Proto-Protestantism Explained

Proto-Protestantism, also called pre-Protestantism, refers to individuals and movements that propagated various ideas later associated with Protestantism before 1517, which historians usually regard as the starting year for the Reformation era. The relationship between medieval sects and Protestantism is an issue that has been debated by historians.

Successionism is the further idea that these proto-Protestants are evidence of a continuous hidden church of true believers, despite their manifest differences in belief.

Overview

Before Martin Luther and John Calvin, some leaders tried to reform Christianity. The main forerunners of the Protestant Reformation were Peter Waldo, John Wycliffe and Jan Hus.[1] Martin Luther himself saw it important to have forerunners of his views, and thus he praised people like Girolamo Savonarola, Lorenzo Valla, Wessel Gansfort and other groups as prefiguring some of his views.[2] [3]

Claimed to have prefigured Protestantism

Pre-reformation movements that have been argued, with differing degrees of anachronism and accuracy, as having individual ideas later espoused by some Protestant groups include:

Successionism

John Foxe (c. 1563) was the first English Protestant author to defend Protestantism from charges of novelty by claiming, in S.J. Barnett's words, "the continuity of a proto-Protestant piety since apostolic times": in England's case this included a national first-century conversion to Christianity from a visiting Joseph of Arimathea.[75] This has no historical basis.

According to Brethren missionary Edmund Hamer Broadbent in The Pilgrim Church (1531), over much of the Christian era, many Christian sects, cults and movements foreshadowed the teachings of what later became the Non-conformist Protestant movements.[76]

Baptist successionism

Baptist successionism postulates an unbroken lineage of churches which have held beliefs similar to those of current Baptists. Groups often included in this lineage include the Montanists, Novationists, Donatists, Paulicians, Albigenses, Waldenses, Petrobrusians, Arnoldists, Henricians, Hussites (partly), Lollards (partly) and Anabaptists. Baptist successionism proposes that groups such as Bogomils or Paulicians were Baptist in doctrine instead of Gnostic.[77]

Criticism

The idea of proto-protestants has been criticized as a diverse category whose only commonality is a perceived anti-Catholicism rather than any adherence to the Five Solae; the idea of successionism (or the hidden church) has further been criticized as lacking historical evidence, linking unrelated groups (e.g. the Manichaean Bogomil "Cathars", the Albigensian "Cathars", the semi-monastic Beguine movement, the antipapal fraticelli friars, the Trinitarian and eucharistic Waldenses, and the Lollards) and as fabricated to serve a polemical need.[75]

