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Moufang, Franz Christoph Ignaz, theologian, b. at Mainz, February 17, 1817; d. there, February 27, 1890. His early studies were made at Mainz. In 1834 he went to the University of Bonn, first taking up medicine, but soon turning to theology. Among his masters were Klee, Windischmann, and Walter. In 1837 he went to Munich, and the next year took the prescribed theological examinations at Giessen, after which he entered the ecclesiastical seminary at Mainz, where he was ordained priest December 19, 1839. His first appointment was as curate in Seligenstadt on the Main, where his uncle, Adam Franz Lennig, later vicar-general and dean of the cathedral at Mainz, was pastor. Lennig stimulated in him a broad interest for the religious questions of the time. Moufang also taught at the pro-gymnasium at Seligenstadt. After brief charges of the parish of Bensheim, and that of St. Quentin in Mainz he was appointed in 1845 religious instructor at the Mainz gymnasium.
When Bishop von Ketteler reestablished in 1851 the philosophical and theological school in connection with the seminary at Mainz, he appointed Moufang regent of the seminary and professor of moral and pastoral theology. Moufang became a canon November 6, 1854, and spiritual adviser and member of the diocesan court December 2 of the same year. On the occasion of the twenty-fifth anniversary of his priesthood the theological faculty of Würzburg bestowed the honorary degree of doctor of theology upon him. On the death of Lennig in 1866 the bishop wished Moufang to be his successor as dean of the cathedral and vicargeneral. Moufang, however, declined, preferring to devote himself to the seminary. In November, 1868, he was summoned to Rome, for the preparatory work of the Vatican Council, and was placed on the committee for ecclesiasticopolitical matters under Cardinal Reisach. During the Kulturkampf, to Moufang’s great sorrow, the theological school of the seminary was closed (1877) by hostile legislation. After the death of Bishop von Ketteler (July 13, 1877), the chapter elected Moufang administrator of the diocese. The hostile attitude of the Prussian Government made this office very difficult during the ten years’ vacancy of the see. On April 16, 1886, Leo XIII made him a domestic prelate. Under Bishop Haffner the theological school of the seminary was reopened on October 25, 1887, and Moufang again directed the semi-nary as regent. But ill health prevented him from remaining long at the work that was so dear to him.
Moufang rendered great and permanent services to the Archdiocese of Mainz as an educator of the clergy and in many other ways. He was soon prominent in the circle that centered about Lennig’s strong, energetic personality, and he took an eager part in all efforts to improve religious and social conditions. He assisted in the formation of the “Piusverein“, and as a member of the “St. Vincenz and Elisabeth Verein” did much to promote its prosperity. In the regeneration of Catholic Germany his name is inseparably linked with the history of the general conventions (Generalversammlungen) of the Catholics of Germany. Like his colleague, Heinrich, he was, for almost forty years, one of the leading personalities and most prominent speakers. For a number of years he was also active as a legislator. After 1863, as representative of the bishop, he had a seat in the upper chamber of the Hessian Landtag, and repeatedly took a prominent part in the debates on social and political questions, and questions of Church policy. In 1871 he entered the German Reichstag, where he was held in great esteem by the Center for his political services and as an intermediary in harmonizing the differences between North and South Germany. The most prominent feature of his literary activity was his work in reorganizing and publishing the “Katholik”, which in collaboration with Heinrich he edited from 1851 until his death.
His other literary work was mainly in the history of the older Catholic catechisms in Germany. His chief works on this subject are: “Die Mainzer Katechismen von Erfindung der Buchdruckerkunst bis zum Ende des 18. Jahrhunderts” (Mainz, 1878); “Katholische Katechismen des 16. Jahrhunderts in deutscher Sprache, herausgegeben and mit Anmerkungen versehen” (Mainz, 1881). Among his numerous shorter writings are: “Die barmherzigen Schwestern, eine Darstellung ihrer Grundung, Verbreitung, Einrichtung and Wirksamkeit” (Mainz, 1842); “Der Informativ-Prozess. Eine kirchenrechtliche Erorterung” (Mainz, 1850); “Die katholischen Pfarrschulen in der Stadt Mainz” (Mainz, 1863); “Das Verbot der Ehen zwischen nahen Verwandten. Beleuchtung der Griinde dieses Verbotes” (Mainz, 1863), I; “Die Handwerkerfrage” (Mainz, 1864), a speech delivered in the Upper Chamber of the Landtag at Darmstadt and published with notes; “Die Kirche and die Versammlung katholischer Gelehrten” (Mainz, 1864), a reply to Dr. Michelis’s “Kirche oder Partei”; “Cardinal Wiseman and seine Verdienste um die Wissenschaft and die Kirche” (Mainz, 1865); “Der Kampf urn Rom and seine Folgen fur Italien and die Welt” (Mainz, 1868); “Carl August, Cardinal von Reisach”, in “Katholik”, 1870, I, 129-50; “Der besondere Schutz Gottes fiber Papst Pius IX” (Mainz, 1871); “Aktenstiicke betreffend die Jesuiten in Deutschland, gesammelt and mit Erlauterungen versehen” (Mainz, 1872). Moufang also published a prayerbook, “Officium divinum”, which is very widely used and has passed through numerous editions, the first appearing at Mainz, in 1851, the nineteenth in 1905.
FRIEDRICH LAUCHERT