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Lazarus Spengler
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Lazarus Spengler (13 March 1479 in – 7 September 1534 in Nuremberg) was a prominent supporter of and leader of the Protestant Reformation in Nuremberg, as well as a famous .Grimm, Harold John. (1978) Lararus Spengler: A lay Leader of the Reformation (Ohio State University Press)


Life and career
Spengler was the son of Georg and Agnes Spengler, and he was the 9th of 21 children. His father was a in the Imperial Court of Justice. Lazarus Spengler enrolled in the University of Leipzig in 1491. Upon the death of his father in 1496, Spengler returned to Nuremberg and obtained a position in the office of the Nuremberg ( Raths Syndikus). In 1507, he became the town clerk.

He met in 1518, when Luther passed through Nuremberg. Spengler became an ardent supporter, publishing Schutzred supporting Luther in 1519. He was active in reforming the church in Nuremberg, which drew unfavorable attention from religious conservatives. Spengler was one of Luther's supporters mentioned by name in Pope Leo X's , issued on 15 June 1520, threatening to Luther and his followers if they did not submit to the pope. With the support of the Nuremberg town council, Spengler refused to submit to the pope, and was subsequently excommunicated along with Luther by the pope on 3 January 1521, by the bull Decet Romanum Pontificem. In April 1521, Nuremberg sent Spengler as a delegate to the Diet of Worms.

Spengler and the Nuremberg town council continued to reform the church in Nuremberg throughout the 1520s, and in 1525, Spengler traveled to to consult Luther and Philipp Melanchthon about the possibility of converting the Ägidienstift into a Protestant gymnasium. Luther and Melanchthon looked favorably on the proposal, and the gymnasium was opened by Melanchthon on 23 May 1526. In 1528, Spengler worked with the other reformers to convince the Elector of Saxony, John the Steadfast to authorize a canonical visitation, an activity that had previously been conducted exclusively by bishops. Spengler participated in the negotiations at the Diet of Augsburg in 1530, where he was a vocal defender of strict Lutheranism.

He was largely responsible for the design of the , adopted by Luther at the time of the Diet of Augsburg. He is also remembered as the author of several , some of which remain in hymn books to this day. One of these, "Durch Adams Fall ist ganz verderbt" (All Mankind Fell In Adam's Fall), is quoted in the Book of Concord, the official Lutheran confession.Tappert, Theodore G. (1959) The Book of Concord (Fortress Press), p. 467


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