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<span class=prefix>Rev</span> Samuel Simon Schmucker

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Rev Samuel Simon Schmucker

Birth
Hagerstown, Washington County, Maryland, USA
Death
26 Jul 1873 (aged 74)
Gettysburg, Adams County, Pennsylvania, USA
Burial
Gettysburg, Adams County, Pennsylvania, USA GPS-Latitude: 39.8196069, Longitude: -77.2303622
Memorial ID
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Samuel Simon Schmucker was born on February 28, 1799 in Hagerstown, Maryland. His father, John George Schmucker, was a German immigrant and an ordained pastor in the Pennsylvania Ministerium. At age 15, he enrolled in the University of Pennsylvania. Schmucker was very controversial in his time and angered many in the Lutheran community. Many did not consider him a true Lutheran, rather they thought of him as a Puritan or a Calvinist. One belief that alienated him from his fellow Lutherans, was that he did not believe in the Real Presence in the Lord's Supper. He also wanted to discard the Augsburg Confession as a declaration of Lutheran belief in favor of a mutilated confession compatible with Reformed theology. He published numerous works, including: "Fraternal Appeal to the American Churches on Christian Union" (1838), "The American Lutheran Church (1851), "The Lutheran Symbols" (1856), and "The Church of the Redeemer as developed within the General Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church" (1870).
Samuel Simon Schmucker was born on February 28, 1799 in Hagerstown, Maryland. His father, John George Schmucker, was a German immigrant and an ordained pastor in the Pennsylvania Ministerium. At age 15, he enrolled in the University of Pennsylvania. Schmucker was very controversial in his time and angered many in the Lutheran community. Many did not consider him a true Lutheran, rather they thought of him as a Puritan or a Calvinist. One belief that alienated him from his fellow Lutherans, was that he did not believe in the Real Presence in the Lord's Supper. He also wanted to discard the Augsburg Confession as a declaration of Lutheran belief in favor of a mutilated confession compatible with Reformed theology. He published numerous works, including: "Fraternal Appeal to the American Churches on Christian Union" (1838), "The American Lutheran Church (1851), "The Lutheran Symbols" (1856), and "The Church of the Redeemer as developed within the General Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church" (1870).


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