Place in Bavaria, Germany
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In Folge neun unseres Podcasts zu Gast: "Sportler des Jahres" 2024 aus Schwabach und Spieler der Falcons: Tom Stoiber.
„Wenn durch einen unserer Tipps nur ein Fahrer nochmal in den Spiegel schaut – und ein Unfall dadurch verhindert wird – dann haben wir schon was erreicht.“– Jessica, Flottenexpertin bei Gentele & Kollegen in Schwabach bei Nürnberg.In dieser Folge gibt dir Jessica einen Einblick in ihren Job als Versicherungsmaklerin im Bereich Kfz-Flotten bei Gentele & Kollegen, einem unabhängigen mittelständischen Versicherungsmakler.Vom Umgang mit Rahmenverträgen für ganze Fuhrparks über die direkte Kommunikation mit Kunden aus allen Ebenen bis hin zur smarten Nutzung von Schadendaten zur Prävention – Jessica zeigt, wie vielseitig, kundennah und wirksam der Alltag in einem mittelständischen Maklerhaus sein kann.✅ Flottenversicherung in der Praxis – vom klassischen Firmenwagen bis zur komplexen Fahrzeugflotte✅ Vertragsmanagement mit Überblick – Rahmenverträge & schlanke Prozesse✅ Datenbasierte Prävention – wie aus Schadenanalyse echte Mehrwerte für Kunden entstehen✅ Schadensabwicklung mit Verantwortung – Ansprechpartnerin, Vermittlerin und Problemlöserin in einem✅ Kundenkontakt auf Augenhöhe – Austausch mit Geschäftsführern, Sachbearbeitern & Fahrern
In der Blütezeit der Goldschlägerei arbeitete jeder sechste Schwabacher in einem der zahlreichen Handwerksbetriebe. Heute gibt es hier nur noch zwei davon und aus dem Handwerk wurde ein Maschinen-Werk. Ist Blattgold daher nur noch museale Nostalgie und Tourismus-Konzept?
Der Vortrag wurde von Jonathan Leeman auf der E21-Regionalkonferenz Südost 2024 in Schwabach gehalten.
Der Vortrag wurde von Kai Soltau auf der E21-Regionalkonferenz Südost 2024 in Schwabach gehalten.
Der Vortrag wurde von Jonathan Leeman auf der E21-Regionalkonferenz Südost 2024 in Schwabach gehalten.
Der Vortrag wurde von Jonathan Leeman auf der E21-Regionalkonferenz Südost 2024 in Schwabach gehalten.
Terrorermittlungen in Hof eingestellt + Handballsensation: Coburg besiegt Lemgo Lippe + Luftwaffenrekruten legen Gelöbnis in Schwabach ab + Einweihung OP-Neubau in Hof + Würzburg stellt Christbäume in der Stadt auf + Freibad Bischofsgrün (Lkr. BT) wird erneuert + Hackerangriff auf Mailsystem in Aschaffenburg
Tatverdächtiger nach Messerattacke in Schwabach festgenommen + Fahndung nach Tankstellenräuber in Uettingen (Lkr. Würzburg) + Spielzeughersteller Haba streicht weitere Stellen
VGN Nürnberg wird teurer + Helios-Klinik in Hammelburg geschlossen + Nach Leichenfund in Schweinfurt: Spurensicherung erneut im Einsatz + Berufsberatung im Nürnberger Stadionbad + Unterfränkische Landwirte zufrieden + "Kinetic Wall" im Nürnberger Zukunftsmuseum + Vorfreude auf Goldschlägernacht in Schwabach
VGN Nürnberg wird teurer + Helios-Klinik in Hammelburg geschlossen + Nach Leichenfund in Schweinfurt: Spurensicherung erneut im Einsatz + Berufsberatung im Nürnberger Stadionbad + Unterfränkische Landwirte zufrieden + "Kinetic Wall" im Nürnberger Zukunftsmuseum + Vorfreude auf Goldschlägernacht in Schwabach
Bete!
12.07.2023 1. Timotheus 3 gelesen von Elida Sitzmann, Schwabach by Gemeinschaftsverband Sachsen-Anhalt
Ein offenes Treffen für alle, die sich Gedanken über eine Willkommenskultur in den Pfarrgemeinden machen, fand vor kurzem in Schwabach statt. Dort hat man sich in St. Sebald Gedanken gemacht, wie man Menschen im Gottesdienst begrüßen kann, die eher selten in die Kirche gehen. Bernhard Löhlein berichtet.
Ref.: Andrea Miller, Schwabach
„Doppelwumms“ oder Rohrkrepierer? Auf diese Frage hat der Bundestagsabgeordnete Sascha Müller eine einfache Antwort: „Die Koalition hat vieles auf den Weg gebracht und ich bin zuversichtlich, dass die Maßnahmen Wirkung zeigen werden“, sagt der Finanzexperte der Grünen. So sei die Gaspreisbremse ein probates Mittel, um weitere Gaspreiserhöhungen – soweit sie jetzt nicht schon angekündigt sind – auszuschließen. Es führt aber dennoch kein Weg am Energiesparen vorbei, so Müller.
Durchsuchungen in Villa in Rottach-Egern wegen umgangener EU-Sanktionen durch einen russischen Oligarchen / Ausländische Gäste fühlen sich wohl auf dem Oktoberfest / Auch Bayern trauert um die Queen / Bewährungsstrafe für LKW-Trunkenheitsfahrt in Fürth / Tierschutzskandal in Bad Grönenbach vor Gericht / Suchaktion nach vermisstem Bergsteiger am Hochkalter erfolglos / Beobachtungen in einem Baumarkt in Schwabach - mögliche Lösungen für Energieversorgung / Nürnberger Hallenbäder senken die Wassertemperatur auf 26 Grad / Bodensee-Schiff "Mainau" ist das erste elektrisch betriebene Passagierschiff / Ellertshäuser See wird wieder aufgefüllt / Reichsbürgertreffen an Coburger Schule bleibt ohne strafrechtliche Folgen / Grüne fordern Moratorium für Bau der Zweiten Stammstrecke in München / Sportkurse können gegen Demenz helfen / App für Lehrstellen-Vermittlung in Bayreuth vorgestellt
Das markante Bauwerk der evangelischen Gethsemanekirche und seine Anlage in einem großen Gartengrundstück ist schon etwas ganz Besonderes und sucht weitum seinesgleichen. Alles ist Ausdruck einer tiefen, in der Bibel wurzelnden Symbolik.
