Gerhard of Zütphen

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gerhard of Zütphen, or Zerbolt of Zutfen, was a a mystical writer and one of the first of the Brothers of the Common Life.

[edit] Biography

He was born at Zütphen, in the Netherlands, in 1367. Even in the Brothers of the Common Life's community of "plain living and high thinking", founded by Gerhard Groote and Florentius Radewyn at Deventer, also in the Netherlands, Gerhard was remarkable for his absorption in the sacred sciences and his utter oblivion of all matters of merely earthly interest.

He held the office of librarian, and his deep learning in moral theology and canon law did the brothers good service, in helping them to meet the prejudice and opposition which their manner of life at first aroused.

He died at Windesheim in 1398.

[edit] Writings

His best known works are entitled "Homo quidam" and "Beatus vir"; the two are almost identical (de la Bigne, Bibliotheca Patrum, XXVI).

Two other treatises on prayer in the mother-tongue and on reading the Scripture in the mother-tongue are attributed to him (Ullmann, Reformatoren vor der Reformation; and Hirsche in Herzog's Realencyklopädie, 2nd ed.).

Ullmann and other controversialists have used Gerhard of Zütphen's zeal for propagating the vernacular Scriptures as proof to connect the Brothers of the Common Life with the German Reformers; but an examination of Gerhard's arguments, as quoted by them, reveals with how little foundation.

[edit] Source

This article incorporates text from the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913. [1]