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The Truth About Calvin and
Servetus by Loraine Boettner
We must now consider an event in the life of Calvin
which to a certain extent has cast a shadow over his fair name and which has exposed him to the charge of intolerance and
persecution. We refer to the death of Servetus which occurred in Geneva during the period of Calvin's work there. That it
was a mistake is admitted by all. History knows only one spotless being -- the Savior of sinners. All others have marks of
infirmity written which forbid idolatry. Calvin has, however, often been criticized with
undue severity as though the responsibility rested upon him alone, when as a matter of fact Servetus was given a court trial
lasting over two months and was sentenced by the full session of the civil Council, and that in accordance with the laws which
were then recognized throughout Christendom. And, far from urging that the sentence be made more severe, Calvin urged that
the sword be substituted for the fire, but was overruled. Calvin and the men of his time are not to be judged strictly and
solely by the advanced standards of our twentieth century, but must to a certain extent be considered in the light of their
own sixteenth century. We have seen great developments in regard to civil and religious toleration, prison reform, abolition
of slavery and the slave trade, feudalism, witch burning, improvement of the conditions of the poor, etc., which are
the late but genuine results of Christian teachings. The error of those who advocated and practiced what would be considered
intolerance today, was the general error of the age. It should not, in fairness, be permitted to give an unfavorable impression
of their character and motives, and much less should it be allowed to prejudice us against their doctrines on other and more
important subjects. The Protestants had just thrown off the yoke of Rome and in their
struggle to defend themselves they were often forced to fight intolerance with intolerance. Throughout the sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries public opinion in all European countries justified the right and duty of civil governments to protect and support
orthodoxy and to punish heresy, holding that obstinate heretics and blasphemers should be made harmless by death if necessary.
Protestants differed from Romanists mainly in their definition of heresy, and by greater moderation in its punishment. Heresy
was considered a sin against society, and in some cases as worse than murder; for while murder only destroyed the body, heresy
destroyed the soul. Today we have swung to the other extreme and public opinion manifests a latitudinarian indifference toward
truth or error. During the eighteenth century the reign of intolerance was gradually undermined. Protestant England and Holland
took the lead in extending civil and religious liberty, and the Constitution of the United States completed the theory by
putting all Christian denominations on a parity before the law and guaranteeing them the full enjoyment of equal rights.
Calvin's course in regard to Servetus was fully approved by all the leading Reformers of the time.
Melanchthon, the theological head of the Lutheran Church, fully and repeatedly justified the course of Calvin and the Council
of Geneva, and even held them up as models for imitation. Nearly a year after the death of Servetus he wrote to Calvin: "I
have read your book, in which you clearly refuted the horrid blasphemies of Servetus.... To you the Church owes gratitude
at the present moment, and will owe it to the latest posterity. I perfectly assent to your opinion. I affirm also that your
magistrates did right in punishing, after regular trial, this blasphemous man." Bucer, who ranks third among the Reformers
in Germany, Bullinger, the close friend and worthy successor of Zwingli, as well as Farel and Beza in Switzerland, supported
Calvin. Luther and Zwingli were dead at this time and it may be questioned whether they would have approved this execution
or not, although Luther and the theologians of Wittenberg had approved of death sentences for some Anabaptists in Germany
whom they considered dangerous heretics, adding that it was cruel to punish them, but more cruel to allow them to damn the
ministry of the Word and destroy the kingdom of the world; and Zwingli had not objected to a death sentence against a group
of six Anabaptists in Switzerland. Public opinion has undergone a great change in regard to this event, and the execution
of Servetus which was fully approved by the best men in the sixteenth century is entirely out of harmony with our twentieth
century ideas. As stated before, the Roman Catholic Church in this period was desperately
intolerant toward Protestants; and the Protestants, to a certain extent and in self-defense, were forced to follow their example.