12.07.2022 1. Timotheus 3 gelesen von Elida Sitzmann, Schwabach by 1189 Stimmen für 365 Tage
Warum gibt es eigentlich keine geilen Bagels in Deutschland?! - Diese Frage hat den Stein ins Rollen gebracht für diese äußerst interessante Episode mit THE SIT aus Nürnberg. Wir sprechen nicht nur über Bagels, leckeres New-York-Streetfood und das noch recht unbekannte Konzept der Ghostkitchen, nein, wir reden heute auch mal ganz offen darüber, was bei Lieferdiensten und der Gastro zur Zeit so gar nicht passt und wie Servet und Mehmet versuchen einen neuen Standard in Sachen Lieferessen zu setzen!Falls ihr aus Nürnberg, Fürth, Erlangen, Schwabach oder Herzogenaurach kommt, könnt ihr euch mit dem Rabattcode - fettundrauchig - selbst davon überzeugen und dabei noch 20% sparen. #notasponsor (ab 05.06.22)FETT & Rauchig findest du auch auf INSTAGRAM: fettundrauchigWer FETT & Rauchig unterstützen möchte, der kann das hier tun! https://www.patreon.com/fettundrauchigIch freue mich außerdem sehr, wenn ihr den Podcast bei iTunes und Spotify bewertet und auch, wenn ihr euren Freunden, Kollegen oder sogar euren Feinden von Fett & Rauchig erzählt!Unsere allgemeinen Datenschutzrichtlinien finden Sie unter https://art19.com/privacy. Die Datenschutzrichtlinien für Kalifornien sind unter https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info abrufbar.
Ein neuer Bundestagsabgeordneter für den Nürnberger Süden und Schwabach. Sascha Müller ist seit der letzten Wahl für die Nürnberger Grünen und Schwabacher im Deutschen Bundestag. Wir haben ihn das erste Mal seit der Wahl wieder getroffen und hatten einiges an Gesprächsstoff. Wir sprechen über die aktuell ins Spiel gebrachte Extrasteuer für Unternehmen, die vom Krieg profitieren, die gescheiterte Impfpflicht im Bundestag und ob derzeit an Maßnahmen für eine mögliche nächste Welle gearbeitet wird, den Ukrainekrieg und über das Tempolimit. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/politik-punk/message
Eine junge Frau aus Schwabach (19) bezichtigte einen Kollegen der Vergewaltigung: Nun ist klar - das Verbrechen hat es nicht gegeben.
Ach du dickes Ei oder besser - ach, wie viele Eier! Im Stadtmuseum Schwabach in Mittelfranken gibt's es auch in diesem Jahr - passend zu Ostern - die weltweit größte Eier-Sammlung. Das Team um Museumsleiter Tobias Schmid hat viele Schätze gesammelt. Sehr seltene, sehr alte und kostbare Eier - alle mit einer besonderen Geschichte. Sogar ein echtes Dino-Ei gibts zu sehen.
08.02.2022 2. Mose 39 gelesen von Steve Sitzmann, Schwabach by 1189 Stimmen für 365 Tage
Kurz vor Weihnachten geben Magdalena und Axel noch einmal alles: Schwabach einflussreichster Podcast Unfug und Recht ist zurück. Wir wünschen Euch frohe Weihnachten und ein gutes, gesundes, neues Jahr!
In this bonus Christmassy episode, Kate is talking about two kinds of lebkuchen: an old fashioned aged lebkuchen from Shauna Sever's Midwest Made and Elisenlebkuchen from Axel from Schwabach near Nuremburg (thanks Axel!). Let me know your thoughts on the podcast: flourbuttereggssugar@gmail.com If you listen on Apple Podcasts, leave a review! And find us on Facebook and Instagram. Website including recipes: flourbuttereggssugar.com
For real: What were you doing during your sophomore year of college? Probably not what Jessica Schwabach was doing, which was starting her own plant-based meat company. Two years later, Jessica has gone through two prestigious accelerator programs, created products that have been sold in dozens of stores, and just raised a $4 million seed round, including investment from food giant Nestle. Just what is this new founder CEO doing that has so many people so interested? Well, she and her team at Sundial Foods have created some alt-chicken wings, with skin and all, that are apparently knocking people's socks off.
vom Bauprojekt bis zum schnellen Internet - es geht was voran in Schwabach und wir erzählen euch wer, wie, was, wieso, weshalb, warum?! Und dann gibt es da noch drei Fragen zu beantworten...
Ein Nachbarschaftsstreit in Regensburg ist inzwischen derart eskaliert, dass der eine dem anderen dreckige Unterhosen vor die Nase hängt. Wie es so weit kommen konnte und was ein "Kacke-Christbaum" ist - darüber reden wir mit Meike Föckerberger aus dem BR Studio Ostbayern. Deutlich geschmackvoller geht's in London zu: Dort kommt heute wieder das berühmteste Bild des geheimnisvollen Graffiti-Künstlers Banksy unter den Hammer. Beim letzten Mal wurde «Girl With Balloon» geschreddert und dadurch noch berühmter - und wertvoller.Und: Viele Ärzte warnen seit einigen Tagen vor einer aufgestauten Krankheitswelle bei Kindern. Wir fragen nach bei Kinderarzt Dr. Volker Rösch aus Schwabach in Mittelfranken.
Nach einer langen Sommerpause geht es endlich wieder los: Unfung & Recht, Schwabachs einflussreichster Podcast geht in eine neue Runde. Magdalena und Axel sprechen über Bau, Radwege und natürlich bleibt auch die Bundestagswahl nicht unerwähnt.
Am Tag des Schokoladeneises steht uns ein ausgewiesener Experte zur Verfügung: Luca de Rocco betreibt eine Eisdiele in Schwabach und kennt das Geheimnis für ein richtig gutes Schokoladeneis.
Synopsis Some classical music snobs look down their nose at film scores, considering them less “serious” than “art” music written for the concert hall. Aaron Copland, for one, deplored this attitude. He admired the work of composers like Bernard Herrmann, Alex North, David Raksin, and Elmer Bernstein, whose successful Hollywood careers earned them financial rewards on the West Coast, if not the respect of the snootier East Coast music critics. Copland himself had spent some time in Hollywood, and knew what was involved in completing a film score on time AND on budget. On today’s date in 1940, at Grauman’s Chinese Theater in Hollywood, the press was invited to a special preview showing of a new film version of Thornton Wilder’s popular stage play “Our Town.” To match Thornton Wilder’s nostalgic play about American life in Grover’s Corners, New Hampshire, Copland’s score employed harmonies suggestive of old New England church hymns. For once, audiences AND the critics were impressed, and Copland quickly arranged an “Our Town” concert suite, which premiered on a CBS Radio broadcast in June of 1940, and reworked this suite for its first public performance by the Boston Pops and Leonard Bernstein in May of 1944. Music Played in Today's Program Aaron Copland (1900 – 1990) Our Town Suite Saint Louis Symphony; Leonard Slatkin, cond. BMG 61699 On This Day Births 1740 - Italian composer Giovanni Paisiello, in Roccaforzata, near Taranto; 1814 - German pianist and composer Adolph von Henselt, in Schwabach,Bavaria; Deaths 1707 - German organist and composer Dietrich Buxtehunde, age c. 70, in Lübeck; 1770 - (on May 9 or 10) English composer, conductor and writer on music Charles Avison, age 61, in Newcastle upon Tyne ; 1791 - American statesman and songwriter Francis Hopkinson, age 53, in Philadelphia; He was one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence, and dedicated a book of his songs to George Washington; 1799 - French composer Claude Balbastre, age c. 72, in Paris; Premieres 1812 - Rossini's opera "La Scala di seta" (The Silken Ladder), in Venice; 1868 - Bruckner: Symphony No. 1, in Linz, composer conducting; 1893 - Rachmaninoff: opera "Aleko," in Moscow at the Bolshoi Theater (Julian date: April 27); 1924 - R. Strauss: