18 July 1534 A.D. Zachary Ursinus Born—German Reformed Churchman
& Professor; Co-Author of Heidelberg Catechism
Chapter 29
Zacharias Ursinus & Caspar Olevianus: Authors of the Heidelberg
Catechism
Introduction
Without
question the Heidelberg Catechism is one of the most, if not the most, beloved
Confession of all time. Those who cherish the heritage of the truth and turn to
the Confessions of the church to learn it will rejoice in the Heidelberger as a
precious gift of God through the Spirit of Truth Whom Christ promised the
church.
Not only
those who belong to churches which have made the Catechism their theological
basis, but God's people from any tradition and from all ecclesiastical
backgrounds, love and cherish this glorious creed.
Its
attractiveness lies in two characteristics. The first is its warm and personal
style. It speaks to the experience of the child of God. It tells him what the
truth means to him personally in his own life and calling in the world. The
second is its dominating theme of comfort. The personal and experiential aspect
of the Catechism looks at the truth in all our life as a truth which brings
comfort. It echoes the words of God in Isaiah 40:1: "Comfort ye, comfort
ye my people, saith your God."
In the
last chapter we described the role that Frederick the Pious played in the writing
of the Heidelberg Catechism. In this chapter we will let the authors themselves
step out of the obscure past and take their place momentarily on the stage of
history to tell us of what God worked in them.
Zacharias Ursinus
Ursinus's
Early Life
Zacharius
Ursinus was born on July 18, 1534 in the town of Breslau of Silesia, a province
of Austria. He was born of a family by the name of Baer, or Bear. Those who
know the Big Dipper as Ursa Major will also know that Ursinus is only the Latin
word for bear.
His
parents were poor, for the wages of a tutor were meager and his father was a
tutor. Two advantages, however, were his, brought up as he was in a tutor's
home. The first was that he was surrounded from infancy with learning, and the
second was that he had an opportunity to meet many of the rich and famous in
the course of his early years.
Ursinus
studied in Breslau until his 15th year, when he went to Wittenberg. Four years
after Luther's body had been laid to rest in the cathedral of Wittenberg, and while
Philip Melanchthon, Luther's colleague and close friend, was still teaching,
Ursinus came to this notable and famous school. Because his parents could not
support him, his expenses were underwritten by the Senate of Breslau, with the
understanding that he would return to his native town to teach after he had
completed his education.
Although
he was a very able and gifted student, Ursinus was shy and retiring, tending
somewhat to be moody, and not at all inclined to participate in the
intellectual rough and tumble of classroom life in a university. Nor did he
eagerly seek the companionship of his fellow students who, oftentimes with
excessive gaiety, would celebrate the freedom of an academic life. He preferred
to compose Greek and Latin verses in the solitude of his study.
He would
probably have passed through the halls of the university scarcely noticed if it
were not for the fact that Melanchthon observed his ability, took Ursinus into
his own home, and became a friend and companion as well as teacher to the shy
student. It was a strange but rich friendship, a 53 year old gifted theologian
with a poor student of 16.
The
Lutheran Reformation had penetrated Breslau prior to Ursinus's birth and had
influenced his parents. Wittenberg was the center of Lutheran studies. It is
not surprising that Ursinus became an ardent Lutheran. But already Melanchthon
was having second thoughts about Luther's view of the Lord's Supper and was
more inclined to agree with the Swiss theologians on the presence of Christ in
the bread and wine. Ursinus was influenced by Melanchthon and developed his own
views, which were more like those of his mentor.
Ursinus
spent seven years with Melanchthon and even accompanied him to Worms and
Heidelberg in 1557. Heidelberg was the city in which Ursinus would do his most
important work. He saw it for the first time in the golden autumn of October.
On the hillside covered with trees stood the imposing castle in which the
Elector lived. The city was in the narrow valley of the Neckar River which
flowed through the Black Forest to the Rhine just a few miles away. The Church
of the Holy Spirit dominated the city with its spires soaring above the roofs
of the houses. Almost at the feet of the spires was the most famous and oldest
university in Germany, the University of Heidelberg. It had been Roman
Catholic; it was now Protestant. Whether it would be Lutheran or Reformed had
yet to be decided. It was Melanchthon's home, the land for which he longed. But
Melanchthon had not come to stay; his life's work was on the sandy and dusty
soil of Wittenberg.
