Born: Sep­tem­ber 17, 1611, Halle, Ger­ma­ny.

Died: Ap­ril 24, 1684, Weiss­en­fels, Ger­ma­ny.

Johannes was the son of Johann Olearius, pas­tor of St. Mary’s church and Sup­er­in­ten­dent at Halle. He en­tered the Un­i­ver­si­ty of Wit­ten­berg in 1629 (MA 1632, DD 1643), where he be­came a le­ctur­er and, in 1635, ad­junct of the phil­os­o­phy fac­ul­ty. In 1637, he be­came Sup­er­in­ten­dent at Quer­furt. In 1643, Duke Au­gust of Sach­sen-Weis­sen­fels ap­pointed Olear­i­us chief court preach­er, and pri­vate chap­lain at Halle, where he be­came Kirchenrath in 1657, and Gen­er­al Sup­er­in­ten­dent in 1664. On the death of Duke Au­gust in 1680, the ad­min­is­tra­tion of Mag­de­burg fell to the Elect­or of Bran­den­burg, and Duke Jo­hann Adolf gave Olear­i­us sim­i­lar ap­point­ments at Weis­sen­fels, which he held un­til his death.

Olearius wrote a Bi­ble com­ment­ary and var­i­ous de­vo­tion­al works. He a­lso co­mpiled Geist­liche Singe-Kunst, one of the larg­est and most im­port­ant German hymn­als of the 17th Century. The first edi­tion ap­peared in Leip­zig in 1671, with over 1,200 ent­ries; the sec­ond in Leip­zig in 1672, with 1,340 hymns. The first edi­tion con­tained 302 hymns by Olear­i­us him­self, marked “D. J. O.”

Sources

Hymns

  1. Ach, wie gross ist deine Gnade
  2. Es war die ganze Welt
  3. Gelobet sei der Herr
  4. Gott Lob, mein Je­sus macht mich rein
  5. Herr Je­su Christ, dein theur­es Blut
  6. Herr, öffne mir die Herz­ens­thür
  7. Jesus selbst, mein Licht, mein Leben
  8. Komm, du wert­es Loes­e­geld
  9. Nun kommt das neue Kirch­en­jahr
  10. Sollt ich mein­em Gott nicht trau­en
  11. Tröstet, trös­tet meine Lieb­en
  12. Wenn dich Un­glück hat be­tre­ten

If you know Olear­i­us’ bur­ial place