ballet "Schlagobers" (Whipped Cream), in Vienna; 1940 - The film "Our Town" opens in Hollywood at Grauman's Chinese Theater; The film was based on the play of the same name by Thorton Wilder, and featured a filmscore by Aaron Copland; Copland arranged a suite of music from his filmscore, which premiered on CBS Radio on June 9, 1940; A revised version of the suite was given its first public performance by the Boston Pops conducted by Leonard Bernstein on May 7, 1944; 1981 - Christopher Rouse: "The Infernal Machine" for orchestra (Movement II of Rouse's "Phantasmata"), at the Evian Festival, France, by the University of Michigan Symphony Orchestra, Gustav Meier conducting; 1986 - Ellen Taaffe Zwilich: "Concerto Grosso" (after Handel's Sonata in D), by the Handel Festival Orchestra of Washington, Stephen Simon conducting; 1988 - Bernstein: "Arias and Barcarolles," at Equitable Center Auditorium in New York City, by vocalists Louise Edeiken, JoyceCastle, John Brandstetter, and Mordechai Kaston, with the composer and Michael Tilson Thomas at the piano; An orchestrated version of this work prepared by Bright Sheng premiered on September 22, 1989, at the Tilles Center of Long Island University with the New York Chamber Symphony conducted by Gerard Schwarz and featuring vocalists Susan Graham and Kurt Ollmann; 1990 - John Harbison: "Words from Patterson" (to texts by William Carlos Williams), at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., with baritone William Sharp and the members of the New Jersey Chamber Music Society; 1998 - John Tavener: "Wake Up and Die," for solo cello and orchestral cello section, at the Beauvais Cello Festival in Beavais , France; 1999 - Zwillich: "Upbeat!" by National Symphony, Anthony Aibel conducting; Others 1863 - American premiere of Berlioz's "Harold in Italy," by the Theodore Thomas Orchestra in New York. Links and Resources On the film "Our Town" The Copland Collection at the Library of Congress
Synopsis Some classical music snobs look down their nose at film scores, considering them less “serious” than “art” music written for the concert hall. Aaron Copland, for one, deplored this attitude. He admired the work of composers like Bernard Herrmann, Alex North, David Raksin, and Elmer Bernstein, whose successful Hollywood careers earned them financial rewards on the West Coast, if not the respect of the snootier East Coast music critics. Copland himself had spent some time in Hollywood, and knew what was involved in completing a film score on time AND on budget. On today’s date in 1940, at Grauman’s Chinese Theater in Hollywood, the press was invited to a special preview showing of a new film version of Thornton Wilder’s popular stage play “Our Town.” To match Thornton Wilder’s nostalgic play about American life in Grover’s Corners, New Hampshire, Copland’s score employed harmonies suggestive of old New England church hymns. For once, audiences AND the critics were impressed, and Copland quickly arranged an “Our Town” concert suite, which premiered on a CBS Radio broadcast in June of 1940, and reworked this suite for its first public performance by the Boston Pops and Leonard Bernstein in May of 1944. Music Played in Today's Program Aaron Copland (1900 – 1990) Our Town Suite Saint Louis Symphony; Leonard Slatkin, cond. BMG 61699 On This Day Births 1740 - Italian composer Giovanni Paisiello, in Roccaforzata, near Taranto; 1814 - German pianist and composer Adolph von Henselt, in Schwabach,Bavaria; Deaths 1707 - German organist and composer Dietrich Buxtehunde, age c. 70, in Lübeck; 1770 - (on May 9 or 10) English composer, conductor and writer on music Charles Avison, age 61, in Newcastle upon Tyne ; 1791 - American statesman and songwriter Francis Hopkinson, age 53, in Philadelphia; He was one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence, and dedicated a book of his songs to George Washington; 1799 - French composer Claude Balbastre, age c. 72, in Paris; Premieres 1812 - Rossini's opera "La Scala di seta" (The Silken Ladder), in Venice; 1868 - Bruckner: Symphony No. 1, in Linz, composer conducting; 1893 - Rachmaninoff: opera "Aleko," in Moscow at the Bolshoi Theater (Julian date: April 27); 1924 - R. Strauss: ballet "Schlagobers" (Whipped Cream), in Vienna; 1940 - The film "Our Town" opens in Hollywood at Grauman's Chinese Theater; The film was based on the play of the same name by Thorton Wilder, and featured a filmscore by Aaron Copland; Copland arranged a suite of music from his filmscore, which premiered on CBS Radio on June 9, 1940; A revised version of the suite was given its first public performance by the Boston Pops conducted by Leonard Bernstein on May 7, 1944; 1981 - Christopher Rouse: "The Infernal Machine" for orchestra (Movement II of Rouse's "Phantasmata"), at the Evian Festival, France, by the University of Michigan Symphony Orchestra, Gustav Meier conducting; 1986 - Ellen Taaffe Zwilich: "Concerto Grosso" (after Handel's Sonata in D), by the Handel Festival Orchestra of Washington, Stephen Simon conducting; 1988 - Bernstein: "Arias and Barcarolles," at Equitable Center Auditorium in New York City, by vocalists Louise Edeiken, JoyceCastle, John Brandstetter, and Mordechai Kaston, with the composer and Michael Tilson Thomas at the piano; An orchestrated version of this work prepared by Bright Sheng premiered on September 22, 1989, at the Tilles Center of Long Island University with the New York Chamber Symphony conducted by Gerard Schwarz and featuring vocalists Susan Graham and Kurt Ollmann; 1990 - John Harbison: "Words from Patterson" (to texts by William Carlos Williams), at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., with baritone William Sharp and the members of the New Jersey Chamber Music Society; 1998 - John Tavener: "Wake Up and Die," for solo cello and orchestral cello section, at the Beauvais Cello Festival in Beavais , France; 1999 - Zwillich: "Upbeat!" by National Symphony, Anthony Aibel conducting; Others 1863 - American premiere of Berlioz's "Harold in Italy," by the Theodore Thomas Orchestra in New York. Links and Resources On the film "Our Town" The Copland Collection at the Library of Congress
Es ist ein Donnerstag am späten Nachmittag - Magdalena und Axel treffen sich zu ihrem monatlichen Podcast und... haben überhaupt keine Lust. Lasst euch mit einer vollen Breitseite Motivation verwöhnen und genießt die neue Folge des einflussreichsten Podcasts in Schwabach. Die nächste Folge wird wieder besser - versprochen ;)
Der evangelischen Christophoruskirche sieht man auf den ersten Blick gar nicht an, dass sie erst Anfang der 1950er Jahre errichtet wurde. Stilmittel alter mittelfränkischer Dorfkirchen sind gut sichtbar. Vier Glocken, 1952, 1957 und 2001 allesamt von der Gießerfamilie Bachert gegossen, rufen zum Gebet.
In dieser Folge sprechen Klaus und Daniel mit Michaela Jilg von der Kläranlage Schwabach. Wie wird man als Frau Leiterin im Abwasserbereich? Wie bekommt man berufliches und privates unter einem Hut? Was ist spannender Kläranlage oder Kanalnetz? Was ist der wichtigste Ablaufgrenzwert? Hört rein und lasst euch überraschen, ob Klaus und Frau Jilg verwandt sind :D. Folgt uns auf: https://www.linkedin.com/company/abwassertalk-wastewatertalk/ https://www.instagram.com/abwassertalk/
In dieser Folge erzählen wir euch welche Geschichte hinter der Ricarda-Huch-Straße in Schwabach steckt.