After
traveling together to Heidelberg, Ursinus and Melanchthon parted ways, Ursinus
to travel for a year throughout Europe visiting the Protestant centers of
learning in Germany, France, and Switzerland. He could read the Hebrew lectures
of Jean Mercier in Paris, sit at the feet of Bullinger in Zurich, and talk with
Calvin in Geneva. In fact, Calvin presented him with a gift of a complete set
of Calvin's works, signed by their illustrious author.
For a few
short years he fulfilled his obligations to Breslau by teaching there. But the
Lutherans suspected him of being more Reformed than Lutheran in his views of
the Lord's Supper. They were right; but it was a whispering campaign against
him, finally exploding into public debate, which persuaded Ursinus to resign
his position and leave the city. He never did enjoy controversy, and the
bitterness of the hatred in Breslau was more than he could bear.
From
Breslau Ursinus went to Zurich for a short time of peace and quietness in which
he became a close friend of Peter Martyr, the Reformer from Italy who had made
such a notable contribution to the Reformed doctrine of the Lord's Supper. His
decision to go to Zurich was a difficult one. He told his uncle:
Not
unwillingly do I leave my fatherland, since it does not permit the confession
of the truth, which I can not with good conscience give up. If my teacher
Melanchthon still lived, I would go nowhere else but to him. But as he is dead,
I will go to Zurich where there are pious, great and learned men. As for the
rest, God will care.
Ursinus
found companionship and fellowship here with men with whom he was in complete
agreement.
Frederick
the Pious wanted a Reformed professor in Heidelberg and called Peter Martyr.
Martyr declined the call on the grounds of old age, but recommended Ursinus.
When Ursinus received the call from Frederick, he was most reluctant to go. He
as well as anyone knew the tensions and controversies which were tearing apart
that city. To a friend he wrote: "Oh that I could remain hidden in a
corner. I would give anything for shelter in some quiet village."
But God
has a way of calling a person to a work from which he shrinks. So it was with
Moses. So it was when Calvin, at the threats of the fiery Farel, was persuaded
to stay in Geneva. So God called Ursinus, shy and retiring, to the swirling
ecclesiastical and doctrinal hubbub of Heidelberg.
Years In
Heidelberg
Times in
Heidelberg were trying. Although through the wise and godly rule of Frederick
the Pious Roman Catholicism had been pretty much rooted out of the city,
Lutheranism and the Reformed faith were vying for dominance. The differences
were almost exclusively over the doctrine of the Lord's Supper, but violent and
radical Lutherans were doing everything they could to rid the city of any men
who disagreed with their position.
Ursinus
was appointed head of the Collegium Sapientiae, the College of Wisdom,
as it was called. But it was not long after, that he was appointed to occupy the
chair of Dogmatics. And every imaginable chore and obligation were thrust upon
him, as Frederick and others sought to make use of his enormous abilities and
clear understanding of the truth.
It was not
as a joke that Ursinus put a sign on the door to his office in the University
which contained on it a bit of Latin doggerel which translated read:
"Friend who enters here: be quick, or go; or help me with my work."
Yet his
work for which he is renowned is his authorship of the Heidelberg Catechism.
With Caspar Olevianus, he was instructed to draw up a confession which could be
used for the instruction of the people of the Palatinate and could serve as a
basis of unity.
Ursinus
had earlier written a small Catechism in Latin, which also had proceeded from the
idea of comfort. It had suggested to Ursinus the theme of this Catechism, and
much of this earlier work was absorbed into the Heidelberger. It is hard for us
to believe that Ursinus was only 28 years old at the time, but he had been
steeped from infancy in Reformational theology and he was a man of brilliant
gifts with which God had endowed him. The work began in 1562 and took nearly a
year. It was a great time for Confessions: the Thirty-Nine Articles had been
adopted by the Church of England; Bullinger had written his beautiful Second
Helvetic Confession; and Spanish persecutors in the Lowlands were hunting the
author of the Belgic Confession, Guido de Brès.
