READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
CHAPTER X.THE HELVETIC REFORMATION.
The Helvetic Reformation, like the German, was the
outcome of both the national history and the Renaissance. The history of
Switzerland had been a record of free communities in town or country, more than
holding their own under changing local dynasties and weakening imperial power.
Gradually a sense of national unity emerges, but earlier local connections are
long retained. The Teutonic communities of Uri, Schwyz, and Unterwalden separately gain their independence in
ways common enough elsewhere, and then become the centre of the later confederation. The lands around them are divided into two strongly
marked parts: a Burgundian west, looking towards France, Burgundy, and Savoy,
converted by Gallic or Roman missionaries, divided among many dynasties, and a
Swabian or Alamannic east, richer in civilization and
democratic cities, converted by Irish missionaries, looking by the run of its
valleys and the lie of its plains towards Germany. This division lasts through
the Frankish Empire and through the Middle Ages, and is the most essential
feature in Swiss history.
The growth of the early Habsburg power, following the
extinction of the House of Zäringen (1218), at first
threatened the freedom of the Swiss; the connection of the Habsburg House with
the Empire gave it an imperial claim to jurisdiction in addition to the varied
local claims it already possessed, though at the same time it absorbed its
energy in other and more important fields. The tendencies to union shown by the
German Leagues operated also among the Swiss communities, and in the end gave
rise to the Perpetual League of the three Forest Cantons, Schwyz, Uri,
and Unterwalden (August, 1291), with
simple provisions for maintaining their primitive liberty and regulating their
mutual relations. The League concluded at Brunnen on December 13, 1315, after the great
battle of Morgarten,
added nothing essential, although it bound the members more closely together
against a usurping lord. The accidents of Habsburg history and the varied
grouping of the neighboring Powers kept this early league alive and even caused
it to grow : victories against the Habsburgs and afterwards against Burgundy
confirmed its strength and increased its reputation. Soon cities with dependent
villages under them, Luzern, Zurich, and Bern, joined the Confederates, and
introduced divergent interests and policies. Around central Switzerland with
its thirteen Cantons -those already mentioned, with Glarus, Zug, Freiburg,
Solothurn, Basel, Schaffhausen, and Appenzell-
there arose other leagues, the League of God’s House among the subjects of the
see of Chur, the Graubünden (or Grisons), and
the League of the Ten Jurisdictions, differing in constitution and with
histories of their own. In varying relations to the Confederation stood also
dependent States (the Valais, the town and Abbey of St Gallen, and others).
The Federal government not only gathered fresh
members, but made conquests of its own : the Aargau (1415), partly divided
between Bern and Zurich, partly, in the Free Bailiwicks, ruled jointly by the
six Cantons (Zurich, Luzern, Schwyz, Unterwalden,
Zug, and Glarus); the Thurgau, similarly ruled, but with special relations to
Zurich. The government of these Common Lands was a difficult matter, as there
was no Federal organization beyond the Diet, to which the Cantons sent
delegates. The Free Bailiwicks were administered by a Bailiff (Landvogt), appointed for
two years by each of the six Cantons in turn. This defective system demanded
perfect unity among the Confederates before it could work; and the chance of
discord was greater because these Subject Lands lay between Zurich and Bern,
and closed the path northwards from the Forest Cantons. To the south moreover
conquests had been made towards Italy, and thus the Confederates were brought into
touch with Italian as well as with German and more western politics.
Among the Confederates, Zurich (which joined them May,
1351) held a peculiar place. Favored by Austria, and as an imperial city,
Zurich had followed a distinct policy of its own which had at times led to war
(for instance, 1442-50). What Bern, with its distinct aims and more
aristocratic constitution, was to the west, Zurich, with its important gilds
and widespread trade, was to the east. The Confederacy was again divided by the
diversity of interests between rural and urban Cantons; moreover, city
factions, as at Luzern, Zurich, and Bern, had looked to the Confederacy for
help, and conversely civic disturbances could shake the Confederate League. The
conquests from Austria, and the entanglement in the wars of France and
Burgundy, and in those of Italy, involved the Confederacy in external relations
out of all proportion to its constitutional growth. The problem of Federal
organization was handed down unsolved by the Middle Ages, together with
conditions that made it difficult of solution.
1484-1506] The youth of Zwingli.
Huldreich Zwingli
was born on New Year’s Day, 1484, at Wildhaus in the
valley of Toggenburg. This district, after the
extinction of its dynasty (1436), had been an object of strife between Zurich
and Schwyz; but in the end it had passed by purchase to the Abbey of St Gallen. The inhabitants of Wildhaus had gained the rights of electing their village bailiff and choosing their own
village priest. Zwingli’s father held the former, and his uncle Bartholomew the
latter, office; when this uncle (1487) became rural dean and rector of Wesen on the Lake of Wallenstadt, the young boy,
already destined for clerical life, went with him. His family was thus
respected and versed in civil and ecclesiastical matters; on the mother’s side,
too, one uncle was Abbot of Fischingen,
and another relative Abbot of Old St John’s, near Wesen. In 1494 Zwingli was sent to Basel to be
under Gregory Bünzli,
and in 1498 to Bern, where his teacher was Heinrich Wölflin (Lupulus),
then the most famous humanist in Switzerland. He was moved from Bern, lest the
Dominicans should secure him as a novice, and he is next found at Vienna, where
his classical bent was strengthened. In 1502 he returned to Basel where, in
1504, he graduated as Bachelor; the University was not then at its best, but
the city was still a centre of Swiss life and of the
trade in books; he became a teacher at St Martin’s School, and thus his mind
was early trained in the habit of instruction. In 1506 he was called to the
charge of Glarus, an important town with three outlying hamlets, and was
ordained priest at Constance.
The impulses forming his character had been simple:
the democratic spirit of a self-governing village with traditions of its
struggles; in 1490 he must have seen the Abbot of St Gallen appear
with a small army to reduce his subjects to obedience; the training of the
parish priest with a sense of responsibility (discharged as he even then
significantly held mainly by preaching); the life of the village with its many
activities of a smaller kind. But stronger than all these was his humanistic
training, which at Glarus he had time to follow out. Traces of the current
classical taste are seen in him to the end: one of these was his belief in the
divine inspiration of Cato and other ancients with their high ideal of patriotism;
hence, too, came his deep interest in the salvation of the great ancients who
lived before Christ. But he was a humanist who never sought a patron.
Before he came to Glarus he had been under the
influence of Thomas Wyttenbach (1505-6),
a lecturer at Basel, from whom he had learnt the evils of Indulgences and the
authority of the Bible. These crude ideas of reform were not however confined
to Wyttenbach, and it
was only in order to minimize his debt to Luther that Zwingli mentions this
earlier indebtedness. But he had made closer acquaintance with Church abuses;
for Heinrich Göldli,
a Swiss of the Papal Guard and a trafficker in benefices, had bought the
reversion of Glarus, and Zwingli had to pay him a pension of 100 gulden before
entering upon his charge.
In classics Erasmus was his guide; good letters and
sound theology were to go together; the spirit of the German Renaissance was to
inspire theology; but of deep personal religion Zwingli at this stage was
ignorant. That he never went to rest at night without having read a little in
his master's works, as he said in a letter to the master himself, may not have
been strictly true; but the dominant influence of Erasmus upon Zwingli, never
overcome although combined with other influences, admits of no doubt. He may
also have learnt from Erasmus something in the way of negation, such as a
contempt for relics; something, too, he may have learnt from Pico della Mirandola,
for whose sake he was once called a heretic at Basel; but from anti-papal
tendencies he was quite free. From this young humanist -paradoxically combining
a deep sense of responsibility with notable laxity in his moral life- no programme of reform was as
yet to be looked for. His was a mind that moved gradually towards its fuller
plans, and needed a fitting field wherein to work.
In 1513 he had again taken up the study of Greek, in
which a little later Bombasius became
his teacher; and he went to the New Testament itself rather than to any
commentaries; the Fathers however attracted him, and it was at Glarus that he
read Jerome (to whom Erasmus could not fail to send him), Augustine, Origen,
Cyril, and Chrysostom. Of all these Augustine was his favorite - a fact to be
noted in discussing his theology; but he considered the Greek Fathers to be more
excellent in their Christology than were the Latin. Hebrew, possibly begun
before, was studied later at Zurich in 1519 or 1520, but needed a renewed
effort in 1522. He ever insisted upon the need of a learned clergy, and studied
Holy Writ as he had learned to study the classical writers, a method which lent
freshness to his teaching, but laid him open to a charge of irreverence.
Through his devotion to Erasmus and his friendship
with Heinrich Loriti of
Glarus (Glareanus) Zwingli
gained an entry into the world of letters, which inherited the cosmopolitanism
of the medieval universities, and which was now beginning to group itself
around presses such as Froben’s at
Basel and Froschauer’s at Zurich (1519).
This was of importance, not only for his growing reputation, but also as
bringing him into touch with wider interests. In his later years of diplomacy
the habit of correspondence and the varied associations thus formed proved of
use. Equally important too was the skill with which he drew around him younger men
- some to find their goal in humanism, some in religious reform; in their after life and in their studies (mainly at Vienna) he
followed them from afar and regularly wrote to them. Thus before he founded a
school he had the scholars ready, and his name was a power among the younger
men.
During these years at Glarus he became entangled in
that system of wars and pensions which was the glory and the shame of his
fatherland. The Italian wars brought not only much wealth to Switzerland, but
also an increase of territory. To keep the Swiss as allies Louis XII had (1503)
surrendered Bellinzona to
them; when Massimiliano Sforza was made
Duke of Milan (1512) they received from him the Val Maggia, Locarno, and Lugano,
while the Rhaetian League (the Grisons)
gained the Valtelline.
The Swiss Diets were besieged by agents of the Powers. A French party was to be
found in every town, and a papalist anti-French
party was created by Matthäus Schinner,
Cardinal of Sion, in the service of Julius II.
Zwingli’s interest in politics was great; politics and patriotism inspired his
earliest German poems, the Labyrinth, and the Fable of the
Ox and the Beasts; his position in Glarus made him a valuable ally for the
papal party in a parish where the French were strong; it was therefore natural,
although afterwards made a charge against him, that he should accept from the
Pope a pension of 50 florins (1512 or 1513); and he was also (August 29, 1518)
appointed acolyte chaplain. So far was he from being anti-papal that the Papacy
was the one Power with which he held it right, even dutiful, to form alliances.
Twice he seems to have gone to Italy as chaplain with the Glarus contingent;
according to Bullinger he was present at
Novara (June 6, 1513) and at Marignano (September
13-14, 1515); on the latter occasion his persuasion kept the Glarus men
faithful to their service when others deserted to the French. Afterwards he
indicates this as the period when he formed his well-known views upon the evils
of mercenary service. The life of a mercenary -in camp or city- destroyed the
simplicity endeared to Zwingli by the earlier Confederate history and classic
models.
In 1515 the papal alliance came to an end : the
terrible experience of Marignano on the
one hand, and the acquisition of territory on the other, had made the
Confederates desirous of peace, and (November 29, 1516) a permanent peace was
made with France. Zwingli's opposition to this change of policy made his
position at Glarus untenable, and he became people's priest (or vicar) at Einsiedeln (April 14, 1516), placing a vicar at
Glarus. Einsiedeln, owing to its renown as a
place of pilgrimage, combined the quiet of a monastic House with the traffic of
a place of passage. Here he carried further his classical studies and increased
his reputation as a preacher; he carefully trained himself in oratory by a
study of the best classic models.
The personalities of the three great leaders, Erasmus,
Luther (to whom Zwingli considered he was prior in his teaching), and Zwingli,
were very different. Luther, with his monastic training, cared little for
Catholic organization; but he had a fervid personal experience and a strong
love for doctrine. Erasmus combined piety and theological learning with much
freedom of speech, tempered by regard for authority and a historic sense.