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Forerunners of the Reformation. 2021-11-20. Musée protestant.
  2. Web site: Daniels. David D.. Honor the Reformation's African roots. 2022-01-28. The Commercial Appeal. en-US.
  3. Web site: Martin Luther and Ethiopian Christianity: Historical Traces The University of Chicago Divinity School. 2022-01-28. divinity.uchicago.edu.
  4. Web site: Philip Schaff: History of the Christian Church, Volume III: Nicene and Post-Nicene Christianity. A.D. 311-600 - Christian Classics Ethereal Library. 2021-12-21. www.ccel.org.
  5. G. Hunter. David. Resistance to the Virginal Ideal in Late-Fourth-Century Rome: The Case of Jovinian. 1987. Theological Studies. 48. 45–64. 10.1177/004056398704800103. 54891999. 2021-12-21. 2021-12-21. https://web.archive.org/web/20211221093951/http://cdn.theologicalstudies.net/48/48.1/48.1.3.pdf. dead.
  6. Book: Neander, August . General History of the Christian Religion and Church . 1849 . Crocker & Brewster . en . It is plainly evident that Jovinian could only have understood by the church, here, the invisible church.
  7. Book: Dorner, Isaac August . A System of Christian Doctrine . 1890 . T. & T. Clark . en.
  8. Book: M ́Clintock, John Strong, James . Cyclopaedia of Biblical, Theological, and Ecclesiastical Literature: Volume II . 2020-04-17 . BoD – Books on Demand . 978-3-8460-5024-8 . en . As Jovinian taught the Pauline doctrine of faith, so he did the Pauline idea of the invisible Church.
  9. Book: Evans, Warren Felt . The Spiritual Journals of Warren Felt Evans: From Methodism to Mind Cure . 2016-12-19 . Indiana University Press . 978-0-253-02255-4 . en . Jovinian (a choice spirit who differentiated the invisible from the visible church.
  10. Book: Evans, Warren Felt . The Spiritual Journals of Warren Felt Evans: From Methodism to Mind Cure . 2016-12-19 . Indiana University Press . 978-0-253-02255-4 . en . But there is an invisible Church, which has existed in every century, which is pure and spotless. ... This whole train of thought has been suggested by reading the words of Jovinian, in Neander.
  11. Web site: Byzantine Empire – The age of Iconoclasm: 717–867. 2021-10-29. Britannica.com. en.
  12. Schildgen. Brenda Deen. Destruction: Iconoclasm and the Reformation in Northern Europe. Heritage or Heresy. 2008. 39–56. 10.1057/9780230613157_3. 978-1-349-37162-4.
  13. Book: Herrin, Judith. Byzantium: The Surprising Life of a Medieval Empire. 2009-09-28. Princeton University Press. 978-0-691-14369-9. en.
  14. Raaijmakers. Janneke. 2017. Claudius. Self-styling in early medieval debate: Self-styling in early medieval debate.
  15. Book: Milner, Joseph . The History of the Church of Christ Volume 3 . A comment on the epistle to the Galatians, is his only work which was committed to the press. In it he every where asserts the equality of all the apostles with St. Peter. And, indeed, he always owns Jesus Christ to be the only proper head of the church. He is severe against the doctrine of human merits, and of the exaltation of traditions to a height of credibility equal to that of the divine word. He maintains that we are to be saved by faith alone; holds the fallibility of the church, exposes the futility of praying for the dead, and the sinfulness of the idolatrous practices then supported by the Roman see. Such are the sentiments found in his commentary on the epistle to the Galatians..
  16. Book: The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, 3rd edition. 13 March 1997. Oxford University Press. 0-19-211655-X. F. L. Cross. USA. 359. E. A. Livingstone.
  17. Web site: Gottschalk Of Orbais Roman Catholic theologian. 2021-10-27. Britannica.com. en.
  18. Web site: caryslmbrown. 2017-07-18. Reformation parallels: the case of Gottschalk of Orbais. 2021-10-27. Doing History in Public. en.
  19. Lockridge. Kenneth R.. Gottschalk "Fulgentius" of Orbais.
  20. Web site: Ratramnus Benedictine theologian Britannica. 2021-11-21. www.britannica.com. en.
  21. Ælfric . 1 . 255.
  22. Book: Minton, Gretchen E.. John Bale's 'The Image of Both Churches'. 2014-01-26. Springer Science & Business Media. 978-94-007-7296-0. en. Berengar of Tours was an 11th-century theologian who argued that the doctrine of transubstantiation was contrary to reason and unsupported by scripture.
  23. Book: Siebeck, Mohr. Prophecy, Piety, and the Problem of Historicity: Interpreting the Hebrew. 11 March 2016. 978-3-16-154270-1. Germany. 372. Berengar of Tours (c. 1005-1088), Bernand of Clairvaux, the Waldensians in the twelfth century, the Albigensians in the thirteenth century and John Wycliffe (x. 1330-1385) and Jan Hus (c. 1370-1415) in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, are all prefigured in the poetic images of Solomon's Songs. They all become forerunners of Luther and Calvin.