Frederick
pressed the work forward at the swiftest possible rate. When the Catechism was
nearly ready in early 1563, he summoned a large company of ministers and
teachers from throughout the Palatinate to meet in solemn assembly to discuss
and, if possible, approve the work. After solemn worship services and lengthy
discussion, the assembled group was so moved by the genius of the work that
they unanimously recommended to Frederick that it be adopted without change.
And so it was.
In the
second edition, Frederick ordered Q. & A. 80 to be added, though without
the sharp language concerning the mass; but when the attacks of Roman Catholics
increased in bitterness and intensity, Frederick made another change in this
same question and answer which included the words which have ever afterward
vexed the souls of Roman Catholics, words which branded the mass as "an
accursed idolatry." Frederick also ordered that it be divided into 52
sections, or Lord's Days, so that it could be preached from beginning to end in
one year.
It quickly
ran through many editions and was soon translated into different languages,
including the Dutch, where it became a treasured confession of the Dutch
Reformed Churches.
Ursinus's
Post-Heidelberg Years
The rest
of Ursinus's years in Heidelberg were busy and relatively unhappy. Not only did
his duties continue in the University, but he was now also asked to preach each
Lord's Day on the Heidelberg Catechism. Furthermore, he became the chief
defender of the Catechism against the many and vicious attacks made against it
by Roman Catholics and Lutherans alike. They so wearied him who loved peace, so
physically exhausted him, and so impaired his health, that in 1566 he ceased
writing and two years later resigned his chair of Dogmatics. The chair went to
the esteemed Italian reformer, Hieronymous Zanchius, whose work on
"Predestination" is still widely read.
Disputes
in Heidelberg continued, now over church government. Did the discipline of the
impenitent rest with the State or with the church? The controversy was sharp
and bitter. The main defender of Presbyterianism was an Englishman named George
Withers. Bullinger and Beza were called in to give advice. Finally, annoyed by
the silence of Ursinus, Frederick ordered him to express his views. He did so
in a public assembly and in such a candid and kindly way that his views carried
the day, and Presbyteries were established with discipline safely in the hands
of the church.
All these
years he had remained unmarried and had lived with the students in the dorms of
the University. But in 1572, at the age of 38, he began to consider the possibility
of marriage. He had noticed a quiet and friendly woman only a block away from
the University, and one day, summoning up his courage, he took time out from
his studies to propose to her. She accepted; they were married -- perhaps one
of the shortest courtships on record. They lived together nine years, and
brought forth one son.
But things
were soon to change in Heidelberg. Frederick died, worn out by the cares of his
kingdom. The Elector Louis came to the electorate. Louis was an ardent Lutheran
and determined to force Lutheranism on the Palatinate. Within one year he
succeeded in doing this, and the Reformed faculty at the University, including
Ursinus, were dismissed. Over 600 teachers and preachers left the Palatinate
during this unhappy time.
Although
Ursinus was invited to teach at Lausanne in Switzerland, he chose instead to go
to Neustadt, where he set up a school in a nunnery with the help of his good
friend Casimir, son of Frederick the Pious. The school obtained a good faculty
and soon attracted many students from throughout Europe.
But
Ursinus taught only briefly in it. He was asked by a Reformed Convention which
met in Frankfurt in 1577 to draw up a confession which could serve as a basis
for unity of all Reformed Churches in Europe, but he declined on the grounds of
ill-health.
The great
work of these years was the writing of his well-known commentary on the
Heidelberg Catechism, a volume which all who love this creed ought to purchase.
The volume was put together from his lectures on the Catechism in Neustadt,
lectures which he edited and prepared for publication, although this latter
work he never finished. The book was published in 1584 after his death.
His health
continued to decline and his teaching became increasingly sporadic. Finally on
March 6, 1583, at the age of 49, he died in Neustadt, leaving his wife a widow
and his child without a father.
Summary
Ursinus
was not a very good preacher; his gifts lay in the classroom, where his
lectures were learned, incisive, instructive, and delivered in a most
interesting way. He was ever the cautious man, so much so that when questions
were asked of him in class, he almost always postponed the answers to the
following day so that he could have time to formulate a careful answer. His
strength was in his penetrating mind and his deep commitment to the truth. The
truth was not for him an intellectual matter however; it was his
"comfort," that which alone could sustain him through the grueling
years of his work in Heidelberg.