Zwingli had from the first no regard for authority - which indeed presented
itself at times in a guise hard to respect; he belonged to a country peculiarly
weak in its ecclesiastical organization and abounding in clerical abuses. But
he had a deep regard for learning and a love of freedom, personal and
intellectual. He had no vivid perceptions of dogma recording the struggles of
the soul. But he learnt from his varied parochial experience to realize keenly
the relations between a pastor and his people. He had no deep philosophic basis
for his opinions, and he was no framer of theories; he needed the touch of
actual life to bring his powers to work, and he needed a field that suited him
before he could form a definite policy. So far he was a keen Swiss patriot,
with that love of the past that had formed the legend of Tell, a humanist, and
a Reformer of the type of Erasmus, if indeed he was a Reformer at all.
If he was correct in his own view of his mental
history, he took up an anti-papal stand from the first, and not, as Luther did,
pressed by the course of argument. “The Papacy must fall”, he said to Capito in
1517. But the humanists had inherited something of scholastic freedom in
discussion, and to call the papal authority in question was no new thing in
1517. There was little significance in this expression of opinion from one who
held a papal pension, and had done his best to secure help for the Papacy in
what many of its friends condemned - its Italian wars and temporal policy.
After refusing one post at Winterthur, he received the
offer of another, that of people’s priest at the Great Minster of Zurich. His
reputation as a preacher was in his favor; the new Provost of the Chapter
-Felix Frei- had humanistic sympathies, and the
political views, which had made him enemies at Glarus, were not against him
here, for similar views had friends at Zurich; foreign pensions had been
forbidden by the Pensionbrief of
1503, and met with warm opposition in the Chapter; the French alliance also was
of less importance here. His appointment was preceded by much negotiation;
there were rivals, and a story was brought up to his discredit which he could
neither in the main deny, nor yet adequately defend; indeed, the tone of his defence showed a lack of moral sense. Finally the influence
of his friends, especially of Myconius (Oswald Geisshüssler), schoolmaster at
the Minster school, gained him the election (December 11, 1518), 17 out of a
chapter of 24 voting for him. The office of people’s priest or vicar at the
Minster, thus gained, he kept until 1522; later he received a prebend after he had resigned his papal pension.
Zwingli had thus come to the proper field of his
religious and political work. His development had so far been independent, not
influenced even by Luther; and yet the movement begun by Zwingli owes much of
its importance to that initiated by the German Reformer. Their likeness was the
product of the time : their differences were not only doctrinal. Luther was no
humanist, nor did his work lie in a Swiss city or in the Swiss Confederation.
The special type of Protestantism presented to the world by Zwingli was due to
his field of work being a city commonwealth with a peculiar history, political
and ecclesiastical. But the ideas with which he started were the results of his
humanism and of his previous work.
1518] Zwingli at Zurich.
First among his ideas comes that of his prophetical
office : he had gained his experience of life as a parish priest; his heart had
gone into learning and education; these factors combined to form his vision of
a prophet-pastor. From the Old Testament he took the notion of a prophet
teaching morality, and not shrinking from politics where they had to be
touched; but he added to this the ideal of instruction. He thus brought to his
new work the loftiest conceptions of spiritual authority and responsibility. But
his view left no room for other authority or for ecclesiastical superiors. The
prophet was to do his work in the community, not the community of the
congregation regarded as part of a wider Church, but the political community in
which he lived. Preaching -for which his life and training fitted him- was to
be the means of teaching; it was well adapted for influencing a democracy and
was characteristic of his system, where the pulpit superseded the altar, and
where the intellectual element was large.
The relation of the prophet to his community was
tinged by the influence of the Old Testament, and affected by the conditions of
Swiss life. It was the prophet’s work to teach, to inspire the magistracy; but
it was theirs to carry out the policy. Thus he and they had to work together.
This left large ecclesiastical powers to the community, and such the city had
already claimed for itself; it gave wide scope to the personal influence of the
pastor, both over the political assemblies and over the burgesses themselves.
The acquisition of that influence, and the full use of it, were therefore
essential to Zwingli’s success.
Zurich had grown up around the Great Minster and the
Minster of our Lady, foundations of Charles the Great and Ludwig the German
respectively. The site was well adapted for trade, and, between the competing
jurisdictions of the Abbess, the Provost of the Great Minster, and the Bailiff
of the Emperor, a peculiarly free development was possible. There had been many
contests between the city and its clergy. Arnold of Brescia, whose visit left
traces, had sojourned there (1140-5); the liability of the clergy to pay taxes
had been discussed and enforced. As a rule the monasteries were not only
assessed for taxation, but subject to visitation by the State; and one of the
few Federal documents that went into detail laid down the subjection of
ecclesiastics to all ordinary jurisdiction (the Pfaffenbrief of 1370).
Swiss history -apart from legend- had been so far
singularly poor in individual types. The most striking exception was that of
Hans Waldmann, who
had left a conspicuous mark on the constitution of Zurich. In 1483 he became
Burgomaster, and for some years stood out as the leading statesman in
Switzerland; foreign Powers gave him gifts and negotiated with him as with a
prince. Though he was opposed by the aristocrats, he succeeded in carrying out
a constitutional reform, excellent for the city, but stringent and oppressive
for the surrounding villages.
Up to this time the Constafel, the original citizens, knights,
merchants, and men of independent means, had been the leading element in the
constitution. Rudolf Brun (1336) had
placed the Gilds of hand-workers, 13 in number, afterwards 12, alongside of
the Constafel :
their Masters became members of the smaller Council along with other
Councilors, elected variously. At the head of the Constitution stood the
Burgomaster, and for special purposes the Great Council of 200 (exactly 212)
was called together. Waldmann,
whose sympathies were with the Gilds, gave them more power in the constitution,
and reduced the direct representation of the Constafel in the Smaller Council from
12 to 6. These civic regulations were confirmed even by his enemies after his
execution; but discontent was caused by his strict enactments about trade and
agriculture which weakened the country for the good of the city; the ill-will
thus caused led
to the riots preceding his death and left their mark behind. In the end the
villages gained through the mediation of the other States an organization (Gemeinde) of their own, through which they could
act and consult with Zurich.
Waldmann claimed
for the city the right to legislate for the Church, and to regulate the life
and demeanor of ecclesiastics, and thus gave an impulse to the ecclesiastical
independence of Zurich, already considerable. A document, dating from 1510 and
often wrongly termed a Concordat, summed up the ecclesiastical powers claimed
by Zurich and permitted to her by the Pope, anxious for such a useful ally. The
diocesan divisions of Switzerland corresponded to no national limits and were
included in different provinces: Constance and Chur under
Mainz, Basel and Lausanne under Besançon, and Sion under Tarantaise, until freed by Leo X
from its dependence. The Bishop of Constance, in whose diocese Zurich lay, was
not well placed to assert his authority in this powerful city, and had seen
many of his rights as to jurisdiction and appointments superseded.
When Zwingli went to Zurich, he therefore found a city
democratic in its institutions (more so, for instance, than Bern), where a
capable orator and man of affairs would be able to come to the front speedily;
its history had made its relations with the Papacy and the Bishop mere matters
of policy; the Church had as against the State little independence of its own,
and there was no traditional dislike of change. For such a community he was
well fitted: the political questions to which he had given most thought were
those upon which opinion at Zurich was already divided; his power of speech,
carefully trained and developed, could easily gain him power in a city with
some 7000 burghers, and by his expositions on market-days he was able also to
gain influence over the country people.
Zwingli found also in the press a helpful ally; the
printer Froschauer was one of his closest
adherents; his writings, which bear the mark of extempore utterance rather than
of careful preparation, were often intended for the press, and spread through
its channels of trade; letters could be sent and received thorough the same
means, for the printer's house was a centre of news
and communication : Froschauer, for instance,
had a branch establishment at Frankfort and could circulate Zwingli's writings
easily and carry his letters for him. The effect of Zwingli’s works -hastily
written for the most part, rarely classic in form or of permanent value for
thought- was often immediate and great; he was a religious pamphleteer of
learning, vigour, and
experience.
1519-24] Zwingli’s marriage. Indulgences.
In his private life there are few dates of importance.
He was attacked by the plague (September, 1519), to meet which he had
courageously returned from a holiday; but there are no reasons for regarding
this illness as a religious crisis in his life. His marriage with Anne Reinhard, widow of Hans Meyer of Knonau, son of a distinguished family, took place
(April 2, 1524) after a dubious connection of some two years, and was hailed by
some of his friends as a tardy though welcome act of courage. By the end of
1525 his Reformation at Zurich was in effect completed; and from that time
onward his activity was either political or directed against Anabaptist enemies.
In February, 1519, the Franciscan Bernardin Samson,
who had previously encountered Zwingli at Einsiedeln,
reached Zurich to preach his Indulgence. Zwingli opposed him at once and with
success; the Bishop of Constance forbade the clergy of the diocese to admit
Samson into their churches; the Council of Zurich forbade his entry into the
city. But Zwingli and Luther met with very different treatment : Samson was
ordered by the Pope himself not to vex the authorities of Zurich, and rather
than do so to depart; no breach between the Papacy and Zwingli resulted; a monk
who wished to print abuse of him was checked by both Legate and Bishop. The
first sign of anti-papal feeling upon his part comes after the Imperial
election (January-June, 1519). The papal policy in that matter was too shifty
to commend itself to Zwingli’s honest and outspoken nature, and moreover he
wished the Swiss to stand aloof.
But the Lutheran drama had by this time come to a
crisis, and following the advice of friends, Beatus Rhenanus among them,
Zwingli had interested himself in Luther’s fate; after the Leipzig disputation
he hailed him as “David” and “Hercules”, and exerted himself to delay the
publication of the Papal Bull against him. At this time too he read Huss’
work On the Church, which is practically a new edition of Wiclif’s De Ecclesia,
and contains many of the doctrines - such as those touching the papal power,
and the civil right to control the Church - afterwards taught by Zwingli.
The question how far Zwingli was indebted to Luther
has been much discussed. Like Luther, he had been called a heretic after his
opposition to Samson. To him as to others the name Lutheran was carelessly given.
His private Biblical annotations show new doctrinal tendencies after 1522, when
he had undoubtedly read Luther’s works. But the assumption that he owed his
views to Luther always roused his indignation, and a common Pauline element
fully explains the likeness of their opinions, slight as it is. Zwingli tried
to clear himself from the charge of imitation, and claimed for himself
originality. In doing so he was justified, though his treatment of the charge
shows some petulance and self-satisfaction. But it is too much to say that the
bold stand made by Luther and the whole set of problems he raised had no effect
upon Zwingli’s mind and did nothing to direct his activity into new channels.
Their original impulses, however, were very different, and their several
treatment of Indulgences illustrates the difference. To Luther the question
presented itself as a mistaken doctrine which struck at the root of religion;
to Zwingli it was more a practical abuse, an encroachment of the Church upon
the individual life.
The divergence of Zwingli from Erasmus and its
occasion are also instructive. Hütten,
in his energy and contempt for tradition, his license and disregard of
morality, had little in common with Erasmus on the one hand or with Luther on
the other, although his love of learning and width of outlook joined him to
both. Before his death, however, in August, 1523, a quarrel with Erasmus
brought out the fundamental opposition between them. Zwingli, linked to Erasmus
by early indebtedness and a scholar's reverence, had yet more in common
with Hütten; and when
the dying outcast, disowned by the calmer souls, reached Zurich, Zwingli
befriended him; he did this, not from mere human sympathy, but also from the
feeling of a common cause against the old society and the old traditions. But
his action caused a breach between him and Erasmus, and with Glareanus also, “the shadow
of Erasmus”. This marks a certain separation of Zwingli from the aims of the
humanist circles in which he had hitherto lived; for Basel and Einsiedeln, unlike Luzern, were both centres of learning.