  24. Book: Jung. Emma. The Grail Legend. Franz. Marie-Luise von. 1998. Princeton University Press. 978-0-691-00237-8. en. Berengar of Tours (first half og the eleventh century), whose views occasioned the dispute known as the Second Eucharistic Controversy. Berengar aught that the body and the blood of the Lord were no "real" in the Eucharist but a specific image or likeleness ("figuram quandam similitudinem"). He was thus a forerunner of the Reformers..
  25. Web site: Cathari Christian sect. 2021-10-29. Britannica.com. en.
  26. Walther. Daniel. 1968. Were the Albigenses and Waldenses Forerunners of the Reformation?. Andrews University Seminary Studies. 6. 2.
  27. Book: Markowitz, AvFran . Sarajevo: A Bosnian Kaleidoscope . 2010.
  28. Book: Dedijer, Vladimir . The Beloved Land . 1961 . Simon & Schuster . en . But within a short time both Rome and Constantinople had excommunicated the Bosnian Church, which claimed to represent the true form of Christianity . ... The Bosnian faith was, in a way, the forerunner of the great Reformation.
  29. Book: Bringa, Tone . Being Muslim the Bosnian Way: Identity and Community in a Central Bosnian Village . 2020-09-01 . Princeton University Press . 978-1-4008-5178-2 . en . The Bosnian Church has, however, been described primarily as a heretic Catholic sect. It has furthermore been seen as a forerunner to the Protestants.
  30. Reddy. Mike Megrove. 2017. The forms of communication employed by the Protestant Reformers and especially Luther and Calvin. Pharos Journal of Theology. 98. The Pre-Reformers: All groups that spoke out against the church were regarded as "heretical" groups. In the same light, the present-day church considers those individuals that questioned the church "doctrine" and "teachings" as heretics. McCallum (2002:n.p.) states that there were eight heretical groups of pre-reformers between the 12th and 15th centuries during the various European regions. McCallum 2002:n.p. mentions them as follows:.
  31. Book: dePrater, William A.. God Hovered Over the Waters: The Emergence of the Protestant Reformation. 2015-03-25. Wipf and Stock Publishers. 978-1-4982-0454-5. 37. en. (Chapter name: Forerunners of the Protestant Reformation) Despite the failure of the efforts atr a reformation of the church's governance, there were efforts to reform the church's theology and manner of faith. Yet the church was slow to change, Peter Aberlard, a Frenchmand sought to include human reason as one of the means of understanding the meanings of scripture..
  32. Web site: O'Brien . Peggy . Heloise and Abelard: the more the story is retold, the deeper their grave in Paris grows . 2024-05-31 . The Irish Times . en.
  33. Book: Kim, Elijah Jong Fil. The Rise of the Global South: The Decline of Western Christendom and the Rise of Majority World Christianity. 2012-04-06. Wipf and Stock Publishers. 978-1-61097-970-2. 201. en. Peter bruys became one of the earliest leaders of the Reformation, rejecting images, infant baptism,.
  34. Web site: Waldenses Description, History, & Beliefs. 2021-10-27. Britannica.com. en.
  35. Web site: Pierre Valdo (1140-1217) and the Waldenses. 2021-12-31. Musée protestant.
  36. Web site: Spiritual religious order. 2021-10-27. Britannica.com. en.
  37. Web site: Philip Schaff: History of the Christian Church, Volume VI: The Middle Ages. A.D. 1294-1517 - Christian Classics Ethereal Library. 2021-12-23. ccel.org.
  38. Book: Covington . Jesse . Natural Law and Evangelical Political Thought . McGraw . Bryan T. . Watson . Micah . 2012-11-16 . Lexington Books . 978-0-7391-7323-7 . en.
  39. Book: Ockham), William (of . William of Ockham: Questions on Virtue, Goodness, and the Will William Ockham: Qstns Virt Gdn Will . 2021-05-06 . Cambridge University Press . 978-1-108-49838-8 . en.
  40. Book: McGregor . Peter John . Healing Fractures in Contemporary Theology . Rowland . Tracey . 2022-01-20 . Wipf and Stock Publishers . 978-1-7252-6610-0 . en.
  41. Book: dePrater, William A.. God Hovered Over the Waters: The Emergence of the Protestant Reformation. 2015-03-25. Wipf and Stock Publishers. 978-1-4982-0454-5. en. (Chapter name: Forerunners of the Protestant reformation) Bradwardine in his study of Augustinian theology came to an understanding of the doctrine of predestination as a positive affirmation of Gd's benevolent grace unto us..
  42. Web site: Gregory Of Rimini Italian philosopher. 2021-10-29. Britannica.com. en.
