- Jean Frederic Ostervald
Jean-Frédéric Ostervald (
25 November 1663 -April 14 ,1747 ), SwissProtestant pastor, was born atNeuchâtel in 1663 in a patrician family, a son of the Reformed pastor Johann Rudolf Ostervald. He was educated atZürich and atSaumur (where he graduated), studiedtheology atOrléans underClaude Pajon , atParis underJean Claude and atGeneva underLouis Tronchin , and was ordained to the ministry in his native place in 1683.He spent the most part of his life at Neuchâtel, first as a diacon, then from 1699 a pastor, and finally he was elected
deacon . Besides this he gave lectures at the academy of theology. As preacher, pastor, lecturer and author, he attained a position of great influence in his day, he and his friends, J. A. Turretini of Geneva and S. Werenfels (1657-1740) ofBasel , forming what was once called the Swiss triumvirate. He was thought to show a leaning towardsSocinianism andArminianism .His innovative proposals embraced dogmatics,
exegesis (his important translation of and commentary on theBible ),liturgy (Bible reading instead of preaching),hymnology and moral theology (importance of good deeds and moral life). His writings had a great influence, bearing spiritual renewal or exploding contests among Valdenses, Dutch, German, Hungarian andScandinavia n protestants. Moreover, the English Royal Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts – of which he was a member – brought his teachings to the countries of theMiddle East ,India ,Canada and the West-Indian Islands. His highly influential oeuvre was later called "the second Reformation".In August 1746 he had a stroke in the pulpit. He died in Neuchâtel on
April 14 ,1747 , after 61 years of service. His pastor's office was inherited by his son Jean Rodolphe (1687-1764). His grandson was the historian and geographer Samuel Frédéric (1713-1795), whose geographical works were translated into Hungarian by István Losonczi ofHányok (1709-1780).Ostervald's principal works are "Traité des sources de la corruption qui regne aujourd'huy parmi les chrétiens" (1700), translated into English, Dutch and German, practically a plea for a more ethical and less doctrinal type of
Christianity ; "Catéchisme ou instruction dans la religion chrétienne" (1702), also translated into English, Dutch and German; "Traité contre l'impureté" (1707); "Sermons sur divers textes" (1722-1724); "Theologiae compendium" (1739); and "Traduction de la Bible" (1724). All his writings attained great popularity among French Protestants; many were translated into various languages; Ostervald'sBible , a revision of the French translation, in particular, was long well known and much valued in Britain.References
*1911
External links
* [http://ichthus.pompignane.free.fr/NewFiles/biboster.html La Sainte Bible, version Ostervald, révision de 1996] – an online version of Ostervald's Bible
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