In his sermons Zwingli, who was both outspoken and
effective, attacked monasticism and the doctrines of Purgatory and the
Invocation of Saints. But the first conflict took place when he attacked the
principle of tithes. In a Latin sermon preached before the Chapter, he
maintained that tithes had no foundation in the Divine Law, and should be
voluntary. The Provost urged him in vain to recant, and not to furnish arms for
the laity to use against the clergy (early in 1520). The same year a
simplification of the breviary for the Minster was prepared and introduced
(June 27, 1520) - a change arising out of Zwingli’s earlier liturgical studies,
and showing that the majority of the Chapter was on his side.
Religious parties were already forming themselves
around him. He met with opposition both from the conservatives in the Chapter
(including Conrad Hoffman, who had supported his election) and from the monks.
The excitement raised was shown by a decree of 1520, ordering priests in town
and country to preach conformably to the Gospels and Epistles and according to
the guidance of the Holy Spirit and the Bible, but to keep silence upon human
innovations. This decree, proceeding not from the Bishop but from the civil rulers,
and taking the Bible as a standard, exhibited two characteristics of the Zwinglian position.
1521] Mercenary service. The Papacy.
The political events of these years were decisive for
Zwingli and for Zurich. The French, at a Diet held at Luzern (May 5, 1521),
strove to get support from the Confederates. Pensions had already done much
harm to social and political life; the mercenary soldiers, whether abroad
selling their lives for gold, or at home spending it in riot, were an injury to
the State. The ostentatious display of wealth made by the French envoys, both
in the Imperial election and now in their search for an alliance, emphasized
the dangers of mercenary service. Zwingli, together with the Burgomaster Marcus
Roust, opposed the French alliance; the Diet, however, made a treaty with
Francis I by which he might enlist troops up to 16,000 under leaders of his own
choice. The Bernese statesman Albrecht von Stein came to Zurich to secure its
approval; for the city with its villages could raise an army of 10,000. But,
stimulated by sermons of passionate patriotism from Zwingli, reminding them
again and again of their hard-bought freedom and traditional simplicity, the
Zurich Council rejected the French alliance. The Council of the Two Hundred
answered to the Diet, that they would keep to their old leagues, and would have
nothing to do with Princes, pensions, and foreign alliances; and the Pension
decree which forbade the receipt of any alien gifts was to be sworn to by all
the citizens twice a year. But the loss of wealth, the separation from the
other Cantons, and the comparative stagnation of neutral life soon caused
discontent in the Corinth of Switzerland; and Zwingli had to bear many
reproaches. About this time he resigned his papal pension from conscientious
scruples, but soon after received a canonry in the Minster with a prebend of 70 gulden; this benefice gave
him the franchise, and from this time his political importance grew. He was now
the centre of a growing group; Berthold Haller at
Bern, Vadian (von
Watt), the gifted Burgomaster of St Gallen, and
others; the humanistic brotherhood was passing into a Reforming society, and
was soon to be used as a diplomatic power.
Zwingli’s defection from the Papacy was now only a
matter of time. An incident often assigned as its cause was even more important
for Zurich than for him. The Pope asked for a force to be used only for the defence of his States, not against the French or other
Swiss. Zurich, which sent him half his body-guard, was the place where he
sought it. Zwingli, who had once before supported a papal application, now
opposed it. But a force of 6000 set out (September 16, 1521) and was in the end
sent to Milan. The Council indignantly recalled it; but some of the soldiers
followed Cardinal Schinner, and narrowly escaped a conflict with the Swiss
mercenaries of France. To make things worse, their pay was withheld even after
their return. The Council, supported by popular feeling, now forbade all
foreign service (January 11, 1522).
This same year, the question of Lenten observance
began the Zwinglian Reformation. Some of
Zwingli’s followers did not share his willingness to wait for the action of the
magistracy. The printer Froschauer and
others ate meat publicly, in the presence of Leo Jud and Zwingli himself. They
could justify themselves by his teaching that nothing not commanded by
Scripture was binding upon Christians, and he undertook their defence. His sermon On the Choice or Freedom of
Food was preached now (March 30, 1522) and afterwards printed, as were
many of his sermons delivered about this time. He advocated freedom for the
individual, upon whom lay the responsibility to act without scandal.
The civic authorities made a compromise : no
distinction was drawn, they said, by the New Testament between kinds of food;
but for the sake of peace the old rule should be kept until changed by
authority, and the people's priests were to check the people from any breach of
this ruling. The disregard of custom and authority shown by the decree and the
act leading to it could not be overlooked; and the Bishop of Constance sent a
commission, consisting of his Suffragan (Melchior Wattli) and two others, to
settle the matter. The commissioners laid their views before the priests and
the Smaller Council, and commanded them to observe existing customs (April 7,
1522). Before the Great Council Zwingli answered the Suffragan’s arguments,
and the debate really turned upon Church authority and custom as against
individual freedom. At its close the Council repeated its old decree, pending a
settlement by the Bishop of Constance, which they begged him to make according
to the law of Christ. This was a practical abrogation of episcopal power, for
the Bishop's standing was clear. The Zwinglian Reformation,
therefore, begins as an ecclesiastical revolution, founded on action rather
than doctrine, by which a city freed itself from outward control and organized
itself afresh.
His learned friend Johann Faber, the Vicar-General of
Constance, afterwards an Aulic Councilor
and a leading ecclesiastic, had just returned from a visit to Rome (May, 1522)
and thenceforth led the opposition against Zwingli. So early as 1519 the latter
had marked him as one from whom, although a humanist, the Gospel had little to
hope. Zwingli’s literary work at this time recalls that of Wiclif in the years before
his death; his Archeteles -a
full statement of his position- was written in haste and appeared now (August
22, 1522). On reading it Erasmus begged him to be more cautious and to act with
others; Oecolampadius also urged restraint. The same
year (July 2) ten priests joined Zwingli in a petition to the Bishop to allow
clerical marriage, wherein the wish for innovation was as distinct as the
picture of existing morals was dark. There can be no doubt that the priests in
Switzerland, owing partly to the disorganization of episcopal rule and partly
to the isolation of their parishes, had a low standard of life; of this there
is ample evidence from both episcopal and Reforming documents. A like request
made to the Federal Diet (July 13) was accompanied by a repudiation of the
names Lutheran and Hussites. These requests had
no result beyond making clear the position of those who preferred them.
1522-3] The First Disputation.
At Zurich repeated troubles with the monks, and
disturbances during Zwingli’s sermons, made it necessary for the Burgomaster to
restore order. His decree -this time coupled with no appeal to the Bishop- was
that the pure Word of God must be preached, and the Scholastics (a term loosely
used for teachers held to be old-fashioned) left alone. A Chapter (August 15)
of the country clergymen came to the same decision. Thus backed by civic and
clerical authority, Zwingli held himself free. The Bible -as interpreted by the
responsible “Bishop” (so he terms all pastors and indeed in one place all
humanists)- was to be the sole guide of faith. City and country, pastors and
magistrates were combined into a stronghold of Reform. The system thus begun
may be described on the one side as individualistic and on the other as civic.
The appeal to the Scriptures alone was individualistic, due to humanism without
prepossession; the civic element was due to the circumstances of Zurich.
In a federal republic accustomed to Diets a Public
Disputation- suggested in Archeteles-seemed
a likely way to settle controversies. It recalled at once University exercises
and General Councils; it was at once learned and democratic. Such an assembly
was called at the end of the year, and met in Zurich (January 29, 1523). The
invitation to this Disputation shows the Great Council for the first time
definitely on Zwingli’s side; and each subsequent stage of the Swiss
Reformation was marked by a similar encounter. Zwingli had resigned his
parochial charge, but had been allowed by the Council the use of the pulpit. In
the Disputation he and his doctrine were the central points of debate. To
regulate the Disputation he had drawn up 67 theses.
The fundamental conception of the doctrine here set
forth was that of the Church as a democratic body of all Christians, each in
open communication with God independently of externals or means of grace,
guided by the study of Scripture and the illumination of God’s Spirit. To this
conception the republicanism of letters and of Switzerland had each contributed
something. Starting from this assumption, the Theses place the
Gospel alone as the basis of truth and the secular authority as the governor of
the organization; they deny the power of Pope and hierarchy, the sacrifice in
the Mass, the Invocation of Saints, Purgatory, times of fasting, and clerical
celibacy.
About 600 were present at the Disputation, including
representatives of the Bishop with Faber among them; Schaffhausen, however, was
the only Canton which sent deputies. Faber urged the postponement of a decision
until the expected General Council met; but Zwingli’s reply was that the Word
of God was the sole authority, and competent scholars could interpret it, so
that there was no need of a Council’s decision. When the audience met after
dinner, the Burgomaster Roust, who presided, declared in the name of the
Council that Zwingli had not been convicted of heresy, and therefore ordered
that he should go on preaching the Holy Gospel with the Holy Spirit’s help.
Zurich was thus committed to Zwingli, and the importance of the decision was
shown by Faber’s printing his own account of what took place as a correction of
the Zurich account. The First Disputation marks Zwingli’s control of the city
as established, and their joint complete and open rupture with the past.
Zwingli was now sure of his ground and could proceed
more rapidly : his literary activity was accompanied by practical changes. Leo
Jud had translated the Baptismal Office into German and used it (August 10,
1523). A committee was appointed to deal with the Minster Chapter, for which a
new constitution was issued (September 29, 1523). Fees for Baptism and Burial
were abolished; holders of Minster offices were to discharge their duties to
the utmost of their health and strength; as they died off, their places were to
be left unfilled (unless chaplains were needed), and the income was to be
applied to other purposes. The Chapter’s fall was not undeserved; for, though
there were some excellent members, it had become a refuge for men of good
family and poor education. The Bible was to be read by the Minster clergy
publicly an hour a day in Hebrew, Greek and Latin, with explanations; free
lectures and fit lodgings were provided for candidates for the ministry, so
that they need no longer go abroad. The public lectures were the origin of the
later “prophesying”. In this scheme of teaching Zwingli had able helpers in Leo
Jud, people's priest at All Saints (1523), and Myconius, now (1524) at the Minster school. Zwingli
remained faithful to the principles of Erasmus, and never fell into the easy
error of underestimating education as compared with spiritual zeal. The
educational scheme was completed for Zurich itself, after the dissolution of
the monasteries which followed in December, 1524. What remained of the
Chapter’s income when education had been provided for, went to the poor and the
aged; in his poor-laws, as in all his social legislation, Zwingli showed a
clear and almost modern appreciation of needs and methods, notably in his
discouragement of mendicancy and use of careful enquiry.
The literary side of Zwingli’s work in this stage was
the Auslegung und Begründung der Schlussreden, an
unsystematic explanation of the Theses for the Disputation. The work, which was
preceded by a letter to the Council and people of Glarus, was a full and in
parts lengthy exposition of the Theses; written in German, it was “a farrago of
all the opinions which are controverted today”. The explanations of the Theses
upon the Papacy and the Mass are especially long, which is noteworthy, as
Zwingli had as yet not attacked the Mass in practice. This work, written night
and day amid the expectation of his friends, and incidentally discussing his
relations with Luther, may be held to contain the full programme of the Helvetic Reformation (July
14,1523).
Not only did he dislike to be called Lutheran, but on
some points, such as Purgatory, Confession, and Invocation of Saints, he
differs from Luther. Against the monks he inveighs strongly: all monasteries
ought to be turned into hospitals. The Reformation in Switzerland made most way
where there were many monasteries, and least where there were none; the
differences that arose between the larger Houses and their tenants made the
latter more eager to embrace Protestantism. And the secularization of the monasteries
-here laid down as desirable- was a very practical part of the Swiss
Reformation : the peasants in some parts undoubtedly looked for profit from the
dissolution. Zwingli also explains his method of dealing with doctrine; the
Invocation of Saints he had let remain until the populace should have learnt to
do without it and worship Christ alone. Confirmation and Extreme Unction he
would retain as rites, not as Sacraments; but Auricular Confession, pictures,
and music, should be banished from churches.
