Demeter Hunyadi (1579–1592) was a Hungarian Unitarian. In 1579 he became the second superintendent of the Antitrinitarian Church.[1] The early Unitarian Christian leader Demeter Hunyadi led the effort to catechize the faithful.[2] The first Unitarian Christian confession of faith was the Consensus Ministrorum, which holds to a Unitarian view of God and teaches that Jesus Christ should be adored; the confession of faith titled the Complanatio (1638) established the divinity of Christ (though subordinate to God), as well as the necessity of the sacraments of infant baptism and reception of the eucharist.[2]
References
- ^ Early modern religious communities in East-Central Europe István Keul – 2009 The Antitrinitarian Church under Demeter Hunyadi (1579–1592) In July 1579 Demeter Hunyadi became the second superintendent of the Antitrinitarian Church
- ^ a b Spicer, Andrew (5 December 2016). Parish Churches in the Early Modern World. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-351-91276-1.