The Biblical Image of the Providential Ruler in the Protestant Propaganda on the Eve of the French Wars of Religion

French Protestantism has remained famous in the history of political thought mostly for its theories regarding popular sovereignty and the right of the people to resist and replace a tyrannical ruler. However, before the civil wars pushed them on this revolutionary path, French Protestants stressed...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Andrei Constantin Sălăvăstru
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-08-01
Series:Religions
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/12/8/596
id doaj-6e01ecd724e443c78a89d09425a2f8c1
record_format Article
spelling doaj-6e01ecd724e443c78a89d09425a2f8c12021-08-26T14:16:49ZengMDPI AGReligions2077-14442021-08-011259659610.3390/rel12080596The Biblical Image of the Providential Ruler in the Protestant Propaganda on the Eve of the French Wars of ReligionAndrei Constantin Sălăvăstru0Department of Social Sciences and Humanities, Institute of Interdisciplinary Research, “Alexandru Ioan Cuza” University of Iasi, 700057 Iasi, RomaniaFrench Protestantism has remained famous in the history of political thought mostly for its theories regarding popular sovereignty and the right of the people to resist and replace a tyrannical ruler. However, before the civil wars pushed them on this revolutionary path, French Protestants stressed the duty of obedience even in the face of manifest tyranny. The reasons for this were ideological, due to the significance placed on St. Paul’s assertion that all political power was divinely ordained, but also pragmatic, as Calvin and his followers were acutely aware of the danger of antagonizing the secular authorities. More importantly, they were fervently hoping for the conversion of France to the Reformation and, in their mind, the surest way such a process could take place was through the conversion of the king and the royal family. Therefore, Protestant propaganda of that time constantly urged the most important French royals to convert to the Reformation, and, for this purpose, they deployed a language full of references to the pious Biblical rulers who led their people towards the true faith—whom the addressees of these propaganda texts were advised to emulate, lest they incur God’s wrath. This paper aims to analyze the occurrences and the role of these references in the Protestants’ dialogue with the French monarchy.https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/12/8/596FranceCalvinReformationkingshipBible
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrei Constantin Sălăvăstru
spellingShingle Andrei Constantin Sălăvăstru
The Biblical Image of the Providential Ruler in the Protestant Propaganda on the Eve of the French Wars of Religion
Religions
France
Calvin
Reformation
kingship
Bible
author_facet Andrei Constantin Sălăvăstru
author_sort Andrei Constantin Sălăvăstru
title The Biblical Image of the Providential Ruler in the Protestant Propaganda on the Eve of the French Wars of Religion
title_short The Biblical Image of the Providential Ruler in the Protestant Propaganda on the Eve of the French Wars of Religion
title_full The Biblical Image of the Providential Ruler in the Protestant Propaganda on the Eve of the French Wars of Religion
title_fullStr The Biblical Image of the Providential Ruler in the Protestant Propaganda on the Eve of the French Wars of Religion
title_full_unstemmed The Biblical Image of the Providential Ruler in the Protestant Propaganda on the Eve of the French Wars of Religion
title_sort biblical image of the providential ruler in the protestant propaganda on the eve of the french wars of religion
publisher MDPI AG
series Religions
issn 2077-1444
publishDate 2021-08-01
description French Protestantism has remained famous in the history of political thought mostly for its theories regarding popular sovereignty and the right of the people to resist and replace a tyrannical ruler. However, before the civil wars pushed them on this revolutionary path, French Protestants stressed the duty of obedience even in the face of manifest tyranny. The reasons for this were ideological, due to the significance placed on St. Paul’s assertion that all political power was divinely ordained, but also pragmatic, as Calvin and his followers were acutely aware of the danger of antagonizing the secular authorities. More importantly, they were fervently hoping for the conversion of France to the Reformation and, in their mind, the surest way such a process could take place was through the conversion of the king and the royal family. Therefore, Protestant propaganda of that time constantly urged the most important French royals to convert to the Reformation, and, for this purpose, they deployed a language full of references to the pious Biblical rulers who led their people towards the true faith—whom the addressees of these propaganda texts were advised to emulate, lest they incur God’s wrath. This paper aims to analyze the occurrences and the role of these references in the Protestants’ dialogue with the French monarchy.
topic France
Calvin
Reformation
kingship
Bible
url https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/12/8/596
work_keys_str_mv AT andreiconstantinsalavastru thebiblicalimageoftheprovidentialrulerintheprotestantpropagandaontheeveofthefrenchwarsofreligion
AT andreiconstantinsalavastru biblicalimageoftheprovidentialrulerintheprotestantpropagandaontheeveofthefrenchwarsofreligion
_version_ 1721190388986806272