Zwingli held that it was his part to teach, but that
to make changes belonged to the civic authority. But his teaching had led some
of his followers to act without waiting for the civic rulers; pictures and
images were torn down both in town and country. After much discussion the
question came before the Great Council, which suspended judgment until a second
Disputation should be held. This took place on October 26,1523. The Bishops and
the other Cantons were invited, but the Bishops did not come; 800 persons, 350
of them ecclesiastics, were present; this time St Gallen as
well as Schaffhausen was represented; Luzern and Obwalden angrily refused the
invitation. The first day’s debate was upon images and pictures, which Zwingli
held forbidden in all cases; some urged delay, but the final decision was that
idols and pictures should be removed, but without a breach of the peace; those
who had already broken the peace were to be pardoned as a rule, but a leader,
Nicholas Hottinger, was afterwards banished for two years.
On the second day the Mass was discussed; Zwingli had prepared Theses according
to which the Mass was no sacrifice and had been surrounded by abuses. But the
appearance in this Disputation of the Anabaptists, an organized radical party
basing their views upon his teaching, and yet going beyond him in action,
hampered him greatly and made the magistracy cautious.
At the Disputation Zwingli noted in a formal way that
the ecclesiastical authorities had done nothing; this was true, although the
Bishop of Constance had in a dignified note asserted his constitutional
position; he could not appear, and he begged them to exercise restraint. But
the civil authorities were now, in Zwingli’s view and in their own, called upon
to act. A commission of eight members of the two Councils and six ecclesiastics
was named to discuss what steps should be taken. Until a settlement the clergy
were to be instructed by an epistle, which Zwingli was asked to write;
preachers were also sent out; Wolfgang Joner, Abbot of Kappel,
who had lately called the younger Bullinger to
his help, together with others, visited the Canton; Zwingli himself went in the
direction of the Thurgau. The Second Disputation, wherein discussion turned
solely on the interpretation of the Scriptures, marks a fresh stage in the
Reformation, even apart from the appearance of the Anabaptists. The Short
Introduction to Christian Doctrine is its literary monument.
Division in the Swiss Confederation. [1523-4
The Reformation was now no longer a purely civic affair.
From the first the Catholic Cantons had been indisposed to treat it as such;
among people of simple minds and with an unformed Federal system religious
innovation and religious discord put a heavy strain both upon Federal action
and other bonds of union. The Federal Diet at Baden (September 30, 1523) had
threatened all innovators with punishment, and Luzern in particular had shown
by its action the strength of its feelings. The Reformation had thus already
divided the Confederation, and no Diet had been held at Zurich since March,
1522; the union of the Cantons before this time had, however, been so loose
that it is easy to overestimate the retrograde effects of the Reformation.
The Introduction, written in fourteen
days, was circulated in November, 1523, and was intended for the clergy, not
the public. It started from an explanation of the relations between the Law and
the Gospel, passing on to an application to present needs, the question of
images, and that of the Mass. Throughout the Canton priests here and there
ceased to say mass; when Conrad Hoffman and the Catholics of the Chapter
complained, the Council, advised by the parish priests, forbade them to speak
or act against what had been settled, under pain of loss of their benefices and
banishment; at Whitsuntide a full settlement should be made (January, 1524). A
further appeal from the Catholic Cantons to abstain from innovations (February
25, 1524) only called forth the answer that they would observe the Federal
League, but could not yield in matters of conscience (March 21). For Christmas
Day, 1523, Zwingli had announced an administration in both kinds at the
Cathedral, and the substitution of a sermon for the daily mass. The Council,
however, decreed that until Whitsuntide old Mass and new Administration should
continue side by side. Images and crucifixes -the use of which had been quietly
checked for some time- were on no account to be carried about. The exact form
of the substitute for the Mass was to be settled at a fresh Disputation (December
19, 1523).
When Whitsuntide came (May 15, 1524) the Council
resolved to act on its own authority without waiting for the Bishop. The
committee appointed in 1523 suggested the removal of pictures and images by
legally named authorities at the wish of each community, and Zwingli urged the
replacing of the early Mass by a sermon and the Lord’s Supper. The committee,
however, did not altogether follow him as to the Mass; this was left in use,
but the images were removed. The tardy intervention of the Bishop, defending
the Mass and images, was disregarded. This decision was adopted by both
Councils and sent round to the bailiffs in the country for execution
(June-July). The majority of a village, however, could decide to keep or remove
images as they pleased. Removal was to be carried out by the pastor and
responsible men; the use of organs, the passing bell, and extreme unction were
also abolished. A reply to the Bishop was composed by Zwingli, who was now
all-powerful, and approved by the Council. The section on the Mass is Zwingli’s
first complete statement of his views, which he was now developing. He carried
on a controversy, partly as to this subject, with Jerome Eraser of Leipzig, who
had attacked Luther for his alteration of the Canon; in his Antibolon (August
18) in answer to this opponent, in an Apology addressed to Diebold Geroldseck (October 9,
1523), in his De Canone Missae Epichiresis (1523), in his Subsidium sive Coronis de Eucharistia (1525), and
in his De Vera et Falsa Religione (1525)
Zwingli dealt with this central point. Negatively, he repudiated all
sacramental efficacy, and reduced the rite to a mere sign (nuda signa): positively, he laid great stress, notably in
his reply to Emser, upon its aspect as a feast
and a corporate act; it was therefore social, not merely individual in its
importance.
The Mass at Zurich was abolished in April, 1525, but
the religious Houses had been previously suppressed; the monks who did not
return to the world were placed together in the Franciscan monastery; the
convent of the Minster of our Lady (December 4,1524) and the Chapter of the
Great Minster (December 20) gave up their possessions to the city; the
monasteries throughout the Canton followed. The incomes were devoted to
education or the poor; a gymnasium, for instance, was endowed with
the funds of the Great Minster, and Zwingli himself became rector of the Carolinum (April 14, 1525) as the united scholastic
foundations were called. His scheme of graduated studies leading up to the
ministry was adequate and well thought out. By a development of the plan of
Biblical instruction begun in 1523 the prophesying or expositions took the
place of the choir services, while the linguistic instruction was extended
(July 19, 1525). When a Synodal organization
(September 23, 1527) and Church Courts (Stillstände)
for discipline and marriage-cases were set up (May 10, 1525), the Reformation
upon its constructive as well as its destructive side was completed. As a
purely civic organization even in its details it was systematic and orderly : a
register of baptisms, for instance, was begun in 1526 for the city and
afterwards extended to the Canton. Of the elaborate system thus established
Zwingli was the “Bishop” and the soul.
It seems strange to find the Council at this date
(August 19, 1524) writing to the Pope that they were unable to stop the course
of change, even had they wished, owing to the strength of popular opinion. The
Pope's reply was conciliatory, and prolonged negotiations took place (1525-6);
the city trying to obtain the arrears of its military pay, and Clement VII
seeking to keep the city firm in its old alliance. In no respect were the
positions of Luther and of Zwingli more contrasted than in the treatment they
received from the Papacy, and the cause of this was the papal hope of help from
Zurich.
The civic position of Zwingli was now significant.
Theoretically he might consider the congregation the ecclesiastical power, but
in practice the community acted. He had realized his conception of the prophet
guiding the community; nay more,
he was, as Salat says, “Burgomaster,
secretary, and Council in one”. First the Great Council, the democratic body,
had been won, then the Smaller Council, and finally events gave Zwingli even
further power. Marcus Roust and Felix Schmid, the experienced Burgomasters, had
died (1524), Joachim am Grüt, Zwingli's opponent in
the debates upon the Mass (1525), had been dismissed from his office of city
clerk (end of 1525). Zwingli was the sole leader left. At a threatening crisis
(November 20, 1524) the Burgomaster and the chief Gild-master received
authority to settle pressing business privately with the help of trusty men.
This is the first appearance of the Privy Council in and through which Zwingli
afterwards worked, and to which foreign affairs were mainly entrusted. The
experience of the Peasants’ War (1524-5) inclined Zwingli to a body less
democratic than a large assembly, and his policy often required secrecy.
Through this body, the Heimliche Rath,
or the Privy Six, which became permanent in 1529, Zwingli exerted his
influence. The Council itself was "purged" by the exclusion of those
opposed to him (December 9, 1528), who were found chiefly among the nobles, The
numbers representing the Constafel in
the two Councils were reduced, from 6 to 3, and from 18 to 12, respectively
(1529). Thus beyond the Protestant democracy and the two Councils stood the
commanding personality of Zwingli, working through and upon each of them, but
above them all, through the Privy Six,
1523-8] The Swiss Anabaptists.
Zwingli had been so gently treated by the Pope, and
his career had been so fortunate, that his conflict with the Anabaptists might
well seem to him the hardest struggle undergone by him. The leaders of that
party had been among those who, by eating flesh in Lent, began the breach with
episcopacy. They and their followers pulled down crucifixes before the State
had legalized such acts; but they could appeal to Zwingli's teaching. They
first appear as a distinct party in the Second Disputation (October, 1523).
Conrad Grebel, son of
Jacob Grebel,
executed November, 1526, for treason, and Felix Manz, both men of influential families and with
private grudges against Zwingli, were leaders of this radical party in the
city; outside the city were other local centres : Zolliken, Wyteken, and Höngg. The dislike of tithes, so loudly expressed
in the Peasants’ Revolt, was shared by many Anabaptists; and at Grüningen, a centre where this economic side of the Anabaptist movement showed itself, it united
with that of the peasants. Zwingli himself was averse from levying the small
tithes upon vegetables and fruit ; he held further that tithes had merely
legal, but no Scriptural, warrant. The Council, however, disagreed with him,
and tithes were maintained.
At first the movement was indigenous; but late in 1524 Münzer came to Waldshut (N.W. of Zurich), and Carlstadt to
Zurich itself; some German Anabaptists from St Gallen also
worked in Zurich territory; these influences from outside intensified the
movement and organized it. But it was more a radical than a doctrinal movement;
and hence Zwingli, jealous for the unity of his new organization and yet
largely in sympathy with their views, appealed to the Anabaptists in vain not
to found a separate body. When they did so, a public Disputation with them, the
first of several, was arranged (January 17-18, 1525), and it was followed by a
decree that all unbaptized children must be baptized within a week, or their
parents would be banished. Some of the leaders were imprisoned; and with these
Zwingli held private and repeated discussions.
Inasmuch as this new society rejected the authority of
magistrates and pastors alike, the Council by severe punishment tried to
suppress the movement. Manz was
put to death by drowning (January 7, 1527), and the foreign leaders were banished,
most of them to meet violent deaths later and elsewhere. In spite of Zwingli’s
severity against them, due to his resentment as a rejected leader, whom they
had come to hate as ‘the false prophet’, their small congregations continued to
exist. Their energy afterwards found vent in needed criticism of clerical life;
and the Synod of Easter, 1528, had for one of its objects a tightening of
clerical discipline which might meet the objections and gain over the objectors.
After the final removal of the Mass the radicals
turned to social matters, and, especially at Grüningen, attacked the tithes. An agitation
against tithes and the monasteries had to a great extent common objects with
the Zwinglians; the houses of Rüti and Bubikon were attacked by
rioters; and a popular assembly at Toss (June 5, 1525) caused great fear. The
defeat of the Peasants’ Revolt in Germany made the allied movement easier to
deal with in Switzerland, and Zwingli’s negotiations, together with public
disputations, resulted in a settlement. Tithes remained, but personal
servitude, where the ownership of the State was concerned, was done away with.
