Nicolas Letourneux, Date of Birth, Place of Birth, Date of Death

    

Nicolas Letourneux

French preacher

Date of Birth: 30-Apr-1640

Place of Birth: Rouen, Normandy, France

Date of Death: 28-Nov-1686

Profession: Catholic priest, theologian

Nationality: France

Zodiac Sign: Taurus


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About Nicolas Letourneux

  • Nicolas Letourneux (30 April 1640 – 28 November 1686) was a French preacher and ascetical writer of Jansenistic tendencies.
  • Letourneux was born at Rouen.
  • His parents were poor, but the talents he displayed at an early age attracted the attention of some wealthy benefactors, whose assistance enabled him to study the humanities at the Jesuit College in Paris, and later philosophy at the Collège des Grassins.
  • To Dr.
  • Jean Hersant, his teacher at the latter institution, may be traced his Jansenistic views.
  • Ordained priest at Rouen in 1662, he served for some years as curate there.
  • About 1670 he removed to Paris, became closely associated with the Port-Royalists, and began to cultivate Jansenistic asceticism.
  • He exchanged his soutane for a coarse grey robe and abstained from celebrating Mass, to expiate in this manner what he esteemed his guilt in having accepted ordination at so early an age (22).
  • His intercourse with LemaĂ®tre restored him to more orthodox Catholic views; returning to pastoral duties, he acted as chaplain at the Collège des Grassins.
  • His sermons at various Paris churches quickly placed him in the front rank of the preachers of his day, and in 1675 his work on the text Martha, Martha, thou art careful (Luke, x, 41) won the Balzac prize for eloquence awarded by the French Academy.
  • In such esteem was he held by his spiritual superiors that Archbishop de Harlay appointed him, in 1679, temporary confessor of the nuns of Port-Royal, and also a member of the archiepiscopal commission for the emendation of the Breviary.
  • His relations with the leading Jansenists, however, soon awakened distrust, and he found it necessary to retire, in 1682, to the Priory of Villiers-sur-Fère, a benefice granted him by his patron, Cardinal Colbert of Rouen.
  • In this retirement he devoted the remainder of his life to his ascetical compositions.
  • He died in Paris.

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