Eine Woche verspätet, aber dafür umso sehnlicher erwartet: Die neue Folge Unfug & Recht. Axel ist umgezogen und auch Magdalena sucht eine Wohnung in Schwabach. Da wäre es doch gelacht, wenn Schwabachs einflussreichster Podcast keine Abhilfe leisten kann ;) Hört rein und wie immer: Wir freuen uns auf eure Kommentare!
In dieser Folge erzählen wir euch welche Geschichte hinter der Berlichingenstraße in Schwabach steckt.
Immer wieder werden Soldatinnen und Soldaten der Bundeswehr zu einem Auslandseinsatz nach Jordanien geschickt. Begleitet werden sie dabei von Seelsorgerinnen und Seelsorgern. Von Anfang Dezember bis Anfang Februar war der katholische Militärdekan Michael Gmelch mit vor Ort. Gmelch stammt aus Schwabach. Sein Standort ist derzeit Neubiberg in München. Von seinen Erfahrungen hat er Bernhard Löhlein erzählt.
Immer wieder werden Soldatinnen und Soldaten der Bundeswehr zu einem Auslandseinsatz nach Jordanien geschickt. Begleitet werden sie dabei von Seelsorgerinnen und Seelsorgern. Von Anfang Dezember bis Anfang Februar war der katholische Militärdekan Michael Gmelch mit vor Ort. Gmelch stammt aus Schwabach. Sein Standort ist derzeit Neubiberg in München. Von seinen Erfahrungen hat er Bernhard Löhlein erzählt.
Der einflussreichste Podcast aus Schwabach meldet sich pünktlich nach der Stadtratssitzung zurück. Wie wird eigentlich eine Sandsteinbrücke saniert? Was geschieht auf dem Gelände des ehemaligen Drei-S-Werks? Und wieso zum Teufel trifft sich der Stadtrat mitten im Lockdown? Außerdem gibt Magdalena noch ein wenig Einblick in ihr Leben. Viel Spaß beim Hören. M&A
In dieser Folge erzählen wir euch, welche Geschichte hinter der Blattgoldstraße in Schwabach steckt.
Unser heutiges Thema des Tages befasst sich mit den Corona Schnelltests. Unsere Kollegin Annika Svitil versucht in ihrer Reportage vor Weihnachten in Schwabach einen Corona Schnelltest zu bekommen. Außerdem spricht unsere Kollegin Andrea Herrmann mit dem Arzt Alexander Auer über Schnelltests. Moderation: Daniela Stahl
Live LaufPodcast von unserer Backyard Strecke zwischen Nürnberg und Schwabach. Ist schon eine grandiose Idee an einem Freitag Abend bei Eis und Schnee nicht einfach ins Bett zu gehen sondern sich von einer Kuckucksuhr jede volle Stunde auf die Backyard Strecke schicken zu lassen oder?
Die Lesart in Schwabach und Ansbach wurden abgesagt. Doch die Literatur Tage in Lauf 2020 finden trotz Teil-Lockdown statt. Digital. Wie das funktionieren soll, darüber reden wir mit der Leiterin Ina Gombert
In dieser Folge erzählen wir euch, welche Geschichte hinter der Joachimsthaler Straße in Schwabach steckt.
In dieser Folge erzählen wir euch, welche Geschichte hinter der Fischgrubengasse in Schwabach steckt.
In dieser Folge erzählen wir euch, welche Geschichte hinter der Kloster-Ebrach-Straße in Schwabach steckt.
Am Sonntag fällt in vielen bayerischen Städten in einer Stichwahl die Entscheidung darüber, wer in den kommenden sechs Jahren als (Ober-)Bürgermeister oder Bürgermeisterin die Geschicke einer Stadt lenkt. Nutzt das Coronavirus tatsächlich den CSU-Kandidaten? Wer macht das Rennen in Nürnberg, Erlangen, Schwabach, Ansbach oder Feucht? NN-Chefredakteur Michael Husarek und Online-Chef Matthias Oberth mit einer kommunalpolitischen Einordnung.
Das Nürnberger Tennisturnier ist Geschichte, weil es keinen Hauptsponsor mehr gibt. Die Ice Tigers suchen nach dem Ausstieg von Thomas Sabo neue Geldgeber, viele andere Vereine auch. Der Unternehmer Jochen Scharf unterstützt die Zweitliga-Basketballerinnen in Schwabach, die Nürnberg Falcons, Brose Bamberg, aber auch die Ringer der Johannis Grizzlys oder die Gardetänzerinnen der Schwabanesen. Warum macht er das? Und warum machen es andere nicht? NN-Sportredakteur Sebastian Gloser hat nachgefragt.
Jessica Schwabach started Sundial Foods ( an alternative meats company) in a challenge lab at UC Berkeley with her co-founder Siwen Deng, ultimately winning the collider cup. Jessica is currently withdrawing from school in order to take Sundial Foods to an accelerator in Switzerland. What an inspiring story!
Gespräch mit Sandra Hoffmann-Rivero, Kulturamtsleiterin der Stadt Schwabach
An und für sich kann Michael Fraas mit seiner bisherigen Karriere sehr zufrieden sein. Als Wirtschaftsreferent hat er eine der einflussreichen Positionen bei der Stadt Nürnberg. Nun will der CSU-Mann in Schwabach die Nachfolge von OB Matthias Thürauf antreten. Ein Abstieg? Mitnichten sagt Fraas im Podcast von NN-Chefredakteur Michael Husarek und Online-Chef Matthias Oberth.
In this episode, Gillespie and Riley continue to read and discuss the Schwabach Articles. Baptism, the Lord’s Supper, Church, and all things churchy. Text: The Schwabach Articles, Sources and Contexts of The Book of Concord, trans. William R. Russel, p.83. Show Notes: Banned Books #57 - Schwabach Articles, Part 1 Banned Books LIVE Blues Brothers SWAT scene Beatles “All Together Now” Banned Books #56 - Marburg Articles Sin and Confession on the Eve of the Protestant Reformation - Thomas Tentler — Questions? Comments? Show Ideas? Send them to us at BannedBooks@1517legacy.com. Please subscribe, rate, and review the show in Apple Podcasts: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/banned-books-podcast/id1370993639?mt=2. We’re proud to be part of 1517 Podcasts, a network of shows dedicated to delivering Christ-centered content through weekly, monthly, and seasonal audio platforms. Our podcasts cover a multitude of content, from Christian doctrine, apologetics, cultural engagement, and powerful preaching. Support us with a regular gift at 1517. And as always, don't forget Gillespie's coffee for your caffeinated needs and especially the 1517 Reformation Roast
In this episode, Gillespie and Riley read and discuss The Schwabach Articles. Sin, faith, lots of Holy Spirit, and why the Schwabach Articles are the roots of Lutheran, Reformed, and Protestant confessions of faith. Text: The Schwabach Articles, Sources and Contexts of The Book of Concord, trans. William R. Russel, p.83. Show Notes: Banned Books LIVE Christendom - Capon Your Jesus Has Made You Well — Questions? Comments? Show Ideas? Send them to us at BannedBooks@1517legacy.com. Please subscribe, rate, and review the show in Apple Podcasts: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/banned-books-podcast/id1370993639?mt=2. We’re proud to be part of 1517 Podcasts, a network of shows dedicated to delivering Christ-centered content through weekly, monthly, and seasonal audio platforms. Our podcasts cover a multitude of content, from Christian doctrine, apologetics, cultural engagement, and powerful preaching. Support us with a regular gift at 1517. And as always, don't forget Gillespie's coffee for your caffeinated needs and especially the 1517 Reformation Roast
Es scheint so, als schwappt gerade eine Welle von Amtsmüdigkeit über das Land. Die amtierenden Oberbürgermeister Nürnbergs, Augsburgs und Schwabachs treten 2020 nicht mehr zur Wiederwahl an. Was ist da los?, fragen sich NN-Chefredakteur Michael Husarek und Online-Chef Matthias Oberth im Podcast.
