ZWINGLI, HULDREICH

hooldˈrīkh tsvĭngˈlē, oolˈrĭkh, 1484–1531, Swiss Protestant reformer.

Education of a Reformer

Zwingli received a thorough classical education in Basel, Bern, and Vienna, and was considerably influenced by the humanist precepts of Erasmus. His devotion to learning and his passion for individual freedom, developed through contact with the self-governing Swiss cantons, were important influences in his life. In 1506 he was ordained and appointed pastor of Glarus; he also served (1513, 1515) as chaplain to Swiss mercenaries in Italy. In 1516 he became people's vicar at Einsiedeln. While there Zwingli began to formulate the ideas that were to lead him to renounce the church of Rome.

Unlike Martin Luther, Zwingli experienced no acute religious crisis—he became a reformer through his studies. Later he was to adopt Luther's doctrine of justification by faith alone, but Zwingli's independent study of Scriptures had already led him to question the teaching of the Roman Catholic Church. When he became vicar at the Grossmünster of Zürich in 1518 he found the democratic institutions of the community amenable to his beliefs. In 1519 he successfully opposed the dispensing of indulgences in the city and soon was preaching against clerical celibacy, monasticism, and many other church practices.

Zwingli and the Swiss Reformation

The real beginning of the Reformation in Switzerland was Zwingli's lectures on the New Testament in 1519. Armed with Erasmus' 1516 edition of the Greek text he discarded scholastic commentaries and proclaimed the sole authority of the word of God as revealed in Scriptures. With his expression of opposition to Lenten observances in 1522 the Reformation in Zürich was well under way. In the same year, with the publication of Architeles, he made clear his belief in freedom from the control of the Roman hierarchy. A public disputation with a papal representative was held before the general council at Zürich in 1523; Zwingli presented his doctrines in 67 theses. The council approved the Zwinglian position and instructed all priests in the canton to comply.

The new practices were rapidly put into effect—organs were destroyed, images were removed from churches, priests were allowed to marry, monasticism was abolished, the liturgy was simplified, and the sacrament of communion reduced to a commemorative feast. In 1524, Zwingli publicly celebrated his marriage, which he had illegally contracted two years previously. In 1525 the Catholic Mass was replaced by a reformed service at Zwingli's church in Zürich.

Zwingli became embroiled with the Lutherans in a doctrinal dispute concerning the nature of the Eucharist (see Lord's Supper). Philip of Hesse endeavored to reconcile these differences within the Protestant ranks by calling the disputants together at the Marburg Colloquy (1529). Zwingli and Johannes Oecolampadius and Luther and Philip Melanchthon were present, but no agreement was reached.

Although Bern adopted Zwingli's reforms in 1528, and Basel and St. Gall soon after, he faced agitation by the Anabaptists, who wanted even more radical reform, and the armed resistance of the Forest Cantons that had remained loyal to Rome. When Zürich imposed a trade embargo on these cantons they retaliated with war (1531), and at the battle of Kappel, Zwingli was killed. Zwingli's work in Zürich was carried on by his colleague and son-in-law, Heinrich Bullinger, but the Reformation in Switzerland passed into the hands of John Calvin. Calvin built his comprehensive theological system partly on the groundwork laid by Zwingli, but he resisted Zwingli's more radical teaching on baptism and the Lord's Supper. The Consensus Tigurinus (1549) marks the departure of the Swiss Reformation from Zwinglian to Calvinist doctrine.

Bibliography

See his selected writings, ed. by H. W. Pipkin (2 vol., 1984); biographies by J. H. Rilliet (tr. 1964) and G. R. Potter (1984); bibliography by H. W. Pipkin (1972).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Zwingli Huldreich  - 165 results

