They were both born of peasant stock but of relatively well-to-do parents. Though they opposed one another, Luther and Zwingli had a number of traits in common. Luther always was of the view that Zwingli thought too highly of himself, that he was a show-off with his display of learning in Greek and Hebrew and the classics. He called him the “Giant of Zurich” not in tribute but to ridicule. But Luther never spoke so warmly of Zwingli. Zwingli, like other Renaissance humanists that were enamored of classical allusions, called Luther in tribute “that one Hercules … who slew the Roman boar.” In this same passage Zwingli will also attribute Biblical titles to Luther: “Here indeed you were the only faithful David anointed hereto by the Lord and furnished likewise with arms.” Zwingli would not always be so adulatory in his words to and about Luther. Though they had much in common-and more often the differences are emphasized rather than the similarities-they were indeed adversaries. In addition, though neither one desired it, their differences on the Eucharist would tragically lead to the first major split in Reformation Protestantism between the Lutherans and the Reformed. Though neither one intended it from the beginning, the reforming movements which they started would lead inexorably to a division in Western Christendom. Luther and Zwingli, born within seven weeks of one another, were co-originators of the Protestant Reformation. Recent scholarship, especially Swiss, has sought to study Zwingli for his own sake and has come to the conclusion that he was quite independent from Luther in his theological and Reformational development. Older scholarship on Zwingli, especially German, tended to view him through the eyes of Luther and saw him as largely dependent on the great Saxon Reformer though as diverging from him on a few important points. German Swiss scholars, in particular, would want to qualify this judgment by insisting that Zwingli’s successor at Zurich, Henry Bullinger, also played an important role in molding this tradition. He was the father of the Reformed tradition which spread out in many directions-across Switzerland and southern Germany, to France among the Huguenots, Holland, England and Scotland among the Congregationalists and Presbyterians, across to the New World among the Congregationalists of New England and the Presbyterian, Dutch and German Reformed Churches of the Middle Colonies.Īlthough Zwingli is the originator of this tradition, his role in the shaping of it has been eclipsed by that of John Calvin, the second generation Reformer who, at Geneva on the other side of what is now modern Switzerland, took over the chief leadership of this Reformed tradition a few years after Zwingli’s death. But he is an important figure in his own right. It was Zwingli’s fate to have been cut down in mid-career at the battle of Kappel in 1531 and to have been cast in the shadow of Luther’s gigantic stature. Except for Zurich and its environs, Zwingli did not receive nearly the same amount of attention during his 500th anniversary year as Luther. Not nearly as well-known is the fact that Januwas the 500th birthday of another Protestant Reformer, Ulrich Zwingli, of Zurich. There were pilgrimages by Lutherans and other Protestants to East Germany to visit the sites of his living and working. An abundance of church celebrations and scholarly conferences took place. During the 500th anniversary year Luther made quite a splash in the media with full length articles in Time, Newsweek, the New York Times Magazine, and National Geographic. Novemwas the 500th anniversary of the birth of Martin Luther. The Colloquy at Marburg was called in hopes of reconciling the two centers of the German Reformation-Zurich and Wittenburg, but conflict over the Lord’s Supper split their common cause.
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