1 / 8

Calvinism & Anabaptists

Calvinism & Anabaptists. I. Calvin & Calvinism. Catholicism remained strong in Fr. John Calvin Huldrych Zwingli—Catholic priest-- Zurich, Switz. Influenced by Erasmus & Luther 1520: attacked Catholic Church

Download Presentation

Calvinism & Anabaptists

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Calvinism & Anabaptists

  2. I. Calvin & Calvinism • Catholicism remained strong in Fr. • John Calvin • Huldrych Zwingli—Catholic priest-- Zurich, Switz. • Influenced by Erasmus & Luther • 1520: attacked Catholic Church • Wanted personal faith of early Christianity & believers to have control over the Church • 1528: N. Switz. followed Zwingli, but war broke out in south against Swiss Catholics • 1531: Zwingli died in battle--agreement that each canton could decide religion

  3. A. Calvin Formalizes Prot. Ideas • John Calvin (1509-1564) • Fr. Prot. who carried on Ref. work in Switz. • 1536: published Institutes of the Christian Religion • a summary of Prot. theology • 1536: settled in Geneva • Retained Luther’s reliance on faith & on the Bible • Men & women are sinful by nature • God decided before who would be saved, known as…? • Predestination • The “elect” – people expected to follow the highest moral standards • Calvinism

  4. B. Calvin Leads the Ref. in Switz. • Calvin = Geneva • Theocracy • Prohibited dancing, card playing, bright clothing, profanity • Calvinists—follow rules of Bible strictly, no work on Sabbath, be thrifty, & work hard • Geneva = model city for Prots. • It should not be “forbidden to laugh, or to enjoy food, or to add new possessions to old”

  5. C. Calvinism Spreads • Calvinism spread to Fr. (Huguenots) • 1562: war betw. Hugs. & Catholics • 1572: Fr. royal fam. arranged marriage • Parisian massacre that set off more war • 1598: Edict of Nantes: King Henry IV allowed Hugs. to practice religion & gave equal rights

  6. John Knox—Scottish preacher who visited Geneva (1559) • Brought Calvinism to Scotland • Churches governed by a group of laymen (presbyters) • Followers = Presbyterians • 1560s: Calvinism became Scotland’s official religion • Deposed Mary Queen of Scots in favor of James

  7. II. Other Prot. Reformers • Bible = source of all religious truth • People interpret differently---led to new Prot. groups

  8. A. The Anabaptists • “baptize again” • Only baptized those old enough to decide to be Christian • Church & state should be separate (unlike Calvin) • Persecuted by both Prots. & Catholics • Forerunners of the Mennonites & Amish • Later influenced Quakers & Baptists (split from Anglican church)

More Related