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Jansen, Cornelius Otto
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Jansen, Cornelius Otto

(born Oct. 28, 1585, Acquoi, near Leerdam, Holland—died May 6, 1638, Ypres, Flanders, Spanish Neth.) Flemish leader of the Roman Catholic reform movement known as Jansenism. He studied at the University of Louvain, where he absorbed the teachings of St. Augustine, especially those concerning original sin and the need for grace. He spent 1611–14 in Bayonne, France, where he directed the episcopal college. After studying theology three more years, he returned to Louvain. He became rector of the university in 1635 and a year later was appointed bishop of Ypres. In 1638 he died of the plague. His major work, the Augustinus, was published in 1640; in 1642 Pope Urban VIII forbade the reading of the book.



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Above all, we encounter the theology of grace, which came to Port-Royal from Augustine by way of Cornelius Jansen (1585-1638) and the Abbot of Saint-Cyran (1581-1643) and which was the root of much of the conflict involving convent, king, and pope.
Augustine of Hippo, as refracted through the posthumous writings of Cornelius Jansen (1585-1638), seemed to draw close to Calvinism, particularly its stern view of the transcendence of God, its pessimistic take on the sinful condition of humanity, and its robust defense of divine predestination.
Thus, Cornelius Jansen (1585-1638) gives explicit approval to the work of an Irish monk that there is no salvation for dead unbaptized infants who, because they have not been cleansed of original sin, "go into eternal fire.
 
 
 
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