In regard to Catholic persecutions Philip Schaff writes as follows:
We need only refer to crusades against the
Albigenses and Waldenses, which were sanctioned by Innocent III, one of the best and greatest of popes; the tortures and autos-da-fé;
of the Spanish Inquisition, which were celebrated with religious festivities; and fifty thousand or more Protestants who were
executed during the reign of the Duke of Alva in the Netherlands (1567-1573); the several hundred martyrs who were burned
in Smithfield under the reign of bloody Mary; and the repeated wholesale persecutions of the innocent Waldenses in France
and Piedmont, which cried to heaven for vengeance. It is vain to shift the responsibility upon the civil government. Pope
Gregory XIII commemorated the massacre of St. Bartholomew not only by a Te Deum in the churches of Rome, but more deliberately
and permanently by a medal which represents "The Slaughter of the Huguenots" by an angel of wrath.(1)
And then Dr. Schaff continues:
The Roman Church has lost the power, and
to a large extent also the disposition, to persecute by fire and sword. Some of her highest dignitaries frankly disown the
principle of persecution, especially in America, where they enjoy the full benefits of religious freedom. But the Roman curia
has never officially disowned the theory on which the practice of persecution is based. On the contrary, several popes since
the Reformation have indorsed it .... Pope Pius IX., in the Syllabus of 1864, expressly condemned, among the errors of this
age, the doctrine of religious toleration and liberty. And this pope has been declared to be officially infallible by the
Vatican decree of 1870, which embraces all of his predecessors (notwithstanding the stubborn case of Honorius I) and all his
successors in the chair of St. Peter.(2)
And in another place Dr. Schaff adds, "If
Romanists condemned Calvin, they did it from hatred of the man, and condemned him for following their own example even in
this particular case." Servetus was a Spaniard and opposed Christianity, whether in its
Roman Catholic or Protestant form. Schaff refers to him as "a restless fanatic, a pantheistic pseudo-reformer, and the most
audacious and even blasphemous heretic of the sixteenth century."(3) And in another instance Schaff declares that Servetus
was "proud, defiant, quarrelsome, revengeful, irreverent in the use of language, deceitful, and mendacious," and adds that
he abused popery and the Reformers alike with unreasonable language.(4) Bullinger declares that if Satan himself should come out
of hell, he could use no more blasphemous language against the Trinity than this Spaniard. The Roman Catholic Bolsec, in his
work on Calvin, calls Servetus "a very arrogant and insolent man," "a monstrous heretic," who deserved to be exterminated.
Servetus had fled to Geneva from Vienne, France; and while the trial at Geneva was in progress
the Council received a message from the Catholic judges in Vienne together with a copy of the sentence of death which had
been passed against him there, asking that he be sent back in order that the sentence might be executed on him as it had already
been executed on his effigy and books. This request the Council refused but promised to do full justice. Servetus himself
preferred to be tried in Geneva, since he could see only a burning funeral pyre for himself in Vienne. The communication from
Vienne probably made the Council in Geneva more zealous for orthodoxy since they did not wish to be behind the Roman Church
in that respect. Before going to Geneva, Servetus bad urged himself upon the attention
of Calvin through a long series of letters. For a time Calvin replied to these in considerable detail, but finding no satisfactory
results were being accomplished he ceased. Servetus, however, continued writing and his letters took on a more arrogant and
even insulting tone. He regarded Calvin as the pope of orthodox Protestantism, whom he was determined to convert or overthrow.
At the time Servetus came to Geneva the Libertine party, which was in opposition to Calvin, was in control of the city Council.
Servetus apparently planned to join this party and thus drive Calvin out. Calvin apparently sensed this danger and was in
no mood to permit Servetus to propagate his errors in Geneva. Hence he considered it his duty to make so dangerous a man harmless,
and determined to bring him either to recantation or to deserved punishment. Servetus was promptly arrested and brought to
trial. Calvin conducted the theological part of the trial and Servetus was convicted of fundamental heresy, falsehood and
blasphemy. During the long trial Servetus became emboldened and attempted to overwhelm Calvin by pouring upon him the coarsest
kind of abuse.(5) The outcome of the trial was left to the civil
court, which pronounced the sentence of death by fire. Calvin made an ineffectual plea that the sword be substituted for the
fire; hence the final responsibility for the burning rests with the Council. Dr. Emilé
Doumergue, the author of Jean Calvin, which is beyond comparison the most exhaustive and authoritative work ever published
on Calvin, has the following to say about the death of Servetus:
Calvin had Servetus arrested when he came
to Geneva, and appeared as his accuser. He wanted him to be condemned to death, but not to death by burning. On August 20,
1553, Calvin wrote to Farel: "I hope that Servetus will be condemned to death, but I desire that he should be spared the cruelty
of the punishment" -- he means that of fire. Farel replied to him on September 8th: "I do not greatly approve that tenderness
of heart," and he goes on to warn him to be careful that "in wishing that the cruelty of the punishment of Servetus be mitigated,
thou art acting as a friend towards a man who is thy greatest enemy. But I pray thee to conduct thyself in such a manner that,
in future, no one will have the boldness to publish such doctrines, and to give trouble with impunity for so long a time as
this man has done." Calvin did not, on this account, modify his own opinion, but he could
not make it prevail. On October 26th he wrote again to Farel: "Tomorrow Servetus will be led out to execution. We have done
our best to change the kind of death, but in vain. I shall tell thee when we meet why we had no success." (Opera, XIV,
pp. 590, 613-657). Thus, what Calvin is most of all reproached with -- the burning of
Servetus -- Calvin was quite opposed to. He is not responsible for it. He did what he could to save Servetus from mounting
the pyre. But, what reprimands, more or less eloquent, has this pyre with its flames and smoke given rise to, made room for!
