Page 74 - History of Christianity - Student Textbook
P. 74

end he became a solitary figure who found no realm of truth left but the inner life of the mystics.
              (https://www.britannica.com/biography/Sebastian-Franck)



                          The Bible says in 2 Timothy 3:12, “Indeed, all who desire to live a godly life in Christ Jesus will be
                          persecuted.”  Luther was criticized and persecuted for standing against the Roman Church on
                          certain issues, the greatest being “justification by faith.”  Sometimes the persecution comes from
                          those who claim the name of Christ.  Franck was converted to Lutheranism, yet departed from
              the key doctrines, and denied many of Lutheran doctrines.  He struck out against members of his own
              denominations.  Such may be your future course.  Remember, if you stand for the doctrines of the faith as
              presented in God’s Word, some will not like your position.  They may persecute you.  Remember the verse
              above and take comfort in the fact that persecution means you are living godly in Christ Jesus.  They
              persecuted Him, so don’t be surprised as His representative, you can escape their wrath.


              Heinrich Bullinger, 1504-75 –
                                               Heinrich Bullinger is considered one of the most influential Reformers in
                                               Christian history.  Heinrich was born in 1504, outside the city of Zurich,
                                               Switzerland, to parents who were living in a common-law marriage..

                                               Young Bullinger was sent to monastic school at Emmerich, Germany, where
                                               he studied the works of the great church fathers such as Aquinas, Augustine,
                                               and Bernard. Their writings stirred within Heinrich the desire for a personal
                                               experience with God. Upon graduation, he proceeded to the University of
                                               Cologne in Germany, where he began to realize the importance of studying
              the Scriptures for himself. This practice was rare among his Roman Catholic classmates, as tradition dominated
              the atmosphere and the Pope’s interpretations of Scripture were considered divine.

              Zealots were burning the works of Martin Luther in Cologne, and this fanaticism piqued Heinrich’s interest. What
              was contained within those books that made the church feel the need to burn them? Upon obtaining copies of
              Luther’s work and of others who supported reform, Heinrich began to understand the doctrine of justification by
              faith in Christ alone. At age seventeen, Bullinger surrendered to the call of the Holy Spirit, and his life was
              transformed.

              In 1529, at the age of 25, Bullinger married Anna Adischwyler, a devoted proponent of Reformation theology in
              her own right. Together they had 11 birth children and adopted many others. Remarkably, all six of their sons
              became Reformed ministers. Roman Catholic resistance had become violent, and in 1531 Zwingli was killed.
              Within days, Bullinger was asked to fill the empty pulpit Zwingli had left, and soon Heinrich Bullinger was
              recognized as the new leader of the Swiss Reformation.

              Throughout his life and ministry, Bullinger was a generous and tireless servant. He and Anna opened their homes
              to widows, orphans, and those fleeing the persecution of the Roman Catholic Church. He was a prolific writer—
              127 titles, as well as 12,000 letters—and produced many important works. In 1536 Bullinger helped write
              the First Helvetic Confession, which attempted to reconcile a disagreement between Luther’s followers and
              Zwingli’s; in 1549, he wrote Consensus Tigerinus, a cooperation with John Calvin to clarify the Protestant
              understanding of the Lord’s Supper; in 1566, Bullinger helped unify other factions of the Protestant Reformation
              with his Second Helvetic Confession.

              Heinrich Bullinger paved the way for all non-Catholic Christians to return to the Scriptures as their sole authority.


                                                                73
   69   70   71   72   73   74   75   76   77   78   79