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European Calvinism: history, providence, and martyrdom

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2016

Andrew Pettegree*
Affiliation:
St Andrews Reformation Studies Institute

Extract

For students of the Reformation one of the main conceptual problems is undoubtedly the distance between the mind-set of our age and theirs. We look at the Reformation as a new beginning, the moment when the Church fragmented into competing Churches, and one of the fundamental developments of the Early Modern Age: a term which in itself presents a view of progress and change as one of the determining characteristics of the age.

Contemporaries, however, had a very different perception; they saw the movement for evangelical reform as one of renovation and renewal. They believed that they were attempting to recover what was best in the past of the Church, which had since become hopelessly corrupted. With others of their contemporaries they despised innovation. One can surely only understand Martin Luther if one recognizes the depth of his conservatism; that his personal crusade was to a large extent fuelled by a sense of moral outrage and indignation at what the papacy had done to his Church.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical History Society 1997

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References

1 See here the essays collected by Gordon, Bruce, ed., Protestant Identity and History in Reformation Europe, St Andrews Studies in Reformation History, 3 (Aldershot, 1996)Google Scholar, and particularly the excellent introduction by the editor.

2 Pettegree, Andrew, ed., The Early Reformation in Europe (Cambridge, 1992)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

3 Duke, Alastair, Reformation and Revolt in the Low Countries (London, 1990)Google Scholar; Pettegree, Andrew, Emden and the Dutch Revolt (Oxford, 1992)Google Scholar; Greengrass, Mark, The French Reformation (Oxford, 1987)Google Scholar; Nicholls, David J., ‘The nature of popular heresy in France, 1520–1542’, HistJ, 26 (1983), pp. 26175.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

4 Pettegree, Andrew, Marian Protestantism: Six Studies, St Andrews Studies in Reformation History, 4 (Aldershot, 1996)Google Scholar.

5 Grell, Ole Peter, ed., The Scandinavian Reformation (Cambridge, 1995)Google Scholar; Eberhard, Winfried, ‘Bohemia, Moravia and Austria’, and Daniel, David P., ‘Hungary’, in Pettegree, , ed., Early Reformation in Europe, pp. 2369 Google Scholar.

6 Oberman, Heiko, ‘ Europe afflicta. The Reformation of the refugees’, in ARG, 83 (1992), pp. 91111.Google Scholar

7 Kingdon, Robert M., Geneva and the Coming of the Wars of Religion in France (Geneva, 1956)Google Scholar.

8 Davis, Natalie, ‘Strikes and salvation at Lyons’, in her Society and Culture in Early Modem France (London, 1975), pp. 116 Google Scholar; Benedict, Philip, Rouen during the Wars of Religion (Cambridge, 1981), pp. 7194 Google Scholar; Heller, Henry, The Conquest of Poverty. The Calvinist Revolt in Sixteenth Century France (Leiden, 1986)Google Scholar; Rosenberg, David, ‘Social experience and religious choice: a case study. The Protestant weavers and woolcombers of Amiens in the sixteenth century’ (Yale University Ph.D. thesis, 1978)Google Scholar.

9 Davis, Natalie, ‘The rites of violence’, in Society and Culture, pp. 15288 Google Scholar; Benedict, , Rouen during the Wars of Religion, pp. 4970 Google Scholar. See also now Denis Crouzet, Les Guerriers de Dieu: la violence au temps des troubles de religion, vers 1525 – vers 1610, 2 vols (Champ Vallon, 1990).

10 Pettegree, Emden and the Dutch Revolt, ch. 5. Cf.Mack Crew, Phyllis, Calvinist Preaching and Iconoclasm in the Netherlands, 1544–1569 (Cambridge, 1978)Google Scholar.

11 III, viii, 7: Calvin, John,Institutes of the Christian Religion, ed. McNeill, John T., Library of the Christian Classics, 20–1, 2 vols (Philadelphia, 1960), p. 707.Google Scholar

12 Particularly in his Petit traicte’ monstrant que c’est que doit faire un homme fidele congnoissant la verité de l’evangile (Geneva, 1543), and Excuse a MM. les Nicodemites (Geneva, 1544): Rodolphe Peter and Jean-François Gilmont, eds, Bibliotheca Calviniana, 2 vols (Geneva, 1991–4), nos. 43/6, 44/9. For a review of the literature on this subject see now my ‘Nicodemism and the English Reformation’, in Marian Protestantism: Six Studies.