First hour live recording of my Set at the Bürgerfest Open Air in Schwabach played in the very nice location Unfassbar.
First hour live recording of my Set at the Bürgerfest Open Air in Schwabach played in the very nice location Unfassbar.
Klaus Cäsar Zehrer, *1969 in Schwabach, ist promovierter Kulturwissenschaftler und lebt als freier Autor, Herausgeber und Übersetzer in Berlin. So viel hat Klaus Cäsar Zehrer schon veröffentlicht, u.a. gemeinsam mit Robert Gernhardt und Fil, aber auf seinen ersten Roman mussten wir eine Ewigkeit warten. Jetzt ist er endlich da! DAS GENIE erzählt die unglaubliche Lebensgeschichte von William James Sidis, Genie, Rebell und Visionär. Von seinem Vater regelrecht zu einer Intelligenzbestie herangezüchtet, wird er bereits mit 11 Jahren in Harvard gefeiert. Doch als William erwachsen wird, bricht er mit seinen Eltern und seiner Vergangenheit. Er weigert sich, seine Intelligenz einer Gesellschaft zur Verfügung zu stellen, die von Ausbeutung, Profitsucht und Militärgewalt beherrscht wird. Dass diese Geschichte so oder so ähnlich tatsächlich passiert ist, kann man kaum glauben. Ein faszinierender Roman, spannend, komisch, klug. Rechteinhaber: Diogenes Verlag http://www.diogenes.ch/leser/titel/klaus-caesar-zehrer/das-genie-9783257069983.html Foto © GORDON Photography
Zwölfuhrläuten aus den Kirchen Peter und Paul sowie St. Sebald in Schwabach in Mittelfranken
1 Stunde Livest Record vom Bürgerfest Schwabach 2017 Open Air in der Bar Unfassbar.
1 Stunde Livest Record vom Bürgerfest Schwabach 2017 Open Air in der Bar Unfassbar.
Welcome to Secrets of Organ Playing Podcast #99! http://www.organduo.lt/podcast Today's guests are two organists from Bavaria in Germany, Gerd Hennecke and Markus Kumpf. We met at Vilnius University St. John's church last week where a few days before Gerd played a concert of organ, vocal and oboe music together with soprano Gunta Gelgote and oboist Juste Gelgotaite. Gerd kindly agreed to share his organ journey with our podcast listeners and even brought a friend Markus who was returning to Vilnius from another town, Nida, a UNESCO protected national treasure on the Curonian Spit in the Western part of Lithuania. Both Gerd and Markus also played a joint recital this week in Vilkyskiai, a small town with the German organ about 250 kilometers west from Vilnius. Gerd Hennecke was born in Schwabach, Germany, in 1970. After the completion of a degree in Sacred Music in Bayreuth, he undertook further studies of organ music with Domkantor Professor Hartmut Rohmeyer in Lübeck. Since 1995 he worked as professional church musician in Augsburg and Wolfsburg. His current employment as organist and choirmaster with the Protestant „Church of Christ“ in Sulzbach-Rosenberg started in February, 2001. His work with several choirs and instrumental ensembles is widely acknowledged. In 2017, he was awarded the title of „Church Music Director“ (Kirchenmusikdirektor). In 2001, Gerd founded the „Sulzbacher Kantorei“ choir, which over the years has performed numerous oratories and a-capella concerts, showing a repertoire ranging from the Renaissance up to the Modern Era. Furthermore, he is also working as organ expert and campanologist. So in today's conversation, Gerd, Markus and I talk about their organist careers, the importance of having passion, good teachers and access to many different organs. Enjoy and share your comments below. And don't forget to help spread the word about the SOP Podcast by sharing it with your organist friends. Thanks for caring. You can reach Gerd and Markus by email: Gerd: kantorat.christuskirche.suro@elkb.de Markus: kantorkumpf@gmx.de
„Jedes Kind ist ein Unikat – deshalb soll es nicht in Uniform rumlaufen“, das ist die Auffassung von Cindy Schaab. Mit der Geburt ihrer Tochter hat die studierte Grafikerin und Marketingexpertin zu nähen begonnen. Die „Einheitsware“, die man zu kaufen bekommt, hat ihr einfach nicht gefallen. Außerdem sei Rosa nicht die Farbe für ihre Tochter - und sie will ihr Kind wiedererkennen und nicht aus einer Masse an einheitlichen Mützen herausfinden müssen. „Mein Kind ist einzigartig – und das soll man auch sehen“, sagt die Mutter. Es fiel schnell auf, dass Cindy’s Tochter andere Kleidung trug – und es kam gut an. Schnell entstand auch bei anderen Eltern der Wunsch nach individueller Kleidung. Und so wurde aus dem Hobby ein Beruf mit Berufung. Als Marketingexpertin fiel es Cindy Schaab nicht schwer ein eigenes Lable zu kreieren: „DinDin Handmade with love“. Zwischenzeitlich verkauft sie ihre Waren in zwei Geschäften. Im Lockenfrosch in Schwabach und im Kurzweil in Roth hat sie jeweils eine Regalreihe. Sie ist auch regelmäßig bei regionalen Märkten vertreten. Und die Nachfrage ist groß. So groß, dass sie zum „Einjährigen“ eine Modenschau veranstaltet. Zusammen mit einer Kollegin, die eine ähnliche Geschichte hat und unter dem Label „Fridas Enkeltochter“ anbietet, zeigen die beiden Damen die Herbst-Winterkollektion mit handgefertigten Kurzwaren für Kinder und Jugendliche, vom Baby bis zum Teenager. „Es gibt auch ganz viele Dinge zum Liebhaben“ lt. Cindy Schaab.
ZAK, das Zentrum für Arbeit und Kultur im fränkischen Schwabach, bietet Kindern mit dem "Schülerschloss" ein Rundum-Betreuungsangebot - wenn nötig, auch nachts und am Wochenende.
ZAK, das Zentrum für Arbeit und Kultur im fränkischen Schwabach, bietet Kindern mit dem "Schülerschloss" ein Rundum-Betreuungsangebot - wenn nötig, auch nachts und am Wochenende.
