CALVINISM IN FRANCE 

     France, too, at that time, was all aglow with the free, bounding, restless spirit of 
     Calvinism. "In France the Calvinists were called Huguenots. The character of the 
     Huguenots the world knows. Their moral purity and heroism, whether persecuted at 
     home or exiled abroad, has been the wonder of both friend and foe."1 "Their history," 
     says the Encyclopaedia Britannica, "is a standing marvel, illustrating the abiding power of 
     strong religious conviction. The account of their endurance is amongst the most 
     remarkable and heroic records of religious history." The Huguenots made up the 
     industrious artisan class of France and to be "honest as a Huguenot" became a proverb, 
     denoting the highest degree of integrity. 

     On St. Bartholomew's Day, Sunday, August 24, 1572, a great many Protestants were 
     treacherously murdered in Paris, and for days thereafter the shocking scenes were 
     repeated in different parts of France. The total number of those who lost their lives in the 
     St. Bartholomew massacre has been variously estimated at from 10,000 to 50,000. 
     Schaff estimates it at 30,000. These furious persecutions caused hundreds of thousands 
     of the French Protestants to flee to Holland, Germany, England, and America. The loss 
     to France was irreparable. Macaulay the English historian writes as follows of those who 
     settled in England: "The humblest of the refugees were intellectually and morally above 
     the average of the common people of any kingdom in Europe." The great historian 
     Lecky, who himself was a cold-blooded rationalist, wrote: "The destruction of the 
     Huguenots by the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes was the destruction of the most 
     solid, the most modest, the most virtuous, the most generally enlightened element in the 
     French nation, and it prepared the way for the inevitable degradation of the national 
     character, and the last serious bulwark was removed that might have broken the force of 
     that torrent of skepticism and vice which, a century later, laid prostrate, in merited ruin, 
     both the altar and the throne."2 

     "If you have read their history," says Warburton, "you must know how cruel and unjust 
     were the persecutions instigated against them. The best blood of France deluged the 
     battlefield, the brightest genius of France was suffered to lie neglected and starving in 
     prison, and the noblest characters which France ever possessed were hunted like wild 
     beasts of the forest, and slain with as little pity." And again, "In every respect they stood 
     immeasurably superior to all the rest of their fellow-countrymen. The strict sobriety of 
     their lives, the purity of their moral actions, their industrious habits, and their entire 
     separation from the foul sensuality which corrupted the whole of the national life of 
     France at this period, were always effectual means of betraying the principles which they 
     held, and were so regarded by their enemies."3 

     The debauchery of the kings had descended through the aristocracy to the common 
     people; religion had become a mass of corruption, consistent only with its cruelty; the 
     monasteries had become breeding places of iniquity; celibacy had proved to be a foul 
     fountain of unchastity and uncleanness; immorality, licentiousness, despotism and 
     extortion in State and Church were indescribable; the forgiveness of sins could be 
     purchased for money, and a shameful traffic in indulgences was carried on under the 
     pope's sanction; some of the popes were monsters of iniquity; ignorance was appalling; 
     education was confined to the clergy and the nobles; many even of the priests were 
     unable to read or write; and society in general had fallen to pieces. 

     This is a one-sided, but not an exaggerated, description. It is true as far as it goes, and 
     needs only to be supplemented by the brighter side, which was that many honest Roman 
     Catholics were earnestly working for reform from within the Church. The Church, 
     however, was in an irreformable condition. Any change, if it was to come at all, had to 
     come from without. Either there would be no reformation or it would be in opposition to 
     Rome. 

     But gradually Protestant ideas were filtering into France from Germany. Calvin began his 
     work in Paris and was soon recognized as one of the leaders of the new movement in 
     France. His zeal aroused the opposition of Church authorities and it became necessary 
     for him to flee for his life. And although Calvin never returned to France after his 
     settlement in Geneva, he remained the leader of the French Reformation and was 
     consulted at every step. He gave the Huguenots their creed and form of government. 
     Throughout the following period it was, according to the unanimous testimony of history, 
     the system of faith which we call Calvinism that inspired the French Protestants in their 
     struggle with the papacy and its royal supporters. 

     What the Puritan was in England, the Covenanter was in Scotland, and the Huguenot 
     was in France. That Calvinism developed the same type of men in each of these several 
     countries is a most remarkable proof of its power in the formation of character. 

     So rapidly did Calvinism spread throughout France that Fisher in his History of the 
     Reformation tells us that in 1561 the Calvinists numbered one-fourth of the entire 
     population. McFetridge places the number even higher. "In less than half a century," says 
     he, "this so-called harsh system of belief had penetrated every part of the land, and had 
     gained to its standards almost one-half of the population and almost every great mind in 
     the nation. So numerous and powerful had its adherents become that for a time it 
     appeared as if the entire nation would be swept over to their views."4 Smiles, in his 
     "Huguenots in France," writes: "It is curious to speculate on the influence which the 
     religion of Calvin, himself a Frenchman, might have exercised on the history of France, as 
     well as on the individual character of the Frenchman, had the balance of forces carried 
     the nation bodily over to Protestantism, as was very nearly the case, toward the end of 
     the sixteenth century," (p. 100). Certainly the history of the nation would have been very 
     different from that which it has been. 

     Footnotes: 

     1Smith, The Creed of Presbyterians, p. 83. 
     2Eng. Hist. Eighteenth Century, I., pp. 264, 265. 
     3Calvinism, pp. 84, 92. 
     4Calvinism in History, p. 144 

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