Johannes Gossner
Johannes Evangelista Gossner (14 December 1773 – 20 March 1858), German divine and philanthropist, was born at Hausen near Augsburg.
He was educated at the University of Dillingen. He, like Martin Boos and others, came under the spell of the Evangelical movement promoted by Johann Michael Sailer, the professor of pastoral theology.
After taking priests' orders, Gossner held livings at Dirlewang (1804-1811) and Munich (1811-1817), but his evangelical tendencies brought about his dismissal and in 1826 he formally left the Roman Catholic for the Protestant communion. As Reformed (Calvinist) minister of Bethlehem's Church (1829-1846), a Lutheran and Reformed simultaneum in Berlin, he was conspicuous not only for practical and effective preaching, but for the founding of schools, asylums and missionary agencies.
Lives of Gossner have been written by Bethmann Hollweg (Berlin, 1858) and Hermann Dalton (Berlin, 1878).
See also
- Gossner Theological College
- Gossner Evangelical Lutheran Church in Chotanagpur and Assam
- North Western Gossner Evangelical Lutheran Church
References
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External links
- Gossner, Johannes Evangelista, from Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge
- Gossner Missionary Society, from Christian Cyclopedia
- Gossner Mission Homepage
- Free scores by Johannes Gossner at the International Music Score Library Project
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- 1773 births
- 1858 deaths
- German Roman Catholic priests
- German Protestant clergy
- German philanthropists
- Converts to Calvinism from Roman Catholicism
- Former Roman Catholics
- Founders of Indian schools and colleges