Mikael sang Diaken
Praèn
Mikael sang Diaken | |
---|---|
Data pribadi | |
Lair | Mikael s. 1500-an |
Agami | Kristen |
Denominasi | Ortodoks Oriental |
Profesi | Diaken |
Greja | Greja Tewahedo Ortodoks Ethiopia |
Kedudukan senior | |
Profesi | Diaken |
Mikael sang Diaken yaiku diaken ing Greja Ortodoks Ethiopia ing abad ping 16 M.[1]
Ing 1534, Mikael sang Diaken datheng menyang Wittenberg lan ketemu karo Martin Luther, pimpinan Reformasi Protestan.[2][3] Ing pertemuan kasebut, kalorone ngebandingke Misa Lutheran karo misa sing dikanggo dening Greja Ortodoks Ethiopia lan nemoke nek kaloro misa kasebut nduweni kacocokan siji karo liyane.[1][4] Mikael sang Diaken uga nyebut Pasal-pasal Luther saka Iman Kristen minangka "kredo sing apik".[3][1] Sahinggo, Greja-greja Lutheran ngeambake persekutuan penuh karo Greja Ortodoks Ethiopia.[5][1]
Referensi
[besut | besut sumber]- ↑ a b c d Daniels, David D. (21 October 2017). "Honor the Reformation's African roots" . The Commercial Appeal. Dibukak ing 9 April 2018.
- ↑ Luther Digest: An Annual Abridgment of Luther Studies, Volumes 2-4 . Luther Academy. 1994. kc. 146.
During the summer of 1534, an Ethiopian monk Deacon Michael visited Wittenberg. With great satisfaction Luther recorded that among the Christians in Ethiopia neither the private Mass nor the Mass canon was known, and their order of service generally corresponded to that of evangelical congregations of Germany (WA Tr 5:450, #6045).
- ↑ a b Daniels, David D. (2 November 2017). "Martin Luther and Ethiopian Christianity: Historical Traces" . University of Chicago. Dibukak ing 9 April 2018.
- ↑ Daniels, David D. (28 October 2017). "Martin Luther's 'dream' church? It wasn't in Europe" . Religion News Service. Dibukak ing 9 April 2018.
- ↑ Daniels, David D. (31 October 2017). "Martin Luther's fascination with Ethiopian Christianity" . The Christian Century. Dibukak ing 9 April 2018.
Luther extended full fellowship to Deacon Michael and the Ethiopian Church, an invitation Luther withheld from the Bohemian Brethren (the Hussites) and Reformed Churches connected to Ulrich Zwingli.