Paul-Henri Marron Explained

Paul-Henri Marron
Birth Date:25 April 1754
Birth Place:Leyden
Death Place:Paris
Church:Reformed Church of France
Years Active:1775-1832
Occupation:Pastor
Education:Academy of Leyden
Ordained:1774
Writings:Paul-Henri Marron à la citoyenne Hélène-Marie Williams
Congregations:Walloon church of Dordrecht (1775-82), Dutch embassy in Paris (1782-88), Saint-Louis-du-Louvre (1790-1811), l'Oratorie du Louvre (1811-32)
Pasteur
Family:-->

Paul-Henri Marron was the first Reformed pastor in Paris following the French Revolution. Born in the Netherlands to a Huguenot family, Marron first came to Paris as the chaplain of the Dutch embassy. Protestants in France had been prohibited from worshipping openly since the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685. The Edict of Tolerance in 1787 gave non-Catholics the right to openly practice their religion. Marron was recruited to lead the newly tolerated Protestant community of Paris, a task he accomplished through the French Revolution, several imprisonments, the Napoleonic Wars, the Bourbon Restoration and into the July Monarchy.[1]

Biography

Early life

Marron was born in Leyden in 1754 to a Huguenot family who had fled to the Netherlands as refugees from Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux in the Drôme department of France. He studied theology at Leyden[2] and was ordained at the age of 20.[3] He was called as the pastor of the Walloon church of Dordrecht in 1776.

Paris

In 1782 he moved to Paris to serve as the chaplain of the Dutch ambassador. A Protestant worship service in the French language had been allowed at the Dutch embassy since the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713 providing one of the only means for French Protestants to participate in a worship service.[4] After the Edict of Tolerance in 1787 Jean-Paul Rabaut Saint-Étienne recruited Marron to serve as the first pastor of the Protestant community of Paris.

The new congregation first met on June 7, 1789, in the back room of a wine shop at the corner of rue Mondétour and rue du Cygne. Some of the faithful were distressed to sing the Psalms in a place that was home to more bacchanalian tunes. The church moved to 18 rue Dauphine in February, 1790, where Antoine Court de Gébelin, the famous interpreter of the Tarot, had held his meetings. In 1791, at the behest of Jean Sylvain Bailly, the mayor of Paris, and the Marquis de Lafayette, a recently suppressed church, Saint-Louis-du-Louvre was rented to the Protestants for the annual sum of 16,450 livres.[3]

On July 20, 1792, Marron came from Holland to America to deliver the funeral oration for John Paul Jones.[5]

In 1811 Napoleon decided to demolish Saint-Louis-du-Louvre to make way for an expansion of the Louvre. As a replacement building he gave Marron's congregation l'Oratoire du Louvre.[6]

Death

Marion died on July 31, 1832, from a cholera epidemic and was buried in the Père Lachaise Cemetery. He was still the preacher at l'Oratoire at the time of his death and was succeeded by Athanase Coquerel. His tomb is inscribed with 1 Corinthians 15:55, the last passage on which he preached during a career of more than fifty years:

O mort, où est ton aiguillon?

O sépulchre, où est ta victoire?

O death, where is your sting?

O grave, where is your victory?

Bibliography

Garrisson. Francis. Genèse de l'Eglise réformée de Paris, 1788-1791. Bulletin de la SHPF. 1991. 127. 25. Paris.

Book: Braunstein. Philippe. L'Oratoire du Louvre et les protestants parisiens. 2011. Labor et Fides. Paris. 978-2830914320.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Marron, Paul Henri. McClintock and Strong Biblical Cyclopedia.
  2. Web site: Paul-Henri Marron (1754-1832). Musée virtuel du Protestantisme.
  3. Web site: Vassaux. Philippe. Pasteur Paul-Henri Marron (1754 - 1832). l'Oratoire du Louvre. 24 December 2022 .
  4. Web site: Temples in Paris: Catholic churches and other places devoted to Protestant worship after the Concordat in 1801. Musée virtuel du Protestantisme.
  5. https://archive.org/stream/johnpauljonescom00stew#page/53/mode/1up John Paul Jones commemoration at Annapolis, April 24, 1906
  6. Web site: Churches in XVIIth century in Paris, which were given to the protestants during the French Revolution. Musée virtuel du Protestantisme.