In dieser Ausgabe des Hackerfunks wollen wir euch auf die Reise schicken. Camps, Conventions, Ausstellungen. Wir reden über verschiedene Veranstaltungen rund um Linux, Hacking, Freie Software und die Demoszene. Sowohl für Wandernieren, als auch für Sofasurfer. Trackliste daXX – Chuck Rock RMX Little Bitchard – Four Themes and a Masterplan Press Play on Tape – Monkey Island Live @The Gathering 2003 Nächste Sendung am Samstag, 03. Oktober 2009, 19:00 Uhr Linuxday :: Linuxday in Dornbirn Linuxwochen :: Ãsterreichische Linuxwochen CLT :: Chemnitzer Linux-Tage Brandenburger Linux Infotag :: BLIT in Potsdam FrosCon :: FrosCon in Sankt Augustin bei Bonn Fosdem :: Fosdem in Brüssel CoSin :: Chaos Singularity in Bremgarten OpenExpo :: OpenExpo in Bern und in Winterthur Bünzli :: Bünzli Demoparty in Winterthur EuroBSDCon :: EuroBSDCon mit wechselndem Veranstaltungsort Breakpoint :: Breakpoint Demoparty in Bingen Evoke :: Evoke Demoparty in Köln GeekCamp :: Geekcamp in Altdorf LUG-Camp 2010 :: LUG-Camp 2010 in Schwabach LUG-Camp 2011 :: LUG-Camp 2011 irgendwo in der Schweiz XzentriX :: XzentriX in Seeshaupt LWE :: Linux World Expo CCC Congress :: Chaos Communication Congress in Berlin CCC Camp :: Chaos Communication Camp in Berlin Finowfurt HOPE :: Hackers On Planet Earth in New York Turrican Days :: Turrican Days der LUGBE in Cudrefin Mathias "Turrican" Gygax :: Nachruf auf Mathias "Turrican" Gygax bei der LUGBE OpenRheinRuhr :: OpenRheinRuhr in Bottrop Spezialradmesse :: Spezi in Germersheim ESC :: End Summer Camp in Venedig GPN :: Gulaschprogrammiernacht in Karlsruhe MRMCD :: MetaRheinMainChaosDays in Darmstadt HAR 2009 :: Hacking At Random 2009 in Vierhouten Wanderniere :: Ren Mobilis File Download (59:30 min / 61 MB)
In dieser Ausgabe des Hackerfunks wollen wir euch auf die Reise schicken. Camps, Conventions, Ausstellungen. Wir reden über verschiedene Veranstaltungen rund um Linux, Hacking, Freie Software und die Demoszene. Sowohl für Wandernieren, als auch für Sofasurfer. Trackliste daXX – Chuck Rock RMX Little Bitchard – Four Themes and a Masterplan Press Play on Tape – Monkey Island Live @The Gathering 2003 Nächste Sendung am Samstag, 03. Oktober 2009, 19:00 Uhr Linuxday :: Linuxday in Dornbirn Linuxwochen :: Ãsterreichische Linuxwochen CLT :: Chemnitzer Linux-Tage Brandenburger Linux Infotag :: BLIT in Potsdam FrosCon :: FrosCon in Sankt Augustin bei Bonn Fosdem :: Fosdem in Brüssel CoSin :: Chaos Singularity in Bremgarten OpenExpo :: OpenExpo in Bern und in Winterthur Bünzli :: Bünzli Demoparty in Winterthur EuroBSDCon :: EuroBSDCon mit wechselndem Veranstaltungsort Breakpoint :: Breakpoint Demoparty in Bingen Evoke :: Evoke Demoparty in Köln GeekCamp :: Geekcamp in Altdorf LUG-Camp 2010 :: LUG-Camp 2010 in Schwabach LUG-Camp 2011 :: LUG-Camp 2011 irgendwo in der Schweiz XzentriX :: XzentriX in Seeshaupt LWE :: Linux World Expo CCC Congress :: Chaos Communication Congress in Berlin CCC Camp :: Chaos Communication Camp in Berlin Finowfurt HOPE :: Hackers On Planet Earth in New York Turrican Days :: Turrican Days der LUGBE in Cudrefin Mathias "Turrican" Gygax :: Nachruf auf Mathias "Turrican" Gygax bei der LUGBE OpenRheinRuhr :: OpenRheinRuhr in Bottrop Spezialradmesse :: Spezi in Germersheim ESC :: End Summer Camp in Venedig GPN :: Gulaschprogrammiernacht in Karlsruhe MRMCD :: MetaRheinMainChaosDays in Darmstadt HAR 2009 :: Hacking At Random 2009 in Vierhouten Wanderniere :: Ren Mobilis File Download (59:30 min / 61 MB)
Zwölfuhrläuten aus Schwabach in Mittelfranken, Evang. Stadtkirche St. Johannes d. Täufer und St. Martin
https://storage.googleapis.com/communio-sanctorum/500Years-Part05.mp3As we come up to the 500 year anniversary of Reformation Day, when Martin Luther tacked his revolutionary list of exceptions to current church practice and belief to the Castle Church door in the German town of Wittenberg, we're faced with the realization that the Reformation embraced many more people than the popular telling of history enumerates. Many more.Who do we think of when we think of the Reformation? Martin Luther & John Calvin are the first two most would name. Then with a bit more searching of the gray matter, maybe Philipp Melanchthon & Ulrich Zwingli. There are, of course, dozens more notables who played important roles in the drama that was the Reformation. One of them is the focus of this episode – a man and name that ought to be as prominent in our knowledge of this period as Zwingli or Melanchthon –> Marin Bucer, the Reformer of Strasbourg.Before we get in to his story, a little background on the situation in Germany is a good idea.As moderns, we're used to thinking of history in terms of nation-states. Even as we think back to ancient times, we tend to cast the dominant empires as just very old versions of nation-states. That, despite the fact the modern nation-state of Western civ is a relatively recent invention. We must exercise caution as we review the history of Renaissance Europe and the period of the Reformation because it was this period of time that helped set the political climate for the eventual emergence of the modern world with its nearly ubiquitous carving up of the globe in nations with clearly defined borders.Voltaire once said, “The Holy Roman Empire was neither holy, Roman, nor an empire.” Yet, that's what we call that collection of principalities that formed a loose political collection from the 9th to the 17th C. In the 16th C, the Holy Roman Empire was politically centralized in name only. It was composed of several politically different regions that put a significant check on the Emperor's power. It was this division of power that made the Reformation possible, and helps explain why it took root in Germany rather than France or Spain. As the series we did in Season 1, The Long Road to Reform makes clear, there had been many attempts at reform of the Church prior to Luther and the early 16th C, but none had the Reformation's success precisely because they usually took place in areas that were governed by a single monarch dedicated to Rome. The HRE Emperor Charles V was also Rome's guy, but he only held his office due to the endorsement of 7 German prince-electors, who regularly differed from him on various issues. These powerful Electors and the noble-houses they were scions of had debated for years about the desirability of breaking with Rome. Martin Luther was able to succeed where others failed precisely because he arrived at a time when enough of these Electors had grown fed-up with Rome's meddling, the Emperor was politically weak, and the common people universally recognized the corruption of the Church's upper echelon.Martin Luther's political region was Saxony, ruled by the powerful and well-regarded Elector Frederick III, known as Frederick the Wise. His successors, both named John followed Frederick's support for Luther. The powerful Landgrave, Philip of Hesse, nestled West of Saxony & East of the Rhine, was another avid supporter of the Reformation. That support will play a key role in later developments for both Bucer & Luther. The Emperor walked a political tightrope as he sought to balance the demands of his these tetchy electors, dozens of lesser principalities, and the growing number of politically powerful free imperial cities ruled by councils that often acted as sovereign governments. As if that wasn't enough, Charles V also had war on multiple fronts to deal with, France in the West, the Ottomans in the East, and Italy to the South. The Reformation leaders realized the time was ripe for them to sever ties with Rome since the Emperor needed their support to deal with the external threats. It was a political perfect storm for a religious movement to emerge.Martin Bucer was born in the French region of Alsace, next to Germany, in the free imperial city of Schlettstadt. His family were coopers by trade – barrel-makers. Nothing's known of Martin's mother. His hometown boasted a well-known school where families of the Bucer social class sent their children. He graduated there in 1507 then, at his grandfather's