- Louis de Sabran
Louis de Sabran (or Lewis Sabran) was a French Jesuit born in Paris, 1 March, 1652; died in Rome, 22 January, 1732. He was associated with the court of
James II of England and who engaged in vigorous theological debates with bothChurch of England andPuritan spokesmen.He was the son of the Marquis de Sabran of
Provence , who was a representative of the French court in London during the Commonwealth, and who visited the executed CatholicsCorby andVenerable John Duckett before their deaths. Louis married an English lady, was educated at the English Jesuit seminary ofSt. Omer , being ordained in 1679 and admitted to theSociety of Jesus in 1688.In 1687 he was made the royal
chaplain to James II. A sermon he preached to the king on August 28th of that year on the invocation of saints led to a pamphlet war with William Gee, aPuritan . He also entered into a controversy withWilliam Sherlock , the Anglican theologian and Dean of St. Paul's. He was the assumed author of "Dr. Sherlock Sifted from his Bran and Chaff" in 1687, which Sherlock answered. Sabran answered the reply with "An Answer to Dr. Sherlock's Preservative" and then "Dr. Sherlock's Preservative Considered" in 1688. That same year he was made the chaplain to the infantPrince of Wales .When the
Glorious Revolution began, Sabran was responsible for getting the prince out of the country. They headed forPortsmouth , but he was then ordered to return to London before being allowed to escape. He disguised himself as an attendant to a group of Polish nobles but was discovered by a crowd and beaten and imprisoned. He was freed from prison, however, by order of the king. Dr. Sherlock coincidentally issued a reply to Sabran as the revolution was starting, entitled "A Vindication: an Answer to the Cavils of Lewis Sabran".After returning to France, Sabran was elected to be sent to
Rome, Italy to the Vatican by the council of Watten in 1693. He was appointed visitator of theNeopolitan Jesuits, and represented his province at Rome in the congregation of 1693, when the case of Father González was discussed. In 1699, thePrince-Bishop of Liège made him the president of theseminary there to answer charges ofJansenism among the faculty. The bishop had to enforce order with soldiers. Once the crisis was passed, Father Sabran's rule was successful, and he remained there until 1704.In 1708/09, he was made
provincial superior . He then wrote to Father Metcalfe, a Jesuit in the North, about the progress of Jansenism, but his letter was intercepted, and was declared by some to portend that he intended to gain possession of theUniversity of Douai , as he had done that of Liège. A long-drawn and somewhat bitter controversy ensued. From 1712-15, he was the headmaster of St. Omer, and in 1717 he was made the spiritual father of the English College in Rome. He died in Rome in 1732.The titles of his controversial tracts can be found in
Sommervogel 's encyclopedia; he is alleged to have written a paper, "Artes Bajanae" (about 1701), against Jansenism.References
* Cooper, Thompson and Geoffrey Holt. "Lewis Sabran". In Matthew, H.C.G. and Brian Harrison, eds. "The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography." vol. 48, 518-519. London:
Oxford University Press .
*Catholic|Louis de Sabran
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