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4 The Apocalypse And The Zurich Reformers
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Published:December 2000
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Abstract
Leo Jud was born at Gemar in Alsace, southwest of Strasbourg and attended the Latin School at Selestat at the same time as Martin Bucer. In 1499, he matriculated at the University of Basel, where he met and became friends with Ulrich Zwingli. He intended to study medicine but soon turned to theology under the influence of Thomas Wyttenbach. Jud was ordained a priest in Rome in 1507. From 1507 until 1512, he was deacon at Saint Theodore’s in Basel, and from 1512 to 1518, he was preacher at Saint Hippolyte in Alsace. In 1519, he succeeded Zwingli at Einsiedeln, while becoming increasingly favorable to the Reformation. In 1522, he was chosen, on Zwingli’s recommendation, to become pastor of Saint Peter’s in Zurich, where he took up his duties on 2 February 1523. He was at Zwingli’s side during the Second Zurich Disputation (26–28 October 1523) and during the confrontation with the radical Anabaptists in 1525. He was a judge (one of the two clergymen together with four laymen) of the marriage court from its inception in 1525.
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