  43. Web site: Friends of God religious group Britannica. 2021-11-25. www.britannica.com. en.
  44. Book: The Uses of History in Early Modern England . 2006 . Huntington Library . 9780873282192 . Paulina Kewes . 143.
  45. Book: William J. Kennedy . The Site of Petrarchism Early Modern National Sentiment in Italy, France, and England . 2004 . Johns Hopkins University Press . 9780801881268 . 3.
  46. Book: Petrarch's 'Triumphi' in the British Isles . 2020 . Modern Humanities Research Association . 9781781888827 . Alessandra Petrina . 6.
  47. Book: The Early Modern English Sonnet . 2020 . Manchester University Press . 9781526144416 . Enrica Zanin . Rémi Vuillemin . Laetitia Sansonetti . Tamsin Badcoe.
  48. Book: Abigail Brundin . Vittoria Colonna and the Spiritual Poetics of the Italian Reformation . 2016 . Taylor & Francis . 9781317001065 . 10.
  49. Book: Michalski, Sergiusz. Reformation and the Visual Arts: The Protestant Image Question in Western and Eastern Europe. 2013-01-11. Routledge. 978-1-134-92102-7. en. in the middle of the fourteenth century the Strigolniki heresy broke out in Russia, chiefly in the cities in the north of the country, which gave this movement a proto-Reformation character.
  50. Book: Belich, James . The World the Plague Made: The Black Death and the Rise of Europe . 2022-07-19 . Princeton University Press . 978-0-691-22287-5 . en.
  51. Web site: CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Lollards . 2024-01-29 . www.newadvent.org.
  52. Web site: Lollard English religious history. 2021-10-27. Britannica.com. en.
  53. Web site: Hussite religious movement. 2021-10-27. Britannica.com. en.
  54. Web site: Jan Hus Biography, Reforms, Beliefs, Death, & Facts. 2021-10-27. Britannica.com. en.
  55. Web site: Jan Hus (1369-1415) and the Hussite wars (1419-1436). museéprotestant.
  56. Web site: Philip Schaff: History of the Christian Church, Volume VI: The Middle Ages. A.D. 1294-1517 - Christian Classics Ethereal Library . 2022-02-28 . www.ccel.org.
  57. Web site: Philip Schaff: History of the Christian Church, Volume VI: The Middle Ages. A.D. 1294-1517 - Christian Classics Ethereal Library . 2022-02-28 . www.ccel.org.
  58. Web site: Philip Schaff: History of the Christian Church, Volume VI: The Middle Ages. A.D. 1294-1517 - Christian Classics Ethereal Library. 2021-12-23. www.ccel.org.
  59. Web site: Lorenzo Valla Italian humanist Britannica. 2022-01-27. www.britannica.com. en.
  60. Web site: Philip Schaff: History of the Christian Church, Volume VI: The Middle Ages. A.D. 1294–1517 – Christian Classics Ethereal Library. 2021-11-14. ccel.org. John Pupper, 1400–1475, usually called John of Goch from his birthplace, a hamlet on the lower Rhine near Cleves, seems to have been trained in one of the schools of the Brothers of the Common Life, and then studied in Cologne and perhaps in Paris. He founded a house of Augustinians near Mecheln, remaining at its head till his death. His writings were not published till after the beginning of the Reformation. He anticipated that movement in asserting the supreme authority of the Bible. The Fathers are to be accepted only so far as they follow the canonical Scriptures. In contrast to the works of the philosophers and the Schoolmen, the Bible is a book of life; theirs, books of death.1167 He also called in question the merit of monastic vows and the validity of the distinction between the higher and lower morality upon which monasticism laid stress. What is included under the higher morality is within the reach of all Christians and not the property of monks only. He renounced the Catholic view of justification without stating with clearness the evangelical theory These three German theologians, Goch, Wesel and Wessel, were quietly searching after the marks of the true Church and the doctrine of justification by faith in Christ alone. Without knowing it, they were standing on the threshold of the Reformation..
