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Thomas à Kempis (1380 - 1471) was a medieval Christian monk and author of "Imitation of Christ", one of the most well known Christian books on devotion.
Thomas à Kempis, German mystic and author of the "Imitation of Christ," was born at Kempen[?], Germany (40 miles northwest of Cologne) in 1380 and died near Zwolle (52 miles east-north-east of Amsterdam) in 1471. His paternal name was Hemerken or Hammerlein, "little hammer."
In 1395 he was sent to the school at Deventer
conducted by the Brethren of the Common Life[?].
He became skilful as a copyist and was thus
enabled to support himself. Later he was admitted
to the Augustinian convent of Mount Saint Agnes
near Zwolle where his brother John had been before
him and had risen to the dignity of prior. Thomas
received priest's orders in 1413 and was made
subprior 1429.
The house was disturbed for a time
in consequence of the pope's rejection of the
bishop-elect of Utrecht, Rudolph of Diepholt; otherwise,
Thomas' life was a quiet one, his time being spent
between devotional exercises, composition, and
copying. He copied the Bible no less than four
times, one of the copies being preserved at
Darmstadt in five volumes. In its teachings he was
widely read, and his works abound in Biblical
quotations, especially from the New Testament.
His life is no doubt fitly characterized by the words
under an old picture first referred to by
Francescus Tolensis[?]: "In all things I sought quiet and found
it not save in retirement and in books." A
monument was dedicated to his memory in the presence
of the archbishop of Utrecht in St. Michael's Church,
Zwolle, Nov. 11, 1897.
Thomas à Kempis belonged to the school of
mystics who were scattered along the Rhine from
Switzerland to Strasburg and Cologne and in the
Netherlands. He was a follower of Geert Groote
and Florentius Radewijns, the founders of the
Brethren of the Common Life. His writings are
all of a devotional character and include tracts and
meditations, letters, sermons, a life of Saint Lydewigis[?],
a Christian woman who remained steadfast under
a great stress of afflictions, and biographies of
Groote, Radewijns, and nine of their companions.
Works similar in contents to the "Imitation of
Christ" and pervaded by the same spirit are his
prolonged meditation on the life and blessings of the
Savior and another on the Incarnation. Both of
these works overflow with adoration for Christ.
The work which
has given Thomas à Kempis universal fame in the
Western churches is the De imitatione Christi. It
is the pearl of all the writings of the mystical
German-Dutch school of the fourteenth and fifteenth
centuries, and with the "Confessions" of Augustine
and John Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress it occupies a
front rank, if not the foremost place, among useful
manuals of devotion, after the Bible. Protestants
and Roman Catholics alike join in giving it praise.
The Jesuits give it an official place among their
"exercises." John Wesley and John Newton put
it among the works that influenced them at their
conversion. General Gordon carried it with him
to the battlefield.
Few books have had so extensive
a circulation. The number of counted editions
exceeds 2,000; and 1,000 different editions
are preserved in the British Museum. The
Bullingen collection, donated to the city of Cologne in
1838, contained at the time 400 different editions.
De Backer (Essai, ut inf.) enumerates 545 Latin
and about 900 French editions.
Originally written in
Latin, a French translation was made as
early as 1447, which still remains in manuscript.
The first printed French copies appeared at
Toulouse 1488. The earliest German translation was
made in 1434 by J. de Bellorivo and is preserved
in Cologne. The editions in German began at
Augsburg in 1486. The first English translation
(1502) was by William Atkinson and Margaret,
mother of Henry VII., who did the fourth book.
Translations appeared in Italian (Venice, 1488,
Milan 1489), Spanish (Seville, 1536), Arabic (Rome,
1663), Armenian (Rome, 1674), Hebrew (Frankfort,
1837), and other languages. Corneille produced
a poetical paraphrase in French in 1651.
The "Imitation of Christ" derives its title from
the heading of the first book, De imitatione Christi
et contemptu omnium vanitatum mundi. It consists
of four books and seems to have been written in
meter and rime, a fact first announced by K.
Hirsche in 1874. The four books are not found
in all the manuscripts, nor are they arranged invariably
in the same order.
The work is a manual of
devotion intended to help the soul in its communion
with God and the pursuit of holiness. Its sentences
are statements, not arguments, and are pitched in
the highest key of Christian experience. It was
meant for monastics and recluses. Behind and
within all its reflections runs the council of
self-renunciation.
The life of Christ is presented as the
highest study possible to a mortal. His teachings
far excel all the teachings of the saints. The book
gives counsels to read the Scriptures, statements
about the uses of adversity, advice for submission
to authority, warnings against temptation and how
to resist it, reflections about death and the judgment,
meditations upon the oblation of Christ, and
admonitions to flee the vanities of the world.
Christ himself is more than all the wisdom of the
schools and lifts the mind to perceive more of
eternal truth in a moment of time than a student might
learn in the schools in ten years.
Excellent as
these counsels are, they are set in the minor key
and are especially adapted for souls burdened with
care and sorrow and sitting in darkness. They
present only one side of the Christian life, and in
order to compass the whole of it they must be
supplemented by counsels for integrity, bravery and
constancy in the struggle of daily existence to which
the vast mass of mankind, who can not be recluses,
are called.
The charge has even been made that
the piety commended by the "Imitation" is of a
selfish monkish type. It was written by a monk and
intended for the convent; it lays stress on the passive
qualities and does not touch with firmness the
string of active service in the world. That which
makes it acceptable to all Christians is the supreme
stress it lays upon Christ and the possibility of
immediate communion with him and God.
The references to medieval mistakes or superstitions are
confined to several passages, viz., the merit of good
works and transubstantiation (iv. 2), purgatory
(iv. 9), and the worship of saints (i. 13, ii. 9, iii. 6,
59). In other works, however, Thomas à Kempis
exalts Mary as the queen of heaven, the efficient
mediatress of sinners, and to her all should flee as
to a mother. She should be invoked. He also
gives prayers to Mary (cf. the De tabernaculis, and
Hortus rosarum, Pohl's ed., ut inf., i. also iii. 357,
vi. 219, 235 sqq.).
I. Life, Minor Writings
II. The Imitation of Christ External Link