insistence, became a monk-novice in the Dominican Order. A year in, he was made an acolyte in Strasbourg where he took vows as a friar. By 1510, he was ordained a deacon.Bucer then began studying theology in the Dominican monastery in Heidelberg 5 yrs later. A brief trip to Mainz saw him taking a course in dogmatics and ordination as a priest. In 1517, he returned to Heidelberg to enroll in the university. It was there that Bucer began to be influenced by the ideas of Erasmus and the humanists. It was also there at Heidelberg that everything was to change for him. In April 1518, Johannes von Staupitz, an Augustinian vicar-general, invited an upstart Augustinian monk named Martin Luther from Wittenberg to debate that monks increasingly troublesome views. This debate is known now as the Heidelberg Disputation. It's where Bucer met Luther for the first time. In a long letter to his friend, Bucer recounted what he learned, commenting on several of the theses Luther had posted, where then printed up and spread all over Germany. They were the points Staupitz wanted to dispute. But Bucer found himself intrigued by them, doubly so after hearing Luther's defense. He agreed & found in Luther's points much to connect with his emerging humanist ideas. The following year, Bucer received his degree, and while giving his disputation before the faculty of Heidelberg, made clear his theological break with Aquinas and Scholasticism.Bucer's next step in joining the Reformers was his departure from the Dominicans. That story is interesting and reads like a novel.The Grand Inquisitor of Cologne was the Dominican, Jacob van Hoogstraaten. He launched an inquiry into the teaching and views of the famous humanist scholar Johann Reuchlin. Now, in some places, like Spain, once the Inquisition set its sights on someone, everyone else beat a hasty retreat, lest suspicion fall on them as well. Not in Germany. Things were different there precisely because of the much weaker political structure. So when Reuchlin fell afoul of Hoogstraaten, several German nobles took Reuchlin's side, forcing Hoogstraaten to back down. Thwarted, he now was compelled to prove his title of Grand Inquisitor was deserved ad set his sights on Bucer, who he felt was an easier and more vulnerable target. When word reached Bucer he was now in the Inquisition cross-hairs, he decided to leave the Dominicans. Friends in the Order expedited the annulment of his vows, which were officially severed in April 1521.Though the Inquisition was now technically not able to go after him, it could work to see the annulment of his vows reversed. So over the next 2 yrs, the nobles who'd back Reuchlin came to Bucer's aid as well. He went to work as a chaplain in the court of the Elector of The Palatine and lived in the city of Nuremberg, the most powerful city of the Empire. The city government was a major supporter of the Reformation and the city became something of a magnet for Reformers. It was there Bucer met many who shared his views. In the Fall of 1521, Bucer accepted an offer to become pastor at Landstuhl. The next Summer, he met and married a former nun named Elisabeth.The city of Landstuhl was the center of one of Bucer's noble defenders, Franz von Sickengen, a German knight of confused reputation. Sickengen seems something of an opportunist who sided with commoners when it served to increase his wealth and prestige, then to back nobles for the same reason. He was something of a political pragmatist who saw in the Reformation a way to both advance his personal agenda while giving vent to his loyalty to the German people. He'd built himself a virtually impregnable castle at Landstuhl; at least impregnable by medieval styles of siegecraft. It became the scene of his ultimate defeat in 1523 when in a battle with other German nobles artillery was used for one of the first times.Wanting to advance the Reformation in his capital, Sickingen sent Bucer to Wittenberg for further study with Luther and his assistant Melanchthon. He stopped in the town of Wissembourg on the way and was persuaded by the local reformer, Heinrich Motherer, to stay and work for a time as chaplain. Bucer went to work preaching sermons each day calling for immediate reform. His special focus was abuse in the monastic orders. He was an ardent advocate of the Reformation solas; Sola Scriptura & Sola Fide. He decried the Mass as a recapitulation of Christ's saving work. He lambasted the monasteries as turning the Gospel into a system of salvation by works. Summing up his ideas in six theses, he called for a public disputation with his opponents, of which there were not a few. But the Franciscans and Dominicans ignored his challenge. Bad move on their part because it seemed to say to the local townspeople that they were afraid of not being able to refute Bucer's charges of corruption. Those townspeople, further agitated by Martin's sermons, began threatening the local monasteries. That was too much for the bishop at Speyer who then excommunicated Bucer. In a sign of the way things would go across Germany in the decades that followed, the town council decided to support the now persona-non-grata Bucer, rather than jail or exile him, thereby serving Rome it no longer aligned under its leadership. Events beyond the Wissembourg town-limits put Bucer in peril. His benefactor, von Sickingen, was defeated and killed during the Knights' Revolt I just mentioned. The Wissembourg council urged Bucer to leave. He fled to nearby Strasbourg. It was May 1523, and it's there that Martin Bucer had his greatest impact.Though Bucer arrived in Strasbourg as a political refugee with no visible means of support and no legal rights as a citizen, within 3 months he'd become a settled fixture and influential voice there. Upon his arrival, Bucer immediately wrote to Ulrich Zwingli in Zurich, asking for a post there were he could help the burgeoning Reformation cause. Before he heard back, the reformist-minded Strasbourg city council asked him to assist their local pastor by serving as his chaplain. Bucer began teaching Bible and was so effective one of the local guilds appointed him as the pastor of St Aurelia's Church. Strasbourg couldn't have the pastor of one of its most influential church not be a citizen, so citizenship was granted.Bucer was joined in Strasbourg by a team of capable minds all united by the Reformation Cause. Matthew Zell, Wolfgang Capito, & Caspar Hedio. Early on, Bucer called for a debate with Thomas Murner, a monk who'd attacked Luther with biting satire.Though Strasbourg's council leaned toward the reformist camp, like so many German political leaders of this time, it tended to vacillate on installing Reformation ideas. They wanted to reform the Church but balked at implementing changes to the civil sphere that would set them at odds with the Emperor and his allies. Because Bucer and his Reformer pals had the ear of the masses, hostility toward the civil magistrates grew apace with their hostility toward the Roman clergy.That hostility boiled over when a local Augustinian leader denounced the Reformers & Strasbourg city council as heretics. Furious mobs broke into and looted local monasteries. Opponents of the Reformation we re arrested, including that Augustinian leader. That proved the crisis that moved the Strasbourg council to realize if could not longer vacillate. They asked Bucer to produce an official statement clarifying for all what their theological position was. He drafted twelve articles outlining Reformation doctrine. Missing were such things as the Mass, monastic vows, veneration of saints, and purgatory. He specifically rejected the authority of the pope but emphasized obedience to civil government. The opponents to the Reformation who'd been arrested were released and exiled, ending any and all hurdles to the Reformation in Strasbourg. And all this before the Fall of 1523, the same year Bucer arrived there.Strasbourg's reformers then set about to build a new order of service for their churches. As their basic template, they