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39 - Calvin’s Lutheran Critics

from Part V - Calvin’s Influences

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 November 2019

R. Ward Holder
Affiliation:
Saint Anselm College, New Hampshire
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Summary

In the sixteenth century, the organizing effort of many Reformation leaders coalesced in a newly imagined pan-Protestant community. While differences emerged from early in the Reformation, the consistent effort to resolve disagreements attested to the desire to establish the Reformation throughout Europe. In 1540, John Calvin asserted that religious reforms for Germany could be applied to France, Spain, Italy, and elsewhere in the world, as Protestants sought “to restore those things that Christ handed down, the apostles commended, and the ancient and purer church observed,” rather than to initiate something new.1 But as the vision of a pan-Protestant church faded in the 1550s, a growing criticism of Calvin’s views emerged among later Lutherans. In the aftermath of the Augsburg Interim in 1548, which resulted in a series of intra-Lutheran debates, and the widely publicized 1549 Zürich Consensus, the organizing efforts of German Reformers shifted toward preserving the genuine Lutheran legacy of the Reformation. Such confession building had major consequences for shaping the various forms of reformation and the aspiration to come up with a unifying vision “whether historical or supernatural or both, in compensation for the constant, ad hoc negotiation of relationships.”2 The disagreement over the management of the Wittenberg legacy led to the formation of multiple legacies within Protestantism.3

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2019

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References

Suggested Further Readings

Cameron, Euan. “The Consensus Tigurinus and the Göppingen Eucharistic Confession: continuing instabilities in Geneva’s relationship with Zurich and the Lutheran world,” Reformation & Renaissance Review 18:1, 7284.Google Scholar
Chung-Kim, Esther. Inventing Authority: The Use of the Church Fathers in Reformation Debates over the Eucharist (Waco: Baylor, 2011).Google Scholar
Dingel, Irene. “Calvin in the Context of Lutheran Consolidation,” Reformation and Renaissance Review 12.2-3 (2010): 155187.Google Scholar
Holder, R. Ward. “Calvin and Luther: The Relationship that Still Echoes,” in Calvin and Luther: The Continuing Relationship, ed. Holder, R. Ward (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2013), 710.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Methuen, Charlotte. Luther and Calvin: Religious Revolutionaries (Oxford: Lion, 2011).Google Scholar
Pak, G. Sujin. The Judaizing Calvin: Sixteenth-Century Debates over the Messianic Psalms (New York: Oxford, 2010).Google Scholar
Steinmetz, David. Reformers in the Wings: From Geiler von Kaysersberg to Theodore Beza (New York: Oxford, 2001).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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