God thrust
this shrinking man into the maelstrom of Heidelberg. God knows what to do with
His appointed servants even when it seems all wrong to them and others. But we
are the beneficiaries , for to us has been given the time-honored treasure of
the Heidelberg Catechism.
Caspar Olevianus
Introduction
God used
more than one man to write the Heidelberg Catechism. Frederick III, elector of
the Palatinate, ordered it written and supported the project, even offering
suggestions from time to time. Zacharius Ursinus was its theologian. But Caspar
Olevianus left his own indelible mark on it.
History
has not recorded for us what precise part each of the two authors of the
Catechism played in its formation; and speculations on the subject by
historians have proved fruitless. But it does seem to be a manifestation of
God's great wisdom when, in the formulation of this marvelous creed, God used
both the theologian Ursinus and the preacher Olevianus. Not only is the
Catechism an unsurpassed summary of the Christian faith with the touch of a
theologian; but it is a confession eminently suitable to preach: it has the
touch of a man who was himself a gifted and eloquent preacher and pastor.
Early Life
and Training
Caspar
Olevianus was born on August 10, 1536, two years after the birth of his
colleague Ursinus. He was born in one of the most famous cities in Trans-Alpine
Europe, the city of Trier, or, as it was sometimes called, Treves. The city was
built on the banks of the Moselle River on the border of Germany and
Luxembourg. It boasted of the fact that its history went back to the days
before the birth of Christ, and it claimed to be one of the oldest, if not the
oldest city north of the Alps. The Emperor Caesar Augustus had started the city
in 15 B.C. and had made it an important city in an ocean of barbarians.
The city
had the distinction of being briefly the home of the great church father
Athanasius, when, because of his uncompromising defense of the truth of
Christ's divinity, he had been banished from his church in Alexandria in Egypt.
That was back in the first half of the 4th century.
The
prominence of the city in the Middle Ages was due in large measure to the fact
that the cathedral in the city claimed to have in its possession the seamless
robe of Christ over which the soldiers gambled at the cross. (This robe is
still put on public display at 25-year intervals, and hundreds of thousands
crowd the city to look at it.) Further, the abbey church in the city claimed to
be the burial place of the apostle Matthew, the only apostle, so tradition
said, to be buried north of the Alps.
Olevianus
was born of Gerhard von der Olewig and Anna Sinzig. The name
"Olewig," which means "olive," actually refers to a part of
the city, perhaps even a small village annexed to the city, known by that name.
"Olevianus" is the Latinized form of that name.
Caspar's
father was a merchant, relatively wealthy, and a prominent citizen of this
historic place. He was a baker, a president of the Bakers' Guild, a member of
the city council, and treasurer of the city. He followed a family tradition of
service to the city, for Caspar's grandfather was president of the Butchers'
Guild and also a member of the council. These positions in the city were
important, for Trier, because of its ancient and illustrious past, was a
"free" city in Germany.
Caspar's
mother was a pious and godly woman who exerted great influence on her family
and son. It is striking, if I may make here a somewhat parenthetical remark,
that so many of those men who occupied places of great importance in the cause
of God and of His church, had very godly and pious mothers. It is a fact of
history that ought to give all covenant mothers pause: they never know what the
effect of their piety and humble service of God will be upon their children and
how God will use their godliness for His cause.
Trier was
a Roman Catholic city. It remained such even though the Lutheran Reformation
spread through much of Germany. It remained immune to Lutheran teachings.
Caspar was brought up, therefore, in a Roman Catholic home and taught in a
Roman Catholic school in Trier the first 14 years of his life.
Offsetting
this Roman Catholic influence was one incident which made a deep impression on
Casper during these years, an incident of which he himself later spoke. While
Casper was at school, an aged but kindly and saintly priest planted a seed in
his heart which was eventually to bear fruit. It was nothing more than a remark
which the old priest made to him in the corridors of the school. Recognizing
the abilities of the young boy, the priest put his arm over Casper's shoulder
and said to him: "Never forget that salvation and comfort are to be found
only in Christ's perfect work." Again and again, through those dark and
dreary centuries when Roman Catholicism held sway over the minds and
consciences of men, we find these isolated individuals who, in spite of Rome's
denial of Christ's perfect sacrifice for sin, held to the truth that all our
salvation is only in Christ. It must have been these lonely and scattered men who
enabled the church of Christ to stay alive during those perilous times.
