
The History of the
Reformation
by R.C. Sproul
"A
cesspool of heresies." This was the judgment rendered by the Holy Roman
Emperor Charles V on May 26, 1521, shortly after Luther took a stand at the Diet
of Worms.
Earlier, in the bull Exsurge Domine, Pope Leo X
described Luther as a wild boar loose in the vineyard of Christ and as a
stiff-necked, notorious, damned heretic. On May 4, 1521, Luther was
"kidnapped" by friends and whisked off to Wartburg castle, where he
was kept secretly hidden, disguised as a knight. There Luther immediately
undertook the task of translating the Bible into the vernacular.
Frequently the Reformation is described as a movement that
revolved around two pivotal issues. The so-called "material" cause was
the debate over sola fide ("justification by faith
alone"). The "formal" cause was the issue of sola Scriptura,
that the Bible and the Bible alone has the authority to bind the conscience of
the believer. Church tradition was regarded with respect by the Reformers but
not as a normative source of revelation. The "protest" of
Protestantism went far beyond the issue of justification by faith alone,
challenging many dogmas that emerged in Rome, especially during the Middle Ages.
In a short time, the Reformation swept through Germany but did
not stop there. Aided by the translation of the Bible in other nations, the
reform spread to the Huguenots in France, to Scotland, England, Switzerland,
Hungary, and Holland. Ulrich Zwingli led the Reformation movement in
Switzerland, John Knox in Scotland, and John Calvin among the French
Protestants.
In 1534 Calvin delivered a speech calling the church to return
to the pure Gospel of the New Testament. His speech was burned, and Calvin fled
Paris to Geneva. Disguised as a vinedresser, he escaped the city in a basket.
During the next year, some two dozen Protestants were burned alive in France.
This provoked Calvin to write his famous Institutes of the Christian
Religion, which was addressed to the King of France. His thought
contained in the Institutes developed into the dominant theology for the
international expansion of the Reformation.
The first edition of the Institutes was completed in
1536, the same year Calvin was persuaded by Farel to come to Switzerland to
build Geneva into a model city of Reformation. In 1538 Farel and Calvin were
forced to leave Geneva. He lived and ministered in Strasbourg for three years
until he was called to Geneva in 1541.
Calvin delivered a
speech calling the church to return to the pure Gospel of the New Testament. His
speech was burned.
Calvin’s theology stressed the sovereignty of God in all of
life. His chief passion was the reform of worship to a level of purity that
would give no hint to or support of the human penchant for idolatry. Geneva
attracted leaders from all over Europe who came there to observe the model and
be instructed by Calvin himself.
During this period turbulence spread to England when King
Henry VIII resisted the authority of Rome. In 1534 Henry became the Supreme Head
of the Anglican Church. He undertook the persecution of evangelicals, which
escalated under "Bloody Mary," causing many to flee to Geneva for
refuge.
The persecutions were suspended under "Good Queen
Bess," Elizabeth I, whose stance provoked a papal bull against her in 1570.
The Reformation spread rapidly to Scotland, largely under the leadership of John
Knox, who served 19 months as a galley slave before he went to England and then
to Geneva. In 1560 the Scottish Parliament rejected papal authority. In 1561 the
Scottish Reformed "Kirk" was organized.
One interesting footnote to this is that the first man John
Knox ordained into the ministry of the church was an obscure clergyman by the
name of Robert Charles Sproul, of whom I am a direct descendent.
In the early 17th century, the Reformation spread
to the new world with the arrival of the Pilgrims and colonies of Puritans who
brought Reformed theology and the Geneva Bible with them.
The Reformation was
more than a doctrine about the Bible. It was sparked by a deep and serious study
of the Bible.
Reformation theology dominated Protestant evangelism for
decades but became diluted later under influences of Pietism and Finneyism.
By the end of the 20th century, Reformation
theology declined dramatically in the Western world, being assaulted by 19th-century
liberal theology on the one hand, and the influence of Arminian theology on the
other. This was especially true in America.
In the present scene of American evangelism, Reformation
theology is a minority report. The dominant strands of theology that reign in
current evangelical circles are dispensationalism and neo-Pentacostal
charismatic thought. The phenomenal spread and growth of dispensational theology
in America is a fascinating chapter in church history. Having its roots in
British Plymouth Brethren suppositions, dispensationalism spread rapidly in the
late 19th and early 20th centuries. Fueled by the Bible
School movement, prophecy conferences, and the preaching of men like D.L. Moody,
dispensationalism gathered enormous popular support.
The American version of dispensationalism got a great boost by
the publication of the Scofield Reference Bible. The Scofield Bible, with
its study notes, served as a popular tool for the spread of dispensational
theology. This theology was forged by men who had their roots predominately in
Reformation thought. The themes of classical Reformed theology were modified
significantly by this movement.
The New Geneva Study Bible is the first
distinctively Reformed study Bible in English to appear since the Geneva Bible
in the 16th century. It seeks to recover the theology of the
Reformation and provide a guide for the laity to understand its historically,
doctrinally, and biblically rich system.
In the present scene
of American evangelism, Reformation theology is a minority report.
Its importance to American Christianity is enormous. It is my
hope that it will help guide English-speaking evangelicals back to their
Reformation roots. More importantly, it is designed to call evangelicals back to
the Bible itself and to their historic confessions of biblical theology.
Beyond the borders of America the New Geneva Study Bible
may be used to expand the light of the Reformation to lands where the original
Reformation never reached, especially to Russia and Eastern Europe.
In our day we have seen a revival of interest in the Bible and
a renewed commitment to the authority and trustworthiness of Scripture. But the
Reformation was more than a doctrine about the Bible. It was sparked by a deep
and serious study of the Bible. It is not enough to extol the virtue of
Scripture – we must hear the teaching of Scripture afresh. It is only by a
serious and earnest recovery of biblical truth that we will be able to avoid
falling into a new cesspool of heresy.
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R.C. Sproul is president of Ligonier Ministries, was the general
editor of the New Geneva Study Bible and wrote the notes for the book of
James.
Reprinted from Tabletalk Magazine, vol. 19, no. 4, 4/95 with
permission of Ligonier, P.O. Box 547500, Orlando, FL 32854.