  61. Web site: Philip Schaff: History of the Christian Church, Volume VI: The Middle Ages. A.D. 1294–1517 – Christian Classics Ethereal Library. 2021-11-14. ccel.org. John Ruchrath von Wesel, d. 1481, attacked the hierarchy and indulgences and was charged on his trial with calling in question almost all the distinctive Roman Catholic tenets. He was born in Oberwesel on the Rhine between Mainz and Coblentz. He taught at the University of Erfurt and, in 1458, was chosen its vice-rector. Luther bore testimony to his influence when he said, "I remember how Master John Wesalia ruled the University of Erfurt by his writings through the study of which I also became a master."1169 Leaving Erfurt, he was successively professor in Basel and cathedral preacher in Mainz and Worms. In 1479, Wesel was arraigned for heresy before the Inquisition at Mainz.1170 Among the charges were that the Scriptures are alone a trustworthy source of authority; the names of the predestinate are written in the book of life and cannot be erased by a priestly ban; indulgences do not profit; Christ is not pleased with festivals of fasting, pilgrimages or priestly celibacy; Christ’s body can be in the bread without any change of the bread’s substance: pope and councils are not to be obeyed if they are out of accord with the Scriptures; he whom God chooses will be saved irrespective of pope and priests, and all who have faith will enjoy as much blessedness as prelates. Wesel also made the distinction between the visible and the invisible Church and defined the Church as the aggregation of all the faithful who are bound together by love—collectio omnium fidelium caritate copulatorum. In his trial, he was accused of having had communication with the Hussites. In matters of historical criticism, he was also in advance of his age, casting doubt upon some of the statements of the Athanasian Creed, abandoning the application of the term Catholic to the Apostles’ Creed and pronouncing the addition of the filioque clause—and from the Son—unwarranted. The doctrines of indulgences and the fund of merit he pronounced unscriptural and pious frauds. The elect are saved wholly through the grace of God—sola Dei gratia salvantur electi. These three German theologians, Goch, Wesel and Wessel, were quietly searching after the marks of the true Church and the doctrine of justification by faith in Christ alone. Without knowing it, they were standing on the threshold of the Reformation..
  62. Web site: Philip Schaff: History of the Christian Church, Volume VI: The Middle Ages. A.D. 1294-1517 - Christian Classics Ethereal Library. 2022-01-27. ccel.org. (test 3)
  63. 2016. The forms of communication employed by the Protestant Reformers and especially Luther and Calvin. Pharos Journal of Theology. 98. John of Wessel was one member in the group who attacked indulgences (Reddy 2004:115). The doctrine of justification by faith alone was the teaching of John of Wessel (Kuiper 1982:151). He rejected the doctrine of transubstantiation where it is believed when the priest pronounces the sacraments then the wine and bread in turned into the real body and blood of Christ.
  64. Web site: CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: John Wessel Goesport (Gansfort). 2022-01-27. www.newadvent.org.
  65. Book: dePrater, William A.. God Hovered Over the Waters: The Emergence of the Protestant Reformation. 2015-03-25. Wipf and Stock Publishers. 978-1-4982-0454-5. en. (Chapter name: forerunners of the Protestant reformation) Yet his modest ethnical reforms would lay the grounwork for the later Protestant Reformation movement at Strasbourg..
  66. Web site: How did Savonarola influence the Reformation and Counter-Reformation – DailyHistory.org. 2021-10-29. dailyhistory.org.
  67. Web site: Philip Schaff: History of the Christian Church, Volume VI: The Middle Ages. A.D. 1294-1517 - Christian Classics Ethereal Library. 2021-11-17. ccel.org.
  68. Web site: Italy - Savonarola Britannica. 2021-12-19. www.britannica.com. en.
  69. Savonarola, Girolamo.
  70. Web site: CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Girolamo Savonarola. 2022-01-27. www.newadvent.org.
  71. Book: dePrater, William A.. https://books.google.com/books?id=rXLDCAAAQBAJ&dq=Peter+Abelard+reformation&pg=PA37. God Hovered Over the Waters: The Emergence of the Protestant Reformation. 2015-03-25. Wipf and Stock Publishers. 978-1-4982-0454-5. 43. en. Forerunners of the Protestant reformation.
  72. Book: dePrater, William A.. God Hovered Over the Waters: The Emergence of the Protestant Reformation. 2015-03-25. Wipf and Stock Publishers. 978-1-4982-0454-5. 42–43. en.
  73. Web site: Jacques Lefèvre d'Etaples (1450-1537). 2021-12-31. Musée protestant.
  74. Web site: Little. Katherine. Before Martin Luther, there was Erasmus – a Dutch theologian who paved the way for the Protestant Reformation. 2021-12-31. The Conversation. 29 October 2019 . en.
  75. Barnett . S. J. . Where Was Your Church before Luther? Claims for the Antiquity of Protestantism Examined . Church History . 1999 . 68 . 1 . 14–41 . 10.2307/3170108 . 3170108 . 0009-6407.
  76. Book: Broadbent, E.H.. 1931. The Pilgrim Church . Basingstoke. Pickering & Inglis. 0-7208-0677-1. Edmund Hamer Broadbent.
  77. Book: Hisel, Berlin . Baptist History Notebook . 2017 .