In 1550,
at the age of 14, Caspar completed his studies in Trier. His grandfather
stepped in and offered to support Caspar's further education in France provided
Caspar would study law. This was somewhat strange, for Trier had its own
university; but it becomes a bit understandable when we remember that Trier was
solidly Roman Catholic and its schools were steadily losing students, while the
universities of other parts of Europe were becoming very popular because of
openness to Renaissance and Reformation teachings.
It was in
France that Caspar's life took an extraordinary turn.
Conversion
and Early Work
The years
Olevianus spent in France were profitable, if for no other reason than that
they led to his conversion to the Reformed faith.
Caspar
attended the universities of Paris, Orleans, and Bourges, the same universities
in which Calvin had received his training. Although he studied law, he came
under the influence of leading thinkers in the universities who were more or
less committed to Lutheranism; but more importantly, he came under the
influence of Huguenot teaching. The Huguenots were French Calvinists who had
been delivered from Roman Catholicism, but who were forced to meet secretly
because they were severely persecuted by the king and the church. The shadow of
the stake, the hangman's noose, and the sword hung constantly over them and
their families. Not only did Caspar come in contact with them, but he became
persuaded of their position and even attended their secret meetings.
Especially
one experience changed his life. While walking with a friend, a prince from
Germany, along the river which ran by Bourges, Caspar and this friend were
invited to cross the river in a boat in which were other students. Caspar
refused because the students in the boat were drunk, but his friend took up the
offer. In midstream the students began rocking the boat and it overturned.
Caspar dived into the water to save his friend, but was unable to do so because
of the swift current. He was himself in danger of drowning. At that crucial
point, Caspar promised that, if God would spare his life, he would preach the
gospel in Trier. His friend's valet, thinking Caspar was his master, hauled
Caspar from the water, while the friend drowned. Although Caspar continued his
studies in law, that promise, made in the cold waters of the river Auron, was
not forgotten.
After
completing his studies in France, Caspar returned to Trier -- not yet to preach
(for this he was untrained), but to practice law. His promise, however, sat
heavily upon his soul, and he found no satisfaction in the legal niceties of
16th century law practice. In disgust and restlessness, Caspar traveled to
Geneva for the express purpose of talking with Calvin.
The two
years he spent in Switzerland were important ones. He not only met with and
talked to Calvin, but had opportunity to spend many hours with Theodore Beza,
Henry Bullinger, Peter Martyr, William Farel, and Peter Viret, all luminous
stars in the Reformation heavens. The years were not spent, though, in idle
chatter; he studied in Geneva under Calvin, learned Hebrew, mastered theology,
was instructed in the art of preaching, and prepared himself for the ministry.
It must
have been good instruction which he received in preaching because, along with
the development of his native gifts, this instruction made Caspar one of the
outstanding and most eloquent preachers of the times -- and the times were
blessed with many gifted preachers!
The year
1559 was an important one in the history of the Reformation. During this year
French Protestants held their first Synod in Paris, John Knox returned to
Scotland to establish the Presbyterian Church there, William the Silent made
his vow to drive "the Spanish vermin" from the Netherlands, Elector
Frederick III the Pious began his reign in Heidelberg, and Calvin opened his
Academy in Geneva and published the last edition of his Institutes.
In June of
this important year, at the urging of Farel -- that firebrand of a Reformer who
had been instrumental in keeping Calvin in Geneva, Olevianus returned to Trier.
Trier was
still a Roman Catholic City, and Caspar's presence as a minister of the truth
of the Calvin Reformation would not have gone over very well there. But two
men, Otto Seele and Peter Sierk, influential in the city, were known in Geneva
to have some Calvinistic leanings. To them Calvin wrote to try to encourage
them to work towards reformation in the city, and especially to bring Caspar Olevianus
to the city to help.
