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Matthias of Kunwald

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Died
  
1500

Matthias (Matěj) of Kunwald (died 1500) was one of the first priests of the Unitas Fratrum in 1467.

Contents

Early life

Matthias was a farmer’s son from Kunvald. The date of birth for Matthias is unknown but records indicate that he was twenty-five years old at the time of his ordination. He was elected a priest of the Unitas Fratrum at the synod of Lhotka near Rychnov. The exact date of the gathering is unknown but is traditionally set as Holy Thursday, March 26, 1467. The synod decided that it was time for the Unitas Fratrum to separate from the Roman order and establish their own priesthood.

Career in priesthood

Matthias was selected as one of the first priests through the use of the Lot. After choosing nine members of the Unity that the synod attendees felt had gifts suitable for ministry, they took twelve slips of paper and wrote the words “it is he” on three of them. The slips of paper with those words would be called the positive lot because the members that drew those slips of paper would be selected as priests. It was also possible that none of the positives would be drawn and that would be seen as a sign from God that no priests should be selected.

Matthias was one of the three that drew a positive lot thus becoming one of the first priests of the Unitas Fratrum. The other two to draw positive lots were Thomas (Tuma) Preloucsky, “a tailor who knew Latin,” and Elias (Elias) of Chrenovice in Moravian, a miller. Matthias was approximately twenty-five or thirty years old at the time of the synod and was the youngest of the three chosen but was still appointed by Gregory the Patriarch as the first place among his Unity’s priests.

The ordination of Matthias as a priest of the Unitas Fratrum was performed by Michael Bradacius. Bradacius was a Roman ordained priest but in order to satisfy some members of the Unity, he was sent to the “eldest Waldensian priest in Bohemia” because the Waldensians were believed to trace their roots back to the “uncorrupted pre-Constanian times of the apostles.” After Michael Bradacius ordained Matthias, he renounced his Roman ordination and was himself ordained by Matthias.

Matthias of Kunvald became the leader of the Unity in 1474 when Gregory the Patriarch died and assumed the position as the church’s administrative head.13 The years after Gregory’s death proved to a difficult transition for the Unity. Matthias and many of the older members of the Unity desired for the strict standards of living required for membership to go unchanged. However, newer members that were university trained began to question if the strict standards were necessary. This eventually resulted in the Schism of 1495 that divided the Unity with Matthias and those that agreed with him comprising the Minor Party. Matthias eventually resigned his administrative title but “retained his ability to ordain.” Matthias consecrated Thomas (Tuma) and Elias as bishops of the Unity in 1499.

Death

He died in 1500 at the approximate age of 58 on his way to a synod at Přerov.

References

Matthias of Kunwald Wikipedia