Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2009
The nature of the relationship between the Renaissance and the Reformation has intrigued historians of both the past and the present. Recently a number of noted scholars have attempted to demonstrate the connection between the two movements with varying degrees of success. Historians seem to have marshalled an impressive and growing body of evidence to show the direct relationship between the advent of humanism and the coming of the Lutheran Reformation, even though the exact nature of this relationship has not yet been clarified in a definitive manner. But in the case of humanism and Calvinism no consensus has been reached concerning this problem; consequently, the situation is still in doubt. The purpose of this study is to enhance the historical understanding of the connection between humanism and Calvinism by a fresh analysis of the life and thought of three important first generation leaders of the Reformed church, namely, John Calvin, Theodore Beza and Pierre Viret. Moreover, new evidence on the subject from the career of Viret, the least known but nevertheless a very important member of this Calvinist trinity, will be presented to demonstrate more clearly the positive and direct link between humanism and Calvinism in the formative years of the Reformation.
1. I wish to thank the Bureau of General Research of Kansas State University and the American Philosophical Society (the Penrose Fund) for grants which made possible the research for this study. Also, I have been assisted in preparing this essay for publication by the generous criticisms and comments of several friends, especially those of Robert M. Kingdon of the University of Wisconsin and James M. Kittelson of the Ohio State University.
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55. This does not mean that there is no need for more work on Calvin himself. There is still a number of dark corners of the reformer's thought which need exposition and there seems always to be room for “one more” book or article on John Calvin. Moreover, Calvin, Beza and Viret all lack a definitive twentieth-century biography in English.
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