade. Dès son enfance, Samuel Des Marets montra une forte inclination pour l'étude."
  2. Bettye Thomas Chambers Bibliography of French Bibles, p. 486, 1994: "Samuel Des Marets (1599–1673), professor of theology at Groningen,"
  3. Louis Mayeul Chaudon, Dictionnaire universel, historique, critique, et bibliographique, Volume 11 1810, p. 125: "MARÉTS (Samuel des), né à Oismond en Picardie l'an 1599, avec des dispositions heureuses, étudia à Paris, à Saumur et à Genève."

References

  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Jackson, Samuel Macauley, ed. (1914). New Schaff–Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge (third ed.). London and New York: Funk and Wagnalls. Missing or empty |title= (help)
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