It seems
as if Caspar went without really revealing what his position on reformational
matters was. He must have, for the time being, concealed his true purposes, for
he had no difficulty, because of the reputation of his parents and
grandparents, obtaining an appointment to teach philosophy in the school of a
solidly Roman Catholic city. He chose to teach Melanchthon's Dialectics. The
instruction was in Latin, and Dialectics was rather boring to any but the most
ardent students; so Olevianus could be of little influence. Here he stayed for
awhile, in his home town, in a sense flying under false colors, eager to keep a
vow he had made long before, stuck in a philosophy class in a dying school.
Work In
Trier
Because
few people in Trier could understand Latin (even most of the students were not
very proficient in the language) Olevianus, though able to slip in a few
Reformed remarks from time to time, could scarcely be an effective teacher of
the truths he had learned to love.
In his
discomfort over his vow that he would preach, and determined to reach the
common people, he decided to hold a public lecture in German, the language of
the people. It was subsequently announced. A large crowd assembled. The success
of the lecture was the beginning of a series of lectures in the German tongue,
lectures which became expositions of a Reformation Catechism.
Because
the people received what he had to say eagerly and because the crowds continued
to grow, he asked permission of the council to preach to the people, which
permission was reluctantly given. He chose for this sermon the subject of
justification by faith, which he ably set forth in a crowded room, and which
became an occasion for him to attack various Romish practices. At last he was
beginning to keep the vow he had made to God in the river of Bourges.
Although
the town clerk supported this public proclamation of the gospel, Olevianus was
brought before the city council, which was less receptive to the idea. Somewhat
reluctantly and probably because the city council did not really understand
what was at stake, the men of the council voted to permit him to preach.
The crowds
grew rapidly and soon a Protestant and Calvinistic congregation was organized.
But Archbishop John, a cleric in the church of Rome as well as Elector of that
region, heard reports of what was going on. He knew the significance of it, and
soon, marching with a number of soldiers to the gates of the city, he demanded
that such "nonsense" stop. When the city refused to open the gates to
him, he took up headquarters near the city and began to harass the citizens by
taking away their status as a free city, burning their crops, seizing and
attacking citizens as they traveled to and from the city, threatening the city
with many fierce threats, cutting off their water supply, preventing supplies
of food from entering the city, and summoning more soldiers to make a
determined march on the city.
Finally
John attacked the city, threw Olevianus into jail, banished all who upheld
Protestant practices, and restored Roman Catholicism. It was a total triumph
for Rome. John, to add insult to injury, instituted an annual "Olevian
Procession" to celebrate the banishment of this man of God. It was nearly
250 years before any worship services other than Romish were held here again.
Olevianus
was held in prison for ten weeks and was finally released only at the
insistence of the Elector Frederick the Pious, who paid an enormous ransom for
the release. Olevianus never again returned to the city of his birth.
He had
thought (and promised) to preach the gospel in Trier; he kept his promise,
though only for a short time; God had need of him elsewhere. The year was 1560;
Olevianus was only 24 years old.
Work In
Heidelberg
Although
Olevianus had many offers to work elsewhere, he chose to go to Heidelberg at
the invitation of Frederick. In Heidelberg he became leader and director at the
college. There he completed his doctoral studies in theology and was appointed
to the chair of dogmatics. For use in his lectures, he made a summary of
Calvin's Institutes, which book was the major textbook in the class.
His
abilities were not, however, primarily the abilities of a professor; he was
above all a preacher. And so, when Zacharius Ursinus came to the university,
Olevianus moved out of the chair of Dogmatics to make room for Ursinus, and
Olevianus became chief pastor in St. Peter's Church and later in the Church of
the Holy Spirit. Here, on the pulpit, expounding God's Word, he felt at home.
Here God used his gifts to the advantage of the church.
And so it
was that both a professor, gifted in theology, and a preacher, eloquent and
faithful in the pulpit, were, under God's providence, chosen to write the
Heidelberg Catechism. Ursinus was 28 years old; Olevianus was 26. It is hard to
believe that they were so young. The Catechism gives evidence of authorship by
spiritually and theologically mature men. And so they were. Maturity before
one's thirties -- that is the measure of their God-given abilities.
The
Catechism is a teacher's book and a preacher's book. It is a
systematically-arranged treatise covering the whole of the Christian faith; but
it is not the doctrine of the classroom or lecture hall; it is the doctrine of
the pulpit and the faith of the people of God. The systematic theology of the
creed reflects the gifts of Ursinus; the passionately pastoral approach of
comfort in doctrine is the delicate touch of the preacher.
