A "walking bible", Argula von Grumbach was the first woman who publicly campaigned for the Reformation in 1523. A significant and memorable act from Argula was her challenging the faculty of the University of Ingolstadt on the teaching of the Bible.
On a day in the late summer of 1523, a young woman courageously takes
hold of quill and paper in her study. With determination, she writes a
letter to the faculty of the University of Ingolstadt. Her name is
Argula von Grumbach, aged 31, of noble descent, educated, mother of
four. Her bold action, with which she wanted to support a follower of
Luther, who had got into trouble, did not remain without consequences.
Argula von Grumbach makes history as the first female Protestant lay
theologian.
With a letter, a single woman
challenges the whole faculty of the university of Ingolstadt: Argula von
Grumbach requested that the professors ought to enter a public dispute
with her about the exegesis of the Holy Scripture. While they rubbed
their eyes when faced with this audacity, the sender knows exactly what
she wants: to contribute theological arguments to the case of the young
follower of Luther, Arsacius Seehofer, and ultimately to the cause of
the Reformation itself. She confidently ends her letter with the words:
"I have not written women's gossip to you, but the word of God, as a
member of the church."
God gave His people the courage to carry out His Will at appropriate time, and Argula von Grumbach is certainly an instrument of God in this monumental times.
Taken from: http://www.luther2017.de/en/18681/argula-von-grumbach-i-have-not-written-womens-gossip-you
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