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ZWINGLI, A REFORMED THEOLOGIAN Zwingli A REFORMED THEOLOGIAN Jaques Courvoisier THE ANNIE KINKEAD...to treat some of the main features of the theology of Huldrych Zwingli, the Faculty of Princeton Seminary, which has responsibility...
...Jackson S. M. Jackson, Huldreich Zwingli New York, 1901; repr...Schuler and J. Schulthess, Huldreich Zwinglis Werke Zurich, 1828-42...and the Correspondence of Huldreich Zwingli, i. 1510-1522 New York...
...Part I Huldreich Zwingli and the Reformation in German...Index 455 PART I HULDREICH ZWINGLI AND THE REFORMATION IN GERMAN...direct from his own Word. Huldreich Zwingli, Of the Clarity and Certainty...
...Luther and Zwingli 208 Doctrine...The youth of Zwingli. Parish priest of Glarus, 1506 307...Comparison of Luther, Erasmus, and Zwingli 309 Zwingli...
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journal articles on: Zwingli Huldreich  - 6 results

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...indictment of the view of the Swiss reformer Huldreich Zwingli, who sharply distinguished between Christs...Herbert, Crashaw, and Vaughan. Suffolk. Zwingli. Huldreich. 1953. On the Lords Supper. In Zwingli and Bullinger. Trans. G. W. Bromiley...
...Stephens, The Theology of Huldrych Zwingli (Oxford, 1986 ), pp. 282-310. 3 Emil Egli et al., eds., Huldreich Zwinglis samtliche Werke , 14 vols. (Berlin/ Leipzig/ Zurich, 1905 ), 4:182-187 (hereafter cited as ZW); Emil Egli...
...Stephens, The Theology of Huldrych Zwingli (Oxford, 1986 ), pp. 282-310. 3 Emil Egli et al., eds., Huldreich Zwinglis samtliche Werke , 14 vols. (Berlin/ Leipzig/ Zurich, 1905 ), 4:182-187 (hereafter cited as ZW); Emil Egli...
...Reformation. New York. Zwingli, Huldrych (also Huldrich and Huldreich). 1927. "Ad Theobaldi Billicani...epistolas responsio." In Huldreich Zwinglis Samliche Werke, ed. Emil...On the Lords Supper. In Zwingli and Bullinger, trans. G...
...Walther Kohler et al., eds., Huldreich Zwinglis Samtliche Werke (Leipzig, 1905...at an Undated Letter from Bucer to Zwingli", in Prophet, Pastor, Protestant: The Work of Huldrych Zwingli.after 500 Years , eds. Edward...
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magazine articles on: Zwingli Huldreich  - 2 results

 
 
...prevalent ideal in the sixteenth century. Certainly it was not the watchword of the Reformation: Luther, Calvin, and Huldreich Zwingli all sanctioned the killing of their theological opponents. Indeed, it would have been remarkable if Philip had condoned...
...relationship to the emergence of the magisterial Protestantism associated with major reformers such as Martin Luther, Huldreich Zwingli, and John Calvin. And third, he devotes attention to Roman Catholicism alongside and in relationship to Protestantism...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Zwingli Huldreich  - 14 results

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ZWINGLI, HULDREICH hoold rikh tsving le, ool rikh, 1484...reformer. Education of a Reformer Zwingli received a thorough classical education...peoples vicar at Einsiedeln. While there Zwingli began to formulate the ideas that were...
...Protestant reformer, associate of Huldreich Zwingli in the Reformation in Switzerland...Reformation. He agreed with the views of Zwingli on the nature of the Eucharist...Colloquy of Marburg, 1529, while Zwingli disputed the question with Melanchthon...
...Swiss Protestant theologian, a physician, whose original name was Luber, Lieber, or Liebler. As a follower of Huldreich Zwingli , he supported the Swiss leaders view of the Lords Supper at the conferences of Heidelberg (1560) and Maulbronn...
...a Dominican. After 1531 he was bishop of Vienna. Faber was friendly at first (until 1521) with Martin Luther and Huldreich Zwingli, but later he became their untiring opponent in polemics. He was, nevertheless, an ardent advocate of reform of...
...1893 97). Jackson was religious editor of several encyclopedias and dictionaries. He wrote a standard biography of Huldreich Zwingli (1901), part of the "Heroes of the Reformation" series, which he sponsored. He was long the moving spirit of the...
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