Spener was born on 23 January 1635, in
Rappoltsweiler,
Upper Alsace, now part of France, in Spener's time as part of the
Holy Roman Empire. After a brief time at the
grammar school of
Colmar, he went to
Strasbourg in 1651. There he devoted himself to the study of
philology,
history and
philosophy, and won his degree of master in 1653, with a disputation against the philosophy of
Thomas Hobbes. He then became private tutor to the princes Christian and Charles of the
Electorate of the Palatinate, and lectured in the university on
philology and history. From 1659 to 1662, he visited the universities of
Basel,
Tübingen and
Geneva, and commenced the study of
heraldry, which he pursued throughout his life. In
Geneva especially, his religious views and tendencies turned in the direction of mysticism. Spener returned to Strasbourg in 1663, where he was appointed preacher without pastoral duties, with the right of holding lectures. Three years afterwards, he was invited to become the chief pastor in the
Lutheran Church at
Frankfurt. Here he published his two chief works,
Pia desideria (1675) and
Allgemeine Gottesgelehrtheit (1680), and began that form of pastoral work which resulted in the movement called
Pietism. In 1686, he accepted the invitation to the first court chaplaincy at
Dresden. The
Elector John George III, at whose personal desire the post had been offered to him, was soon offended when Spener condemned the morals of John George's court. Spener refused to resign his post, and the
Saxon government hesitated to dismiss him. In 1691, the Saxon representative at
Berlin induced the court of the
March of Brandenburg to offer him the rectorship of St Nicholas in Berlin, with the title of counsellor of the Marcher
Consistory (Konsistorialrat). In Berlin, Spener was held in high honour, though the tendencies of the court and the government officials were rather rationalistic than pietistic. The
University of Halle was founded under his influence in 1694. All his life, Spener had been exposed to the attacks and abuse of the
orthodox Lutheran theologians. Over time, his opponents multiplied, and the movement which he started accumulated hostile criticism. In 1695, the theological faculty of
Wittenberg formally accused him of 264 errors. Only his death released him from these fierce conflicts. His last important work was
Theologische Bedenken (1700–1702), to which was added after his death
Letzte theologische Bedenken, with a biography of Spener by
CH von Canstein (1711). Spener died in Berlin, on 5 February 1705, aged 70. ==Theology==