The villagers of the lake communes were henceforth regarded as citizens of the
town. The general result here as in Germany was to arouse a dread of change;
and outside Zurich Zwingli's teaching was greatly blamed as an exciting cause.
Incidentally, the vain attempt of Ulrich of Württemberg to regain his duchy by
the help of the peasants and Swiss mercenaries had made the governments
at Ensisheim and
Innsbruck suspicious of Switzerland. The grievances of the peasants,
intensified by the effect of the Reformation upon the public lands,
remained unredressed, and, a century later, led
to the Peasants’ War (1653). Few chapters in the history of federalism are more
instructive than this failure on the part of a democratic federation to govern
its conquests or to respect their liberties.
The peasants. The Subject Lands. [1522-5
The Reformation had brought a new cause of division
into the Confederacy. Religious disunion, save in the occasional form of
heresy, was an unlooked-for thing, and the Federal authority scarcely knew how
to treat it. The Forest Cantons were keen enemies of change; they regarded the
Zurich innovations as threatening to themselves. On the other hand Zurich
naturally regarded herself as free to make what changes she wished. This
difficulty would have strained Federal relations, especially where much of
Church government had been already taken over by the civil power; but it might have
been overcome. When Zurich, disregarding the principle of government
by the majority of the Cantons, pushed religious change into the Subject Lands
the difficulty was increased. The frequent division of the higher and lower
jurisdiction between the Confederates and a single Canton gave rise to the
further question: under which jurisdiction came religious offences? The
majority of the Cantons governing the Subject Lands were Catholic; Zurich in
many places held the lower jurisdiction. As early as November, 1522, the
Federal Diet ordered the bailiffs in the Subject Lands to bring before them the
priests who spoke against the faith, thus claiming religious offences for the
higher jurisdiction. But these beginnings of discord in the Federation were
bound up with the beginnings of a local reformation upon Catholic lines.
The Bishop of Constance, like his brother-Bishop
Christopher von Uttenheim of
Basel, had tried to improve his diocese, as his pastoral letter of 1517 shows.
With these efforts there was widespread sympathy, and when the three Bishops of
Basel, Lausanne, and Constance complained to the Diet at Luzern (January 26,
1524) of the disturbed state of things in their dioceses, the Diet not only (as
already noted) sent an embassy to Zurich urging caution, but proposed to
undertake a reformation on the lines of unity, admitting that abuses ought to
be redressed. Exactions, traffic in benefices, Indulgences were condemned; the
Diet would consult with Zurich as to the best means of shaking off the yoke which
the injustice of Popes, Cardinals, and prelates had laid upon the Swiss people.
But this reformation was to be undertaken by the State, and the Federal Diet
was to be the ruling authority. Nothing could better prove the ecclesiastical
anarchy into which Switzerland had fallen, and the chance that a reforming
Papacy would have had of preserving unity and yet securing progress. Luzern,
whence these proposals came, was afterwards a centre of the Counter-Reformation. They were rejected by Zurich, but resulted in the
Disputation at Baden (May-June, 1526). Zwingli, however, it was easy to see,
cared little for unity or peace, compared with the carrying out of his own
far-reaching plans.
At Beckenried,
April 8, 1524, the Five Cantons, Luzern, Uri, Schwyz, Unterwalden,
and Zug, formed a separate league to suppress all Hussite,
Lutheran, or Zwinglian errors. A further
remonstrance was made to Zurich by all the Cantons except Schaffhausen
and Appenzell, and the intention of not sitting
in Diet along with Zurich was declared (July 16, 1524). The Mass, pictures,
images, and fasting were pronounced binding upon all Swiss. Zurich on the other
hand declared religion to be a purely cantonal matter. This was a question hard
to settle, with no precedents to refer to. Zurich, however, put itself in the
wrong by its action in the Thurgau, where it held the lower jurisdiction,
exercised through its bailiffs. Preachers, for the most part connected with
Zwingli, had worked their way here - such as Oechsli (an old Einsiedeln friend
of his) at Burg. When Oechsli was
seized by the Federal officer who exercised the higher jurisdiction, his
friends and parishioners gathered to rescue him (July 17, 1524): afterwards in
a riotous mob they proceeded to the Carthusian monastery
of Ittingen, and set
it on fire. At Stammheim and
Stein images were destroyed. The seizure of the leaders - three of whom were
executed at Baden - embittered Zurich; but the other Cantons in their turn
blamed its encouragement of the preachers.
Six Cantons (Luzern, Uri, Unterwalden,
Schwyz, Zug, and Freiburg) now threatened to break the league; but Bern was
inclined to support the independence of the Cantons, upon the principle cujus regio, ejus religio.
At a Diet at Zug it was proposed to raise the country districts against Zurich
on account of her destruction of images, but to this step Bern and Solothurn
objected. Zurich had, however, made sure of the loyalty of her subjects in the
religious changes, just as she referred to them the French alliance and the
demands of the peasants. But the Cantons were now divided into hostile
factions; and outside lay Austria, embittered by the help sent from Zurich to a
rising at Waldshut and
Swiss support of Duke Ulrich.
At the end of 1524 Zwingli, always fertile in
suggestions and skilful in
expression, came forward with a remarkable plan. Zurich was to strengthen
herself in military equipment - her reputation for military strength was great;
she was to seek alliances with France and Savoy; to promise St Gallen and the Thurgau the property of the
monasteries in their territory as a price for their support; and to raise Tyrol
against Austria. It is clear that Zwingli’s range was extending: it was now
that he entered into relations with Duke Ulrich; he now also took the religious
movement in his old home, Toggenburg, under his care,
and the Reformation was soon fully under way (1524-5).
Political schemes of Zwingli. [1524-6
The disaster of Pavia (February 24, 1525) wrought some
change in Federal feeling; the loss of 5000 Swiss, followed by the retreat of
the remainder, made the French alliance less popular; people freely cursed the
French, pensions, and subsidies. Thus, Zwingli’s old policy of doing away with
mercenary service was recommended; but he had now departed from his former
dislike of alliances. An alliance with France was soon one of his dearest
hopes; his work at Zurich was safe; to make Protestantism in the Common Lands
equally safe, and afterwards to gain freedom for his preachers in the Catholic
Cantons, were now the objects of his policy. To carry such a policy into effect
foreign alliances were needed. But nearer than France lay southern Germany, the
cities of which were in many ways more like Zurich than was Bern, and here his
doctrines made rapid way. These cities were naturally inclined to an
organization of religion that was at once civic and democratic; Strasburg -
with its many subject villages - was a mediator by position and interest; the
new diplomatists were the preachers, with something of Zwingli’s influence in
their respective cities, and many of them in constant correspondence with him.
The decentralizing of influences which had once centred in Rome or in the greater
ecclesiastical Courts; the substitution of pastors and dogmatic leaders for
Cardinals and Legates : these are leading features of Reformation politics.
Thus the main interest of Zwingli’s letters in the following years is political
and diplomatic. His object was to give Zurich a great dominion such as she had
sought and lost in the old Zurich war, to make her the Vorort, no longer of eastern Switzerland
only, but of a new Confederacy reaching into the Empire and holding at bay the
Emperor (of whom he wished to see the world well rid). But this dominion was to
be based upon a common religion.
As the forces of religious change drew together, so
did the forces of conservatism. Archduke Ferdinand had gathered the leading
Catholic States (June, 1526) at Ratisbon; to them, as to the Diet at Luzern,
the suppression of heresy seemed the most urgent duty; the minor ecclesiastical
reforms secured from the Legate Campeggio fell
far short of the Swiss plan of reform. Faber had been at this conference; in
this year (1526) he became an imperial Councilor, and now he began to organize
the Catholic party in Switzerland. For this purpose a Disputation was suggested
at Baden (January 15, 1526); John Mayer of Eck, a many-sided and able man, was
eager to meet Zwingli. But the latter at first declined to meet him anywhere
save at Zurich; and afterwards, when Zwingli was ready to go to St Gallen or Schaffhausen, the Zurich Council refused
him leave for the journey. When the meeting took place at Baden (May 21-June
18, 1526), he was therefore not present, and Oecolampadius from Basel had to take his place. But the most elaborate arrangements were made
for sending him daily reports and receiving his advice. Eck, with his Theses,
played the part that Zwingli had played at Zurich, and in the opinion of the
majority (82 to 20) played it well. The reputation of the victory greatly
strengthened the Catholic party.
But Zurich was now no longer the sole centre of Reform. At Schaffhausen, Hofmeister, at Biel, Wyttenbach, Zwingli’s old teacher at Basel, were
preaching freely. In Basel Capito’s work
(1512-20) was more than carried on by Oecolampadius,
now (February, 1525) minister at St Martin’s. Bern, the most important of all
the cities, was, in religion as in politics, inclined to a policy of its own.
Political power was here in the hands of the aristocracy, the gilds being
politically unimportant; Berthold Haller and Sebastian Meier by their preaching
shared the work of the painter-dramatist Nicholas Manuel, to whom some ascribe
the direction of Bernese policy, until his death in 1530. Free preaching, if in
accord with God's Word, was allowed, but innovations were forbidden; pictures,
fasting, and other points disputed elsewhere were left untouched; but heretical
books were prohibited (June 15, 1523; November 22, 1524). The magistracy,
however, claimed the right to punish priests disregarding these decrees; the
monasteries were placed under civic control, and clerical incomes were
regulated. But the power of the preachers grew; and at Easter, 1527, both the
Great and the Small Council had Protestant majorities. A decree maintaining the
old worship for the present with a speedy prospect of change was passed; but
some priests here as elsewhere anticipated the change. Political interests
moved Bern in the same direction. Although disturbed by the Peasants' War, Bern
was still unwilling to put pressure upon Zurich; and towards the end of 1526,
through fear of Austria, drew nearer to her. Bern, Zurich, Basel, Glarus,
and Appenzell did not share the desire of
the Catholic Cantons to base their Federal union upon a common belief, but
wished to found it only upon common interests.
The Bernese authorities decided, like Zurich, to hold
a Disputation to which the Bishops and delegates from the Cantons were invited.
Zwingli came with the Burgomaster, Diethelm Roust.
Here (January 6, 1528) ten Theses, drawn up by Zwingli, Haller, and Roll, were
debated. They treated of the Mass as a sacrifice, of pictures, and of
Purgatory; the validity of Church ordinances, except when grounded upon God’s
Word, was denied. Thesis IV, “that the body and blood of Christ are
substantially and corporally received in the Eucharist cannot be proved from
the Scripture”, caused much discussion. The Disputations ended as Zwingli
wished. The Mass was replaced by sermons; images were soon removed, and even
the Minster organ was broken up (February 17, 1528). In some respects, however,
Bern did not follow Zurich; when the latter supported by force the Reformation
in the Thurgau, Bern parted company, and her constant fear of Savoy led her to
look more to the west and less to the east than did Zurich.
The Bernese Reformation was less doctrinal than the
Zurich, but the secularization of the monasteries was a great feature in its
case also (1527); the funds so derived were devoted partly to the State, partly
to replacing foreign pensions, which were now definitely renounced (February,
1528). The Bernese Oberlanders,
however, had hoped to share the property of the monastery at Interlaken, and,
when this was seized for the government, the inhabitants of the Haslithal rose in
rebellion; some citizens of Unterwalden,
believing the statement of these peasants that the Reformation was forced upon
them, crossed the Brünig to
their help, and it cost Bern much trouble to put down the movement so
supported. This incident, for which Bern claimed compensation, was a cause of
much ill-will.