adopted the order already in use in Zurich by the churches influenced by Zwingli, then made some tweaks. In an ambitious move, they suggested that ALL churches of the Reformation adopt the same order and presented their proposal to the luminaries at both Wittenberg & Zurich.Before we carry on with Martin Bucer's story, we need to pause for a narrative sidebar . . .THE central debate Reformers carried on among themselves, and the cause that ended up producing several different Reformation streams, was the doctrine of the Lord's Supper, Communion, the Eucharist. Early on, a rift appeared between Martin Luther and the Swiss Reformers led by Zwingli.Avoiding an overly technical dissertation, let me summarize the 2 positions by saying that Luther adamantly affirmed a real presence of Christ in the bread and wine of communion, while Zwingli regarded the elements of Communion as symbolic memorials to Christ and His work.For long time listeners to CS, these views were rooted in the Christological debates of the 4th & 5th Cs we spent so much time on in both Season 1 and the Creeds series of Season 2. Luther emphasized the unity of Christ's person, saying His human attributes were infused by His divine attributes, so He was present everywhere, including in the elements of the Lord's Supper. Zwingli emphasized Christ's dual nature as God and Man and that His body, while real, was resurrected and sat at the right hand of the Father in Glory.At the Marburg C olloquy where Lutherans and the Swiss met to seek concord, they were able to agree to 13 articles, but when could not achieve agreement on the last, detailing this issue of the presence of Christ in the Lord's Supper. It's been told that in the discussions between Luther and Zwingli, as Zwingli waxed long on a philosophical treatise supporting his position, Luther took a piece of chalk and wrote on the table in front of him, “This is my body.” As Zwingli kept talking, Luther just tapped the table beneath the words.As one biographer on this says, at Worms, Luther had announced that his conscience was held captive by The Word of God. There at Marburg, he clung to the same conviction. He would not allow himself to be swayed from Christ's simple statement “This is my body” by the erudite and reasoned position of Zwingli.So intractable was Luther on this issue, and so suspicious did he become of Zwingli attempting to dissuade him, Luther went so far as to suggest the Swiss weren't Christians. But that wasn't something he regarded very long. Indeed, as the Marburg Colloquy wrapped up, Zwingli asked Luther to draw up a list of the things they agreed on as a standard for all Reformed churches. Luther and Melanchthon, really it was mostly the latter's work, produced a total of 15 articles that became the standard accepted at Schwabach in 1529. Lutherans and the Swiss agreed on all but the last dealing with the Lord's Supper. It reads thus . . .Regarding the Last Supper of our dear Lord Jesus Christ, we believe and hold that one should practice the use of both species as Christ himself did, [by “both species” is meant both bread & wine. Remember that the Roman Catholics only used the wafer. Reformers advocated using both bread & wine] and that the sacrament at the altar is a sacrament of [and here we see the distinct Lutheran doctrine of the real prese nce] the true body and blood of Jesus Christ and the spiritual enjoyment of this very body and blood is proper and necessary for every Christian. Furthermore, that the practice of the sacrament is given and ordered by God the Almighty like the Word, so that our weak conscience might be moved to faith through the Holy Spirit. [Then Melanchthon adds verbiage acknowledging the differing opinions of the Reformers] And although we have not been able to agree at this time, whether the true body and blood of Christ are corporally present in the bread and wine [of communion], each party should display towards the other Christian love, as far as each respective conscience allows, and both should persistently ask God the Almighty for guidance so that through his Spirit he might bring us to a proper understanding.This theological division not only caused massive theological problems, it produced a plethora of political problems. Those German princes who'd supported the Reformation had hoped for a religious harmony to support their break with both Rome and Emperor. A fractured Protestant church was both weak. Bucer recognized this and worked feverishly to affect a compromise that would unite the Lutherans and Swiss. His efforts resulted in several important documents. His views of the Lord's Supper influenced Calvin, who also sought to affect a compromise between the two groups.Bucer's work toward that end began just a year after arriving in Strasbourg and continued for several years. Bucer himself had abandoned a belief in the real presence of Christ in the elements after his own study. What troubled Martin was the insistence by both Luther and Zwingli on maintaining their positions in peril of their unity and the disharmony it engendered, allowing a rift that weakened them in the face of hostile parties. He asked for their unity to be based on what they agreed on, rather than disunity based on where they differed.Bucer's story goes longer, but unfortunately, not this episode, so let's wrap it up . . .He ministered in Strasbourg for 25 years, and while his attempts to reconcile the Swiss & Lutherans was unfruitful, he did achieve a shot-lived concord in 1536. But Bucer's reputation was dealt a terrible blow by his support of The Count of Hesse's bigamy that we've talked about in other places. It was Bucer who persuaded Luther to support Philipp's secret marriage of a second wife. Along with Melanchthon, Bucer took part in the unsuccessful conversion of the Archbishop of Cologne in 1542.When the Protestant princes lost the Shmalkaldic War, the victorious Charles V convened a meeting at Augsburg to draw up articles known as the Interim. Bucer was “invited” to attend and be a voice for the drafting of the articles. When his edits were rejected, he was arrested and eventually coerced into signing them. But when he returned to Strasbourg, he attacked the Interim and continued his calls for reform of the church. The city council, now under close watch by imperial authorities asked Bucer to zip it. When he showed no sign of doing so they told him to leave.Archbishop Thomas Cranmer in England was watching events on the continent with interest. He invited Bucer & his pals who'd been booted from Strasbourg to come to England and help with the Reformation cause there. They arrived in April of 1549 and within days were introduced to King Edward VI. Bucer was given a position as a Professor of Divinity in Cambridge.In going to England, Bucer had great hopes of spreading the influence of the Reformation's objective of simplifying the church's liturgy. His reforms made little headway against the magisterial nature of the Church of England. His greatest influence is likely to be found in the second edition of the Book of Common Prayer which Cranmer asked him to review and edit.England proved to be an unhealthy environment for the now aging Martin. In 1551, his health finally broke and he died on the last day of February at the age of 59.In eulogy, one of his scholarly friends wrote of Bucer, “We are deprived of a leader than whom the whole world would scarcely obtain a greater, whether in knowledge of true religion or in integrity and innocence of life, or in thirst for study of the most holy things, or in exhausting labor in advancing piety, or in authority and fullness of teaching, or in anything that is praiseworthy and renowned.”Two yrs after his death, when Mary 1, AKA Bloody Mary came to the throne, as part of her effort to restore Catholicism, she tried Bucer posthumously for heresy. His casket was dug up, his remains burned, along with copies of his writings. When Elizabeth ascended the throne, she restored Bucer's legacy. A brass plaque now marks the original location of his grave.