13 The author’s preface to Calvin’s Commentary on the Psalms is the most famous piece of autobiographical writing; John Calvin, Commentary on the Book of Psalms, Calvin Translation Society (Edinburgh, 1845), pp. xxxv-xlix.

14 Augustijn, Cornelis, ‘Calvin in Strasburg’, in Neuser, Wilhelm H., ed., Calvinus Sacrae Scripturae Professor (Grand Rapids, Mi., 1994), pp. 16677 Google Scholar.

15 Naphy, William, Calvin and the Consolidation of the Genevan Reformation (Manchester, 1994)Google Scholar.

16 Calvin, Institutes, ed. McNeill, p. 200.

17 Shakespeare, Joy, ‘Plague and punishment’, in Lake, Peter and Dowling, Maria, eds, Protestantism and the National Church in Sixteenth Century England (Beckenham, 1987), pp. 10323.Google Scholar

18 On Crespin and Haemstede, see Watson, David, ‘Jean Crespin and the writing of history in the French Reformation’, and Pettegree, Andrew, ‘Adriaan van Haemstede, the heretic as historian’, in Gordon, Protestant Identity, 2, pp. 5976 Google Scholar; Gilmot, Jean-François, Jean Crespin. Un éditeur reformé du XVIe siècle (Geneva, 1981)Google Scholar; Jelsma, A. J., Adriaan van Haemstede en zijn Martelaarsboek (The Hague, 1970)Google Scholar. On Foxe see now particularly David Loades, ed., John Foxe and the English Reformation, forthcoming in St Andrews Studies in Reformation History (Aldershot, 1997).

19 This paragraph follows substantially the excellent introduction to this subject in Kolb, Robert, For All the Saints. Changing Perceptions of Martyrdom and Sainthood in the Lutheran Reformation (Macon, Georgia, 1987), pp. 1927 Google Scholar. Headley, John M., Luther’s View of Church History (New Haven, 1963), is the standard workGoogle Scholar.

20 Kolb, For All the Saints, p. 19. Oberman, Heiko, Luther. Man between Cod and the Devil (London, 1989)Google Scholar.

21 Fraenkel, Peter, Testimonia Patrum. The Function of the Patristic Argument in the Theology of Philip Melanchthon (Geneva, 1961)Google Scholar, quoted Kolb, For All the Saints, p. 26.

22 Compare Calvin in the Institutes, i, ch. 16: ‘God’s Providence governs all’; Calvin, Institutes, ed. McNeill, pp. 197–210.

23 On Rabus see particularly Kolb, For All the Saints.

24 Histoire des vrays Tesmoins de la verite de l’evangile (Geneva, 1570), sig. aivr-viir.

25 It is interesting too to speculate whether Fox was aware of Haemstede’s work when he devised his own more elaborate scheme for the definitive Acts and Monuments of 1563. For a first consideration of this question see now my ‘Haemstede and Foxe’ in Loades, John Foxe.

26 For the placards, Corpus documentorum inquisitionis haereticaepravatis Neerlandicae, ed. P. Fredericq, 5 vols (Ghent and The Hague, 1889–1902), 4, pp. 43–5, 5, pp. 1–5. James Tracey, ‘Heresy law and centralization under Mary of Hungary: conflict between the council of Holland and the central government over the enforcement of Charles V’s Placards’, ARC, 73 (1982), pp. 288–90.

27 Krahn, Cornelis, Dutch Anabaptism (The Hague, 1968)Google Scholar; Stayer, James, Anabaptists and the Sword (Lawrence, Kansas, 1976)Google Scholar.

28 van Haemstede, Adriaan, De Geschiedenisse ende den dodt der vromer Martelaren ([Emden], 1559), pp. 4267 Google Scholar. This and subsequent translated quotations from Haemstede are my own.

29 ‘D’artikelen der Papistiscer secten’, ibid., pp. 41–2. The source of this pungent and telling list is not clear. Quite possibly it is, as Jelsma suggests, an original contribution of Haemstede’s. Jelsma, Adriaan van Haemstede, pp. 276–8.

30 Haemstede, Geschiedenisse, p. 36.

31 Although frequently practised in France (to prevent the condemned stirring up the crowd gathered for their execution), this practice seems not to have been known in the Netherlands.