About a year later (February, 1529) the Reformation
was carried through at Basel, but not without tumults which drove Erasmus away
to Louvain, the centre of the Counter-Reformation. Mühlhausen, Schaffhausen (where the movement was democratic),
St Gallen, and the Free Bailiwicks
(especially Bremgarten)
followed in the same direction; while Appenzell (the
outer Rhodes allowing freedom of belief, 1524) and Glarus were divided; the
Graubünden - where opposition to the Bishop had long existed - allowed liberty
of preaching in 1526.
But Zwingli’s outlook included Germany as well as
Switzerland; his doctrines, opposed to those of Luther, were here working their
way inwards; and therefore the relations between Emperor and Princes greatly
affected him. Constance, always hostile to the Emperor, and Lindau, controlled the Lake of Constance. In the former,
Protestant views, taught by the Swabian Reformer, Ambrose Blarer, a friend of Melanchthon,
and Zurik, had such
hold that the Bishop (1526) moved to Meersburg, and the Chapter to Ueberlingen. The Federal Diet
(November 4, 1527) refused to admit Constance as a member; but on Christmas-day
the Council of Zurich decided to conclude with Constance a religious and
political League, called das christliche Bürgerrecht. The treaty was modeled upon that
which had admitted Basel to the Confederates (June 9,1501); it contained
provisions for mutual help, mainly defensive; it allowed of extension, and
indeed the conquest of lands for Constance is spoken of, a seeming reference to
the Thurgau. But the peculiarity of the new Treaty lay in its being based upon
theological unity - a principle which was to have a long and disastrous future
in diplomacy. To Strasburg, where the preachers Capito, Bucer, and Hedio were already his
friends, Zwingli sent (August, 1527) an envoy to discuss its admission to the
new League; the admission of Bern, discussed at the Bern Disputation, was
merely a question of time; it followed Constance (June 25, 1528). The
Reformation in the Common Lands was now a pressing question, and a clause in
the Treaty provided that preachers there should be protected, and no subject
punished for his belief; if the majority anywhere decided for Reform, they were
to be left free to carry it out. The first place to which this applied was the Toggenburg, Zwingli’s old home.
Other cities quickly followed : St Gallen (November 3); Biel (January 28, 1529); Mühlhausen (February 17); Basel (March 3); and after a
longer interval Schaffhausen (October 15), which had a somewhat varied
religious history. Strasburg, after many proposals and discussions (due to
Bern’s unwillingness to pass beyond Switzerland), finally entered the League
(January 5, 1530), when the danger from Austria seemed great, and Zwingli's
activity, stimulated by Philip of Hesse, was almost feverish. The edifice was
to be crowned by the admission of Hesse; but only Zurich, Basel, and Strasburg
would consent to so risky an alliance; and in the various treaties concluded
with these cities the claims of the Swiss Confederation were reserved. There
were proposals for a larger league, to include Augsburg, Nürnberg, and Ulm; but
the anomaly of such a formation was evident, and it could not be successfully
carried into execution. The inclusion of Ulrich of Württemberg in the Christian
Civic League, as proposed by Philip, was, happily, not brought about. The
result of the diplomatic activity in which Zwingli had engaged under the
influence of Philip of Hesse thus fell far short of its purpose.
To this new League, which made the Confederation
impossible, the Catholic States replied by the “Christian Union”. Austria had
causes of complaint in the Waldshut incident
and in the monastic secularizations. The monasteries of Stein-am-Rhein and Königsfelden, the former being under Austrian
protection, and the latter an Austrian foundation, had been secularized (1524).
Ferdinand protested; and reprisals followed on both sides. For its Italian
policy Austria had need of Swiss support (it was hopeless, said one Austrian
envoy, to hold Milan unless Switzerland were with the Emperor). At the Diet at
Baden (May 28, 1528) Dr Jacob Sturzl, an envoy from Ferdinand,
whose policy here agreed with the Emperor’s, proposed to the Five Catholic
Cantons, Luzern, Schwyz, Uri, Unterwalden, and
Zug, a league with Austria, partly for defence and
common religious ends. War was threatened; for, while the Imperial government
was eager to attack Constance, Zurich and possibly Bern were equally bound to
defend it, and also to chastise Unterwalden for
violating Bernese territory.
It is impossible to follow in detail Austria’s policy
towards Switzerland : distinctions between the policies of Charles and
Ferdinand, between the Councils at Ensisheim and
Innsbruck, are easily traceable. And the chief advisers were not at one.
Mark Sittich of
Ems -the Vogt of Bregenz and
the Vorarlberg - and Count Rudolf von Sulz, head of the Innsbruck Council, were for war;
they were further urged on by the Bishop of Constance and the Abbot of St Gallen, who had private wrongs to redress. But the
Habsburg lack of funds, and the impossibility of putting fresh taxes upon
impoverished lands, made against war. The desirability of regaining the old
lands of the Habsburgs was always present to their advisers; yet little could
be done to compass it. On the other side the dread of such an attack from
“Pharaoh” was always in the mind of Zwingli, and sometimes found violent
expression. But with the lapse of time he learnt that the Emperor could not
always act as he would.
After lengthy negotiations the proposals for the
Christian Union were drafted in a Diet at Feldkirch (February 14, 1529), and fully
agreed to at Waldshut (April
22, 1529). The old faith was to be preserved and, as in 1525, a reformation on
Catholic lines was to be carried out with the advice of the spiritual rulers.
The members of the Union were bound to secure for each other the right of
punishing heretics. A clause of doubtful interpretation about conquests showed
that the possibility of such had been considered. This Union, which made a
solid wall of Catholicism between South Germany and Switzerland, was, like the
Civic League, a breaking-up of the old Confederation. It also looked for an
extension beyond Switzerland : at the Diet of Speier (1529)
Ferdinand discussed with Bavaria and the Bishop of Salzburg their entry into
the Catholic League; Savoy was spoken of as likely to join it; the Valais also
had (May, 1528) contracted a league for ten years with Savoy; even the Swabian
League, it was said, might become a member. Bern and Zurich would then be
enclosed by enemies.
Diet of Speier.
Imminence of war. [1528-9
The Diet of Speier (February
21,1529) issued a severe decree against sects denying the Sacrament of the
Flesh and Blood of Christ; a distinction, which the Protestants had not as yet
formally made for themselves, was made by others. Nine of the fourteen cities
that signed the Protest presented on this occasion were Zwinglian. Strasburg, which was in disgrace at the Diet
for having just abolished the Mass, drew closer to Zurich, from both political
and theological motives. The distinction between Lutherans and Zwinglians on the subject of the Eucharist became now
of political as well as dogmatic importance.
Events were tending towards war in Switzerland. Bern
and Zurich had agreed (November 16-18, 1528) both to compel Unterwalden to pay the indemnity for invading Bernese
territory, and also to protect the Reformed faith in the Common Lands, while
the several communities were to be left free to decide for the Reformed or
Catholic side. At a meeting of the Thurgau Landsgemeinde at Weinfelden (December 9,
1528) envoys of both the Catholic and Reformed Cantons attended; the latter
promised help to those upon their side, and asked their help in return. The
majority of the Thurgau communities decided for Reform. Meanwhile, the
difficulties of a divided government in the Common Territories had become
increasingly acute. Moreover, to the west, Geneva was attacked by Savoy, to
which the Valais, now (end of 1528) allied to the Five Cantons, was attached,
and the Christian Union supported Savoy. As these alliances tended to war, Schaffhausen, Appenzell, and the Graubünden offered mediation. But, as
their terms did not include freedom of preaching, Zurich, firm on this point,
would not listen to them. Of the Five Cantons, Unterwalden was
now the bitterest; but Luzern and Zurich, the rival leaders, had made up their
mind for war (May 26-28). Bern, anxious to preserve unity, would not promise
Zurich help for an offensive war. The demands of Zurich were indeed excessive;
the surrender of the rights of the Cantons to the administration of the Abbey
of St Gallen (to which Zurich, Luzern,
Schwyz, and Glarus sent a protecting bailiff in turn every two years), the
withdrawal from the Austrian alliance, and the surrender of the Luzern
satirist, Thomas Murner.
Riotous proceedings at St Gallen were
a further cause of war. In 1528 it was Zurich’s turn to appoint the bailiff,
who both attended to secular business and protected the Abbey; Zwingli meant to
use the opportunity to further his cause. The Abbot Franz Geissberger was dying;
Zwingli and the Privy Council bade (January 28, 1529) the Zurich official
(Jacob Frei) seize the monastic property upon
his death, secularize it, and introduce the Gospel. But the townsmen broke into
the abbey (February 23) before the death of Geissberger (March 23). The monks elected as
Abbot Kilian Käuffi, who fled to Bregenz, and thence resisted the plunder of his
abbey lands. Since the abbey was under the protection of the Empire as well as
of the four Cantons, and of these Luzern and Schwyz supported Käuffi, the illegal action of
Zurich and of the townsmen could not but lead to war.
Nor did this incident stand alone: the delicate
constitutional question of the Free Bailiwicks added to the intensity of
feeling. Nearly all the villages in the district had declared (May, 1529) that
they would follow Zurich, which was openly encouraging their violent changes;
in all but religion they would obey their lords, the Catholic majority of the
Cantons. These lords, however, hesitated to use force; but embassies regained
for Catholicism some parishes. A new bailiff sent by Unterwalden was
to take office in May (1529), and at first Zurich resolved to prevent his entry.
Bern did its utmost to keep the peace, but Zurich was
embittered, while the Five Cantons had enough cause to reject Bern's mediation.
Zurich declared war (June 8), and carried out a plan of campaign which Zwingli
had drawn up; leaving small detachments at Muri and
elsewhere, near the Bernese troops at Bremgarten (for Bern, which disliked offensive
war, was yet willing to defend the Common Lands and Zurich if attacked), the
main body moved to Kappel, ten miles from
Zurich. Zwingli's plan was to move suddenly against the enemy; to force them to
give up the Austrian alliance and their rule in the Common Lands, to renounce
pensions, and to allow free preaching in their own territory. The Five Cantons,
hoping to the last for Austrian help, were badly prepared : the troops of
Luzern had gone to the Free Bailiwicks, but those of the other four Cantons moved
from Zug towards Zurich. Hans Oebli,
the Landammann of Glarus, hurried up to
mediate; and, as he was a friend of Reform, his voice, in spite of Zwingli's
plea for war, prevailed. The rank and file of neither army wished for war; and
so, by the help of other Cantons, peace was negotiated by ambassadors, first
at Aarau and then at Steinhausen in Zug; the
decision lay by custom with the armies themselves. Zwingli wished to force the
abolition of pensions upon his opponents, but even at Zurich some were against
this, and Bern, through Nicholas Manuel, refused to enforce it. Finally (June
24, 1529) peace was made at Kappel. Neither
party was to attack the other for its faith. In the Common Lands, the religious
offenders should not be punished; the majority were to decide for or against
the Mass and on other questions; only men of honor and moderation should be
sent there as bailiffs. The Austrian alliance was renounced, and its very documents were cut
into shreds and burnt; the Five Cantons were to pay a war indemnity according
to the decision of arbitrators, and, if it remained unpaid, Zurich and Bern
might close their markets to the Five Cantons. Finally the abolition of
pensions and mercenary service was recommended to the Five Cantons. The removal
of the Austrian alliance seemed to secure the advantage to Zurich, which still
kept Hesse and its chance of France. One clause was afterwards differently
construed to mean, that as faith cannot be planted by force no coercion should
be used against the Five Cantons or their people in matters touching their
faith. The Zwinglians thought that free
preaching extended to the Five Cantons as well as to the Common Lands; and on
the other hand the Five Cantons naturally held themselves free to act as they
pleased in their own territory. Thus the peace which placed Zurich at the
height of her power contained in itself the seeds of future war. As a
politician, if not as a theologian, Zwingli was justified in his preference for
force. As early as August he thought another campaign inevitable.
The question of the Eucharist. Marburg Conference.
