Johannes Kepler was a famous German astronomer and mathematician who lived
from 1571 to 1630. Recently while reading a book about Galileo
which touched on Kepler, I was deeply moved by his story. The following is
taken from the book, The Galileo Connection: Resolving Conflicts
Between Science and the Bible (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1986)
by Charles E. Hummel. Keplers belief in the freeness of the
gospel and his commitment to hold fast to those beliefs even though they
cost him jobs, money, land and homes, persecution, and scorn
stirred me. I thought that you, too, might be challenged by his story.
Keplers work was all the more amazing in light of the great odds against which he fought all his life. Born into a poor family, he was
constantly short of money. From infancy his health was delicate; throughout
his life he suffered from fever attacks, stomach disorders, skin
eruptions and poor eyesight. A Protestant amid the growing Catholic
Counter-Reformation, Kepler was persecuted for his faith, banished from
two cities and forced to give up his property. Frequent moves took their
toll on his home life. His first wife died early of disease: fewer
than half of his children lived beyond ten years.
Employment was always uncertain for Kepler. The noblemen whom he served
often paid his salary late: the emperor defaulted on commitments to
him. Amid those personal misfortunes came the Thirty Years War, one of the
cruelest in European history. During his last twelve years,
Kepler had to conduct his research in the middle of that conflict, at times
with his house occupied by soldiers and in sight of the carnage.
Yet under those incredibly difficult circumstances, Kepler continued his
arduous work and became one of the greatest astronomers. Through
all his suffering he remained a warm-hearted human being with deep Christian
commitment.1
On November 2, [1630], Kepler rode his horse across the cold Danube River
into Regensburg where he stayed with a friend. Soon he came down
with a fever that grew steadily worse with occasional delirium. Although
several clergymen visited him, they did not offer the Communion he
had been denied so many years.2 Yet Kepler was not bitter. When someone asked him in a lucid moment where he thought his salvation lay, he answered confidently, Only and alone on the services of Jesus Christ. In Christ the astronomer found his refuge and solace.3