The fact is that without the pyre the death of Servetus would have passed almost unnoticed.
Doumergue goes on to tell us that the death
of Servetus was "the error of the time, an error for which Calvin was not particularly responsible. The sentence of condemnation
to death was pronounced only after consultation with the Swiss Churches, several of which were far from being on good terms
with Calvin (but all of which gave their consent).... Besides, the judgment was pronounced by a Council in which the inveterate
enemies of Calvin, the free thinkers, were in the majority."(6) That Calvin himself
rejected the responsibility is clear from his later writings. "From the time that Servetus was convicted of his heresy," said
he, "I have not uttered a word about his punishment, as all honest men will bear witness."(7) And in one of his later replies to an attack
which had been made upon him, he says:
For what particular act of mine you accuse
me of cruelty I am anxious to know. I myself know not that act, unless it be with reference to the death of your great master,
Servetus. But that I myself earnestly entreated that he might not be put to death his judges themselves are witnesses, in
the number of whom at that time two were his staunch favorites and defenders.(8)
Before the arrest of Servetus and during
the earlier stages of the trial Calvin advocated the death penalty, basing his argument mainly on the Mosaic law, which was,
"He that blasphemeth the name of Jehovah, he shall surely be put to death" (Lev. 24:16) -- a law which Calvin considered
as binding as the decalogue and applicable to heresy as well. Yet he left the passing of sentence wholly to the civil council.
He considered Servetus the greatest enemy of the Reformation and honestly believed it to be the right and duty of the State
to punish those who offended against the Church. He also felt himself providentially called to purify the Church of all corruptions,
and to his dying day he never changed his views nor regretted his conduct toward Servetus.
Dr. Abraham Kuyper, the statesman-theologian from Holland, in speaking to an American audience not many years ago expressed
some thoughts in this connection which are worth repeating. Said he:
The duty of the government to extirpate every
form of false religion and idolatry was not a find of Calvinism, but dates from Constantine the Great and was the reaction
against the horrible persecutions which his pagan predecessors on the Imperial throne had inflicted upon the sect of the Nazarene.
Since that day this system had been defended by all Romish theologians and applied by all Christian princes. In the time of
Luther and Calvin, it was a universal conviction that that system was the true one. Every famous theologian of the period,
Melanchthon first of all, approved of the death by fire of Servetus; and the scaffold, which was erected by the Lutherans,
at Leipzig for Kreel, the thorough Calvinist, was infinitely more reprehensible when looked at from a Protestant standpoint.
But whilst the Calvinists, in the age of the Reformation, yielded up themselves as martyrs, by
tens of thousands, to the scaffold and the stake (those of the Lutherans and Roman Catholics being hardly worth counting),
history has been guilty of the great and far-reaching unfairness of ever casting in their teeth this one execution by fire
of Servetus as a crimen nefandum. Notwithstanding all this I not only deplore
that one stake, but I unconditionally disapprove of it; yet not as if it were the expression of a special characteristic of
Calvinism, but on the contrary as the fatal aftereffect of a system, grey with age, which Calvinism found in existence, under
which it had grown up, and from which it had not yet been able entirely to liberate itself.(9)
Hence when we view this affair in the light
of the sixteenth century and consider these different aspects of the case, namely, the approval of the other reformers, a
public opinion which abhorred toleration as involving indifference to truth and which justified the death penalty for obstinate
heresy and blasphemy, the sentence also passed on Servetus by the Roman Catholic authorities, the character of Servetus and
his attitude toward Calvin, his going to Geneva for the purpose of causing trouble, the passing of sentence by a civil court
not under Calvin's control, and Calvin's appeal for a lighter form of punishment, we come to the conclusion that there were
numerous extenuating circumstances, and that whatever else may be said, Calvin himself acted from a strict sense of duty.
View him from any angle you please; paint him as Cromwell asked himself to be painted "warts and all" and, as Schaff has said,
"He improves upon acquaintance." He was, beyond all question, a man sent from God, a world shaker, such as appears only a
few times in the history of the world.
Endnotes
1. Philip Schaff, History of the Swiss Reformation,
Volume II, page 698.
2. Schaff, The Creeds of Christendom, Volume
I, page 464.
3. Schaff, Swiss Reformation, page 669.
4. Schaff, ibid., Volume II, page 787.
5. Reference: Schaff, ibid., page 778.
6. Doumergue, article: "What Ought to be Known About Calvin,"
Evangelical Quarterly, January, 1929.
7. Opera, VIII., page 461.
8. Calvin's Calvinism, page 346.
9. Abraham Kuyper, Lectures
on Calvinism, page 129.
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