In this same year the question of the Eucharist became
of crucial importance for the Protestants. In his writings of 1522 Zwingli had
entered into no criticism of the accepted view. The interpretation, in our
Lord’s saying, “This is my body”, of the word “is” as “signifies” was possibly
suggested to him by Cornelius van Hoen,
after 1521, in a circular letter carried about to theologians by Henne Rode. The expression
of his opinion was hastened, if not caused, by Carlstadt’s extreme utterances,
containing (as Zwingli thought) a kernel of truth hidden by errors, and it
first took shape in a letter to Matthäus Alber of Reutlingen
(November 16, 1524) : the Eucharist was regarded as purely symbolical, but as a
pledge of Christian profession; and he emphasized, as his controversy with the
Anabaptists shows, the corporate aspect in the Eucharist.
Zwingli’s teaching, often presented as a mere negation
of Luther's, was no less a negation of the doctrine of the Church. In spite of
varying views as to the exact nature of the Presence, its reality had always
been admitted: Wiclif’s denial
of Transubstantiation and Luther’s assertion of Consubstantiation, although
affecting the relation of the Presence to the elements, had not called in
question that reality or the supernatural grace of this Sacrament itself.
Zwingli, fastening upon the direct relation between God and the individual
apart from outward acts, and starting from the human side, made this Sacrament
purely symbolical, and brought it down from the supernatural to the human
plane. In this he was followed by the later Sacramentarians,
and was at one with the Socinians and more
radical sects. He thus became the revolutionary theologian of the Reformation.
While the Lutherans were sensitive to charges of a departure from the Catholic
faith, the Zwinglians were conscious of
their own bold innovations in doctrine and organization (for instance, they did
not hold Ordination essential). Their divergence from the Catholic Church went
far deeper than objections to the Papacy or to current abuses; and thus the
vision of a Council to promote union had no attraction or possibility for them.
Hence the growth of their influence tended to perpetuate disunion.
The south German cities were led to favor Zwingli's
views, not only from democratic sympathy with the Swiss, but from dislike of
Luther's political allies, the Princes. Nürnberg was an exception : in 1525
Zwingli’s books were forbidden there as “books of the Devil”. But by April,
1527, most of the Augsburg preachers were on his side; at Ulm Conrad Sam was a
pillar of strength to him; Ulrich of Württemberg, influenced by Oecolampadius and then by Zwingli’s sermons (1524-5),
became a strong Zwinglian, and in Hesse
influenced the Landgrave in his turn; at Mainz, Hedio, who came from Basel (1523) corresponded with
Zwingli; Frankfort, through Froschauer's connection,
became a literary centre of the “pure doctrine”;
Strasburg, inspired by Zwingli, sent out its own teachers; and Zwinglianism, spreading down the
Rhine, met a similar current of doctrine originating with van Hoen in Holland; it reached
even Friesland, where Carlstadt had worked, and Luther, unable to understand
such a rapid growth, ascribed it to the Devil.
Haner, a
theologian who differed from Luther in maintaining a purely spiritual eating
and drinking of the Savior’s flesh and blood, and from Zwingli in maintaining a
supernatural communication of grace, had suggested to the Landgrave Philip the
possibility of a conference clearing up all differences. This advice, given
at Speier in 1529, where unity among the
Protestants was desirable for both political and religious reasons, led to the
Marburg Conference (September, 1529). The character and issue of this
Conference have been described elsewhere. The central subject was the change
wrought by consecration in the elements. Zwingli purposely restricted the
discussion to leave hope for unity; he had a practical mind, accustomed more
than Luther's to the give and take of equal discussion. So long as unity was
based upon ecclesiastical organization, there had been scope for difference of
opinion within one Church; but now, when organic unity was lost, exact
agreement of theological opinion and the names of certain leaders were made the
essentials of the unity which it was sought to secure. Luther was the obstacle,
as insisting that union of any kind should depend upon absolute agreement. But
it is hard to see how Luther could have come into union with Zwingli, without
joining in his political schemes; since the demand for a union between them was
primarily political.
The failure to achieve theological unity ruined the
great plan for a league which Zwingli and Philip of Hesse had conceived. Jacob
Meier of Basel had spoken of some considerable plan to be discussed at Marburg;
Zwingli's correspondence with the Landgrave and his visit to Strasburg had
suggested many things to him; his request for an official delegate from the
Zurich Council did not aim at theology alone. Unfortunately, the invitation to
Bern was not sent until September 10, when it was too late. Religious
differences made it clear that Saxony and Switzerland could not be included in
the same league. However, Philip was ready to do without Saxony, and he was
also ready to seek help from France, an expedient which loyalty to the
Empire made distasteful to Saxony. The proposal of such a plan came from
Philip; the exact details were afterwards filled in by Zwingli, inspired from
Strasburg. Not only France but Venice was to be drawn into the league; and the
instructions to Collin, the envoy there, were drawn up by Zwingli himself, as
were many other State papers.
The activity and the expenditure of the French agents
(Boisregault and Meigret) in Switzerland were
great; the Most Christian King had no scruple about negotiations with heretics
(who indeed were better than Turks); in March, 1531, he was ready to help
Zurich secretly. But his great object was to keep the balance even in
Switzerland; a war was not in his interest. On the other hand, the fear of
arousing France paralyzed the Emperor's action. Hence, while foreign influences
pushed Switzerland to the verge of war, they also served to keep it back from
war itself.
Diplomacy took up much of Zwingli's time, but his pen
was as active as ever : he wrote commentaries upon Isaiah and Jeremiah, a
number of important letters, and controversial tracts. His power at Zurich and
the spirit of the city were at their height. In a complaint to Luzern about Thomas Murner (whose Heretics’
Calendar seemed dangerous and offensive to an age over-sensitive to
ridicule) the Council said (February 14, 1529) that they were free, and subject
to no Emperor or lord; they, like France, Venice, and other States, ordered
spiritual persons and property as they thought well. Zwingli's enemies too were
now under his feet; after December 7, 1528, only the barest civic rights
without the chance of office were left to non-Reformers; attendance at Mass
even outside the city was punished by fine; to eat fish instead of flesh on
Friday was an offence. But a reaction might at any time set in. It was indeed
the fear of such a reaction that led Zwingli to make his Reformation as
thorough as possible.
1529-3o] The Tetrapolitana.
In this period it becomes impossible to separate Swiss
politics from German. The restoration of Duke Ulrich of Württemberg (which
Zurich was more disposed than Bern to help) was an unfailing subject of
negotiation. With this Saul who, could he but be restored, seemed likely to be
a Paul to the Reformation, Zwingli had a connection of long standing; and
through him he became friendly with that able politician, the Landgrave Philip
of Hesse. Zwingli’s Hessian correspondence in cipher begins with the second
Diet of Speier, when the Landgrave (April 22,
1529) first wrote about the Marburg Conference, and it ends eleven days before
Zwingli's death. The two correspondents formed vast schemes, for the Landgrave,
like Zwingli himself, was no rigid conservative. As early as 1524 Zwingli had
formed a plan for an extensive league; but the Anabaptist troubles led him to
lay it aside. Now under the Landgrave’s influence he returned to it. After the
Conference the proposal of “a Christian agreement” came from Hesse; it aimed at
securing mutual protection and converts to the Word of God; the Schmalkaldic League (April, 1531) owed something to
this conception. But the idea of a league uniting Swiss and German Protestants
failed through resistance from the Elector of Saxony, faithful to the Empire
and firm in his Lutheran creed.
The reward Zwingli gained for deserting his old
principle of keeping aloof from foreign complications was small; his widest
plans miscarried. No greater success rewarded Bucer in his attempts at mediation between the
Lutheran and Zwinglian camps. The creed of
Strasburg, Constance, Memmingen,
and Lindau, drawn up by Bucer and Capito, presented
to the Emperor July 11, 1530, and known as the Tetrapolitana, was considered and rejected
by Basel and Zurich at the Evangelic Diet of Basel, November 16, 1530. It
affirmed that the true body and blood of Christ were given, truly to eat and
drink, for the nourishment of souls; positively, it made as close an approach
to the Lutheran view as was possible, while by omission of any statement as to
the elements it avoided contradicting that view; in other articles the
authority of the Scriptures, not mentioned in the Augsburg Confession, and the
rejection of images are set forth. Zwingli's own Confession was embodied in
the Fidel ratio ad Carolum Imperatorem presented
to the Emperor (July 3, 1530). The earlier sections expounded the Nicene faith;
the sixth section emphasized Wyclif’s theory
of the invisible Church composed of elect believers; the seventh and eighth
asserted the Sacraments to be merely signs and affirmed Zwingli’s teaching in
terms likely to anger Catholics and Lutherans alike; later sections depreciated
ceremonies, denounced images as unscriptural, magnified the office of preacher,
and discussed the relations of Church and State at length. The Anabaptists were
often incidentally condemned, and the assertion of his own views was clear and
unflinching. No wish to conciliate others, no fear of a breach with the past is
apparent.
Even when Strasburg (December, 1530) joined the Schmalkaldic League, Zwingli’s desire for political
union did not overcome his conscientious adherence to his own views. He was
thus the obstacle in the negotiations at this stage (March-July, 1531), when
the Elector of Saxony had yielded so far as to admit the adherents of the Tetrapolitana to
the Schmalkaldic League. While he was
willing to leave something vague, he could not accept definitions which he held
to be untrue. Moreover, the Lutherans desired a General Council; while Zwingli
had completely broken with tradition, and his organization left no room for
Councils.
Apart from doctrine, Zwinglianism on its political side was now
(1530-1) a greater danger to the Empire than was Lutheranism. Ferdinand wrote
to the Emperor after the battle of Kappel, that
Switzerland was the head of German Protestantism, and to conquer it was the
true way of mastering Germany and re-establishing religious peace; the papal
Legate at Brussels wrote to Clement VII (May, 1531); “Zurich est désormais la tête et la capitale de la secte Luthérienne”. But her power was declining. It was
only a small gain that Ulm (July, 1531), moved by the definite refusal of
Electoral Saxony to alter its position, became more Zwinglian,
or that Bern, whose support was essential to Zurich, rejected the Tetrapolitana. In Zurich itself
Zwingli’s influence was lessening; the unrestrained power of the Privy Council
had grown distasteful, and the disaffected nobility was regaining power; on the
question of an embassy to France (February, 1531), the opposition showed itself
stronger than his followers. The trade of the city had been injured by political
unrest; strict sumptuary laws and moral control led to discontent among the
artisans and tradesmen, who regretted the monasteries; the sermons lost some of
their old attraction. So keenly did Zwingli feel this change, that he formally
asked leave to resign his preachership and
go to work elsewhere (July 26). But he was too closely bound up with the town,
and at the prayer of a deputation, made up of the two Burgomasters and the
three chief Gild-masters, he kept his office; and for the last months of his
life he retained, though precariously, something of his former influence.
War of Musso.
[1530-1
Inside the Confederation war was again drawing nearer;
the Catholic Cantons had still their own grievances and were embittered by
defeat : they still, although against hope, looked to Austria for help.
Zwingli, angry at the insults to which he was subjected, was decidedly for war
(“The knot can only be loosed by firmness”). In this state of affairs the war
of Musso kindled
the flame. The castellan of Musso (di Medigino), since 1525 a
troublesome neighbor of the Graubünden, had (March, 1531) murdered a Graubünden
envoy returning from Milan, and invaded the Valtelline. The League appealed to the Swiss and
especially to Zurich. Zwingli believed that the Emperor stood behind the
castellan, and that movements of troops in Austria foreshadowed an attack upon
Zurich - an event which German politics made not unlikely. The Emperor did not
indeed himself support the castellan, but he was inclined to approve the war,
since it kept the dangerous Swiss employed, and he was not unwilling that Musso should be helped
without expense to himself lest, if left without help, the castellan should
turn to France. The Swiss Diet was divided by the Graubünden request. The Five
Cantons refused help : the Protestants promised it. Zwingli again, in the Privy
Council and in closest touch with the French ambassador Meigret, seized the opportunity
to revive his far-reaching plan of alliance.