Olevianus's
work on the Catechism was by no means all he did in Heidelberg. His
congregational responsibilities were enough to keep him busy, but he was also
deeply involved in continuing reform in the Palatinate. He was instrumental in
bringing into the Palatinate hundreds of Reformed teachers to teach in the
schools and preachers to preach in the pulpits. He was deeply involved in the
defense of the Reformed faith over against Lutheran and Roman Catholic attacks.
He was especially instrumental in solidifying genuine biblical church
government in the Palatinate, although not without a bitter battle with those
who wanted the State to rule the church.
The Last
Years
But even
such good things as Olevianus's work in Heidelberg had to come to an end.
There are
so many things in God's eternal purpose that seem all wrong to us. Just at that
point when so many battles seemed to be won and when Heidelberg was becoming a
center for Reformational studies, God stopped it all.
The
cruelty which Ursinus suffered came also to Olevianus. Ludwig came to the
throne. The pulpits and schools were the first objects of Ludwig's attacks.
Olevianus was fired from his post and put under house arrest. When this arrest
was lifted it was only to banish from the entire Palatinate anyone who breathed
a Reformed word. Over 600 preachers and teachers, including Olevianus, fled,
and the Calvin Reformation came to an abrupt halt.
Olevianus
went for a short time to a castle of a friend in central Germany to tutor his
son and help in the Reformation work which was being done in that area. In 1548
he went to Herborn, another city in Germany, as the chief preacher of the
church there and as promoter of the Reformation. The result was that, although
Lutheranism was the dominant faith in Germany, there were various places where
Calvinism flourished and a Reformed church grew strong.
In the
same year that Olevianus came to Herborn he started a Seminary, more properly,
an Academy, for the school taught also the subjects which were necessary for
pre-theological studies. Olevianus once again occupied the chair of dogmatics.
Under his labors and leadership the Seminary expanded and grew with incredible
speed. A year after it had been started, the famed Piscator came to the school
along with 12 other teachers of prominence in the Reformed movement. The
student body was a cross-section of Europe's Calvinists.
But we
near the end of the story.
Though
only 51, Olevianus was worn with labor and toil in the cause of the gospel. As
he lay dying, he confessed: "I have only learned to know in this sickness
what sin is, and how great is the majesty of God." He spoke of a dream he
had had: "Yesterday I was filled for more than an hour with unspeakable
joy. It appeared to me that I was walking in a meadow resplendent with light,
and while I was moving about, heavenly dew fell on me, not in drops but in
streams. Both my body and soul were filled with exceeding great joy."
Piscator,
hearing this, said: "So the good Shepherd has led you into His green
pastures." Olevianus replied: "Yes, he has led me to the fountain of
living water." He requested that Psalm 42 and Isaiah 53 be read to him. He
asked that those at his bedside sing a Reformation hymn, with whom he joined in
a weak voice. He died shortly after telling those around him: "I would no
longer postpone my journey to the Lord. I desire to depart and be with
Christ." He said his farewells to his wife, his aged mother, his children,
and his friends, taking the time to bless each of them. And so living and dying
in that "only comfort in life and in death," he went to be with the
Lord.
Olevianus's
power was in his preaching. Nevertheless, one more accomplishment, and that in
the field of theology, must be mentioned. He wrote a book, undoubtedly the best
of all his writings, entitled "The Covenant of Grace." What is so
striking about this book is that, although Olevianus often spoke of the
covenant as a pact or an agreement (an idea in keeping with his times), he
also, amazingly, spoke of the covenant as a bond of friendship and fellowship,
an idea which was not to be fully developed in all its beauty until the
theology of Herman Hoeksema. Such is a measure of the stature of this eminent
man of God through whose hands God gave us our Heidelberg Catechism. No wonder
that in that very Catechism should appear the profound truth: "Are infants
also to be baptized? Yes: for since they, as well as the adult, are included in
the covenant and church of God; and since redemption from sin by the blood of
Christ, and the Holy Ghost, the author of faith, is promised to them no less
than to the adult; they must therefore by baptism, as a sign of the covenant,
be also admitted into the Christian church . . . " (Q & A 74).
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