32 Archetypes such as Romanus, the early Church martyr, whose end was marked by several miracles. The first attempt to put him to death was thwarted when a miraculous shower doused the flames; at the second, successful, attempt Romanus praised God despite the removal of his tongue. Haemstede, Ceschiedenisse, pp. 25–6. For the early Church sources, H. Delehaye, ‘S. Romain, martyr d’Antioche’, AnBoll, 50 (1932), pp. 240–83. Cynthia Hahn, ‘Speaking without tongues: the martyr Romanus and Augustine’s theory of language in illustrations of Bern Burgerbibliothek Codex 264’, in Renate Blumenfeld-Kosinski and Timea Szell, eds, Images of Sainthood in Medieval Europe (Ithaca, N.Y., and London, 1991), pp. 161–80.

33 Haemstede, Geschiedenisse, sig. *iir-viir.

34 Ibid., sig. *iir-v.

35 Ibid., sig. *iiv.

36 Ibid., sig. *ivr

37 Ibid., sig. *vr.

38 Compare Luther: Kolb, For All the Saints, p. 26.

39 Gordon, Protestant Identity.

40 Haemstede, Geschiedenisse, pp. 425–6.

41 Alastair Duke, ‘Dissident voices in a conformist town: the early Reformation at Gouda’, in his Reformation and Revolt, pp. 60–70.

42 See my ‘Heretic as historian’, in Gordon, Protestant Identity, and ‘Haemstede and Foxe’, in Loades, John Foxe. The question of the authenticity of the martyrologists’ accounts is now being investigated in a far more systematic and sceptical way. See Watson, ‘Jean Crespin’, and Tom Freeman’s article in this volume.

43 Haemstede, Geschiedenisse, p. 428.

44 Pettegree, Emden and the Dutch Revolt, ch. 4. Alastair Duke, ‘Salvation by coercion: the controversy surrounding the “inquisition” in the Low Countries on the eve of the Revolt’, in his Reformation and Revolt, pp. 152–74.

45 See, for instance, his letters to the Brethren of Poitiers, 9 Sept. 1555 and to the church of Angers, 19 April 1556. Letters of John Calvin, trans. D. Constable, 4 vols (Edinburgh and Philadelphia, 1855–8), 3, pp. 223–5, 261–4.

46 Haemstede, Geschiedenisse, pp. 417–19.

47 Histoire écclesiastique des églises réformées au royaume de France, G. Baum, E. Cunitz, and R. Reuss, eds, 3 vols (Paris, 1883–9). The first edition was published in 1580.

48 Extract of the Histoire ecclésiastique translated in Alastair Duke, Gillian Lewis, and Andrew Pettegree, eds, Calvinism in Europe, 1540–1610. A Collection of Documents (Manchester, 1992), pp. 66–7.

49 Benedict, Rouen during the Wars of Religion, pp. 49–122.

50 Willem Nijenhuis, ‘The limits of civil disobedience in Calvin’s last known sermons: development of his ideas on the right of civil resistance’, in his Ecclesia Reformata. Studies on the Reformation, 2 (Leiden, 1994), pp. 73–94.

51 Duke, Lewis, and Pettegree, Calvinism in Europe: Documents, p. 80.

52 Pettegree, Emden and the Dutch Revolt, pp. 109–46.

53 van Deursen, A. Th., Bavianen en Slijkgeuzen. Kerk en kerkvolk ten tijde van Maurits en Oldenbarnevelt (Assen, 1974)Google Scholar.

54 ‘Coming to terms with Victory: the upbuilding of a Calvinist church in Holland, 1572–1590’, in Pettegree, Andrew, Duke, Alastair, and Lewis, Gillian, eds, Calvinism in Europe, 1540–1620 (Cambridge, 1994), pp. 16080.Google Scholar

55 Included with the Letters of Calvin, 4, pp. 373–7.

56 Davies, Catharine, ‘“Poor persecuted little flock” or “Commonwealth of Christians”: Edwardian Protestant concepts of the Church’, in Lake, and Dowling, , Protestantism and the National Church, pp. 78102.Google Scholar

57 Duke, Lewis, and Pettegree, Calvinism in Europe: Documents, p. 33.

58 Strauss, Gerald, ‘Success and failure in the German Reformation’, P&P, 67 (May, 1975), pp. 3063 Google Scholar; idem, Luther’s House of Learning: Indoctrination of the Young in the German Reformation (Baltimore, 1978); Haigh, Christopher, ‘Anticlericalism and the English Reformation’, in his The English Reformation Revised (Cambridge, 1987), pp. 5674 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

59 A point made to me in conversation by my colleague in St Andrews, Bruce Gordon.

60 For the conservatism of the ‘later’ Luther see particularly Mark Edwards, Luther and the False Brethren (Stanford, 1975); idem, Luther’s Last Battles, Politics and Polemics, 1531–46 (Leiden, 1983).