Political means were used for religious objects. An
assembly of the Zwinglian allies (May 15)
at Zurich determined that the Five Cantons must be forced to allow free way to
preaching. An embargo upon trade by land - to check the passage of wine, wheat,
salt, and iron - was to be set up against the Five Cantons. It was an unhappy
method of compulsion, although it had a precedent in 1438, and had been contemplated
in the First Peace of Kappel. The chief
responsibility belongs to Bern, who suggested it as an alternative to the war
proposed by Zurich. Things drifted nearer to war in spite of representations
from France and from the other Cantons : scarcity of food distressed and
angered the Catholics; Zurich would only remove the embargo if free preaching
were allowed.
The Forest Cantons this time made the first move, and
from Zug marched towards Zurich (October 4-9). When news of this reached
Zurich, a small band, which in the end reached 1200, under George Göldli set out (October 9);
a larger band of 1500 men fairly well equipped started two days later, and
Zwingli accompanied them. But there was a lack of enthusiasm and even of
preparation. In Bern the people blamed Zwingli for this "parsons’
war". The action of Bern indeed was ambiguous; partly owing to trouble
nearer home, and partly from aversion to the war. Her contingent was not ready
until the crisis had passed. But there is no need to look for open treachery
when a house is divided against itself.
The advance guard under Göldli, which was only to keep on the defensive,
began the battle at Kappel on October 11;
they neglected to charge the enemy when changing their attack, and their
position was turned. When the main body under Rudolf Lavater reached the Albis -the position fixed by the Council - the
day was practically lost. Its attack upon the 8000 Forest men failed. Zwingli
was among the slain, and his body was treated disgracefully as that of a traitor.
His stepson, Gerold Meyer, Diebold von Geroldscok, Abbot Joner of Kappel, and others of his friends, perished with him.
The remaining Zurich troops and allies came up
(October 24) with the Catholic troops on the Gubel near Zug and were defeated in an engagement
more serious than the first. Zurich lay open to its enemies: the Emperor might
now have intervened with effect. But through the mediation of the French
ambassadors and the other Cantons peace was made (November 23): the conditions
of the First Peace of Kappel were now
reversed. It was to the credit of the victors that they did not press their
success too far. Even now Zurich was not disposed for peace; but the country
villages, which had lost by the embargo, here as at Bern were strongly for it.
By the Second Peace of Kappel the
territory of Zurich was kept intact: in the Common Lands existing beliefs were
left alone, but Catholic minorities, where there were such, received
protection; government by the majority of the Cantons was affirmed. The management
of its own religious matters was left to each Canton. Zwingli's scheme to force
the Catholic Cantons to give free play to the Reformation in the Common Lands
and in their own territory had failed; but the principle of Federal control
over religion was not asserted. The Christian Civic Alliance and the Treaty of
1529 were annulled. Basel, Schaffhausen, St Gallen,
and Mühlhausen paid indemnities of from 1000 to 4000
crowns. Zurich and the town of St Gallen were
to compensate and restore the Abbey of St Gallen :
the Reformed communities in the Free Bailiwicks, Thurgau, and Toggenburg (where the Abbot regained his power), were
allowed to keep their faith; Catholic, but not Reformed, minorities were
protected. Monks and nuns might return to their Houses. Solothurn restored its
old worship to escape the payment of an indemnity. Bern, which had to forego
the compensation from Unterwalden, and Zurich
were left discontented and almost bankrupt. Zurich was forced (December, 1531)
to grant the Kappel Charter, by which its
rural districts gained a right to be consulted upon all important questions,
and to give or refuse their consent for any future war. Such was the outcome of
Zwingli's ambitious scheme, whereby Bern and Zurich were to be the pillars of a
great Protestant power in Switzerland, extending its influence far afield. The
peace perpetuated division among the Reformers, and separated Switzerland from
Germany. Glarus became Catholic once more; Bern grew more Lutheran; in the
Common Lands the Aargau suffered most reaction, the Thurgau least. Zurich is
henceforth externally of less importance. The future of Swiss Protestantism lay
with Bern and Geneva, the latter not yet a Confederate, but in league with Bern
and Freiburg (February, 1528).
And, furthermore, the Counter-Reformation, or the
Catholic Reaction, (neither name aptly describes the movement or its origin)
found a ready home in Switzerland. Catholicism began to gain ground here soon
after the Second Treaty of Kappel, without
having to wait for any of the stimulating movements felt elsewhere; the scheme
of Catholic reform proposed in 1524-5, and the disasters of Zwinglianism were effective
local causes.
Outside Powers were unwilling to let the war die out;
Philip of Hesse, always ready and hopeful, tried to rouse it to new life; Basel
was arming, but the south German towns urged peace. The Pope called upon the
Emperor to make an end and put down the heresy at once, and even sent to the
Five Cantons “aliquantum pecuniae” : Ferdinand would
have done the same, but was overruled by his advisers. The Austrian statesmen
hoped to use the war for the Emperor's good, but to do so without expense : and
the Emperor feared by any decisive step to rouse the French to war. The French
on their part gained greatly by the Peace. Thus the settlement remained
undisturbed, and the south German towns drew nearer to the Princes now that
Zurich could give them no help.
In Zurich itself the religious movement
continued: Bullinger, Zwingli’s son-in-law and
successor, banished from Bremgarten by
the Peace, carried on his work; but it was now solely theological and internal;
the Privy Council was discredited, as Bullinger explained
to Myconius. Its
existence meant foreign entanglements. And Zurich, weakened by the new power
given to the country districts, became less and less able to pursue an
adventurous foreign policy among the great States of Europe.
But the strife of doctrine remained behind, always
significant for the history of thought, at times for politics as well. Bucer's task of mediation
grew harder and its end more remote. Conferences with Melanchthon had no
result, because it was impossible to devise a formula such as would satisfy
Luther and still recognize the conflicting doctrines adapted to minds of
different types. At Wittenberg (May 22-27, 1536) a well-attended Conference
produced a conciliatory document, the Wittenberg Concord. According
to it, the body and blood of Christ were truly and substantially present in the
Eucharist, shown and received. Bucer,
by a distinction not widely accepted, contended that the impious did not, while
the merely unworthy did, receive them. To this view Strasburg, Augsburg, Ulm,
Constance, and other cities agreed. But Luther hesitated to sign the Concord
because he heard the Swiss had agreed to it, and feared it must therefore be
bad.
On the other hand, in the previous January, the Swiss
theologians had met at Basel and there drawn up the First Helvetic Confession.
It was conciliatory in tone, and went beyond the purely symbolic view,
the nuda signa,
of Zwingli. But its framers were not at Wittenberg; and Bucer, the medium of
intercourse, did not adequately represent one side to the other. Another
Conference of the Swiss Reformers at Basel drafted a new document, showing a
wish for unity, and at the same time making it clear why the Wittenberg Concord
could not possibly be accepted. Luther’s reply (1537) was guarded and
distrustful, so that its circulation in Switzerland did not help the cause
which Bucer and
Melanchthon had at heart. A Conference at Zurich (April 28,1538) showed the
politicians as eager for unity as the theologians for distinction. Finally,
Zurich (September 28, 1538) resolved to keep to her old view with no
modifications. If doctrine was to be the basis of unity, the adjustment of the
limits of difference required nice discussion. Luther’s violence of language,
and Zwingli’s mingling of politics and theology, had complicated that
discussion; henceforth, old positions eagerly guarded and attacked,
associations and repugnances valued
above their real importance, were further obstacles to union. But it was hard
to give any strong religious reasons why unity as distinct from charity should
be sought. Political reasons there were in plenty, but their admission made the
discussions theologically lifeless.
Calvin may have learnt much of organization from
Zurich; but in theological importance he overshadows not only Zwingli but all
other Swiss reformers. As to the Eucharist, while Zwinglian in
his exegesis he was more spiritual in his conceptions, emphasizing the grace
conferred, while not connecting it with the elements; a change which has also
been detected in Bullinger and later Zwinglians. But they agreed in rejecting Luther's
doctrine. Like Bucer Calvin
worked for unity, and unlike Zwingli did not spread his political energies over
too large a field. He was thus able to concentrate and deepen influences set in
motion by Zwingli. But even Calvin’s labors for unity had a political end : if
to observers from the outside German and French Protestants could appear
united, the French King, ally of the one, could not well persecute the other.
Calvin and Bullinger drew up (1549)
the Consensus Tigurinus -
strongly anti-Lutheran in tone. Up to this time there had been a division among
the Swiss leaders : Bullinger had given up
all hope of unity with the Lutherans : at Bern, with its Lutheran inclinations,
that hope was still alive. But with the Consensus Protestant Switzerland was
united. Basel, with traditions of synods of its own, Bern, with a distrust of
all synods as leading to strife, did not welcome it greatly, but yet adopted it
(1551); so did Schaffhausen, St Gallen, Biel,
and Mühlhausen. Thus in the end dogmatic and
political unity - which had so often helped or thwarted each other - claimed a
common territory in Reformed Switzerland. And the reaction following upon
Zwingli’s strict control brought a growth of toleration. In Germany, meanwhile,
the teaching of Zwingli became nominally less important than that of Calvin,
and the division between Reformed and Lutheran - so fatal to German
Protestantism - belongs in its later stages more to the history of Calvinism than
of Zwinglianism. But
Zwingli in his treatment of the Eucharist had raised a fundamental issue; and
his views on this head, like his treatment of public worship, have had a wider
influence than their recognition in Confessions and Liturgies would indicate.
Thus Zwinglianism became
the name of a school of thought rather than of a religious body.
Zwingli’s plans would have given the Confederation
unity and cohesion at the expense of his opponents. But the Reformation
postponed the solution of the unsolved problem of Swiss unity; and the
Counter-Reformation made the difficulties greater. Cardinal Carlo Borromeo, Archbishop of Milan, took a deep interest in
Switzerland : he founded a Swiss College at Milan, introduced into the land the
Jesuits (1574-81) and the Capuchins (1581-8), and procured a permanent nunciature at Luzern. After his death Luzern, under
Ludwig Pfyffer,
formed a league with Uri, Schwyz, Unterwalden,
Zug, Solothurn, and Freiburg to maintain offensively and defensively the
Catholic Faith (1586) : this was known as the Borromean League. Thus the
division into two camps was crystallized, and the old Federal Constitution was
almost dissolved. Diets, save those of the opposed Cantons held separately,
became rare. The disputes about the Common Lands went on and with foreign
influences intensified the differences due to faith. In the Thirty Years’ War
the Protestants expressly and the Catholics tacitly adopted neutrality, but
could not hold entirely aloof. The country's importance to its neighbors lay in
its provision of soldiers for hire, and for this reason they endured its
independence. The neutrality adopted was not that advocated yet departed from
by Zwingli : it resulted from the religious divisions due to him, combined with
the foreign service he condemned.
The Reformation in Switzerland shows how largely the
forms in which religious ideas express themselves are molded by political
forces. It was also more than elsewhere the centre of
the national history. It was Zwingli who, by his religious influence, and his
political mistakes, was the cause of this. Politically his dearest schemes
miscarried; ecclesiastically his type of organization and worship endured;
doctrinally he was overshadowed by others. But the permanent division of the
Cantons was due to him : not merely to the doctrines he taught, but on the one
hand to the power with which he impressed them upon Zurich, and on the other,
to the energy and violence with which, regardless of Federal liberties, he
strove to force them upon the other Cantons.
CHAPTER XICALVIN AND THE REFORMED CHURCH.
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