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Emser EnoyoloDedia THE NEW SCHAFF-HERZOG
able issue of the controversy was chiefly the result of the character of the opposition movement itself. To be sure, motives of religion and of ecclesiastical reform were not entirely wanting; considerations of German national feeling were not lacking; but primarily the archbishops most heartily desired to benefit their own interests as archbishops and territorial sovereigns-interests in the assertion of which they were hindered by the extension of the papal power. As a result the contest soon took on essentially the character of politics or of church politics. Thereby they lost the support which the sympathy of the Roman Catholic population and clergy might have given them; thereby the harmony of the archbishops themselves suffered. The curia owed its victory to the attitude of the German bishops, who felt themselves threatened by an increase of archiepiscopal power, to the energetic action of the Bavarian Palatinate, and to the emperor's inadequate support of the archbishops; and last, not least, to the commencement of the revolutionary period and to the circumstance that the entire development of post-Reformation Catholicism was on the side of the curia. CARL MIaBT.
BxaLxoaesra:: Reaultat des Emser Konprrasu, Frankfort, 1787; F. K, von Moser, Gesckichte der pdpatliclun Nurr kan in Deufichland, i b. 1788; Hiatorierhe Denkutlrdipkaitm des KardinaL . . . Paws, Augsburg, 1832; E. von Winch, Gearhichte dew Emser Konprusea. Carlsruhe, 1840; M. 8tigloher, Die Errichtunp der pttyetliehsn Nuntiatur in MQndren and der Eraser Konpreas, Regensburg, 1887: O. Meier, Febroniua, Tiibingen, 1880; H. Brilok, Geechirhta dar kathoEischen K ircAe im 18. Jadrhundart, Dart i., Main:. 1902.
EMSER, HIERONYMUS: Literary opponent of Luther; b. at tTlm, Mar. 16 (267), 1478 (1477?); d. at Dresden Nov. 8, 1527. He studied at Tiibingen (1493-97) and at Basel, where he received his first and second degrees; in consequence of certain satirical verses, which offended the Swiss, he was driven from the latter city. As secretary and chaplain he accompanied the papal legate, Cardinal Raymond Peraudi, on a tour of visitation in Germany (1502 sqq.), and thus came to know a great part of the land and its famous men. At the request of the cardinal he published (1503) a treatise De crucibtus, attesting certain alleged miracles in the course of the war against the Turks. In 1504 he edited the works of Pico dells Mirandola at Strasburg, taught at Erfurt, where he had Luther among his hearers, and went to 1.eipsic, where he became bachelor of theology in Jan., 1505. Duke George of Saxony had already chosen him secretary and this post called him to Dresden. For some years he was occupied with the effort to secure canonization for Benno, bishop of Meissen (q.v.), which took him to Rome in 150fi07. He received rich benefices and led a very comfortable life at Dresden and Leipsic. A Latin treatise on the origin of the custom of drinking healths, an uncritical and fantastic life of Benno, an essay on the best way of keeping wine, numerous light verses, and new editions of the works of others belong to this period.
When the Reformation came Eraser naturally took sides against Luther, having no true appreciation of the dangers of the Church and sharing in the jealousy which the Saxon court felt toward
Wittenberg. He considered Luther a Hussite, a revolutionist, one who, contrary to the Bible, rejected the utterances of traditional authority, sacrificed the " ecclesiastical " priesthood to the " laical," uprooted the papacy, and stirred up the common people against the clergy and rulers. After the Leipsic Disputation (1519) an open rupture took place and a controversy began, by no means edifying and without profit to the cause. It is sufficiently characterized by stating that during its progress Luther called Eraser the he-goat of Dresden, with reference to his escutcheon, and Eraser called Luther the bull of Wittenberg, After a time Luther gave up the contest, but Eraser continued to issue original works and translations or new editions of the works of others against Luther, writing generally in German and often in doggerel verse to catch the ear of the people. He criticized Luther's translation of the New Testament, exhorted the bishops to provide a better, and ultimately undertook the task himself; in Aug., 1527, his work appeared, made to resemble Luther's folio edition as much as possible, with illustrations by Cransch and his scholar, Gottfried Leigel, which had already been used in Luther's " December " Bible of 1522. Introductions and notes are added; but at the end Eraser warns the laity against Bible-reading. The work at once became popular, and in its original form and worked over by Johann Dietenberger and by Eck, it appeared in more than one hundred editions during the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries. Luther criticized it sharply as stolen from his text.
Of the earlier literary. opponents of the Ref or mation Eraser was the most indefatigable. He published his writings at no small personal expense. He was well read in the fathers and had good humanistic training. But he was uncritically and blindly devoted to tradition, and quite unable to appreciate the motives which influenced Luther. His hatred for the latter steadily increased and he wished more and more earnestly to have him silenced by force. (G. Kwwxltwu.)Bxnrsooawrar: G. E. Waldau, Nadvriclvt von H. Eanaer's Leban, Anepaah, 1783; P. Mown, H. Eraser, der Vork8mpfer Rom* pagan die Reformation, Halls, 1890; G. Kawerau, Hieronymus Emear, Halls, 1898. On his New Testament, consult G. W. Panaer, Varauch ainer kurzen Geachichte der rtlmiach-katholiachen daubchen Bibelnberaafzunpen, pp. 18 eqq., Nuremberg. 1781.
EIiCIEftIA (Gk. enkainia): A dedication festival; applied particularly to the Jewish festival commemoratiyg the rededication of the Temple (see SYNAGOGUE), and to the anniversaries of church dedications (see CONSECRATION).
ENCRATITES, en'cra-twits (" the Self-disciplined," " the Continent "): A name given in the Christian heretic-histories to certain sectaries, who abstained from animal food, intoxicating drinks, and sexual intercourse. Strictly speaking there was no sect of Encratites, nor did they have a particular founder, though Eusebius (Hilt. eccl., iv. 28) first mentions Tatian as such. Nor can they be lumped together with the Gnostics, which, however, does not mean that Encratites here and there may not have represented Gnostic teachings.