William Farel

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William Farel
William-Farel.jpg
Oil on wood, 16th Century in the Bibliothèque de Genève.
Born Guilhem Farel
1489
Gap, Kingdom of France
Died 1565 (aged 75–76)
Neuchâtel
Occupation Evangelist, theologian
Years active 1522–1565
Theological work
Era Reformation
Language French, Swiss
Tradition or movement Reformed, Calvinist

William Farel (1489 – 13 September 1565), Guilhem Farel or Guillaume Farel (French: [gijom faʁɛl]), was a French evangelist, Protestant reformer and a founder of the Reformed Church in the Principality of Neuchâtel, in the Republic of Geneva, and in Switzerland in the Canton of Bern and the (then occupied by Bern) Canton of Vaud. He is most often remembered for having persuaded John Calvin to remain in Geneva in 1536,[1] and for persuading him to return there in 1541,[2] after their expulsion in 1538. They influenced the government of Geneva to the point that it became the "Protestant Rome", where Protestants took refuge and non-Protestants were driven out.[3] Together with Calvin, Farel worked to train missionary preachers who spread the Protestant cause to other countries, and especially to France.[4]

Life

File:FarelNeuenburg.jpg
Statue of Farel in Neuchâtel
The Reformation Wall in Geneva. From left: Farel, John Calvin, Theodore Beza, and John Knox

Farel was born in 1489 in Gap.[5] He was a pupil of the pro-reform Catholic priesthood, at the University of Paris, in the earliest years of the Reformation. There he met the scholar Jacques Lefevre d'Etaples[6] who helped Farel obtain a professorship to teach grammar and philosophy at the Collège Cardinal Lemoine in Paris. With Lefevre he became a member of the Cercle de Meaux gathered together from 1519 by the reform-minded bishop of Meaux, Guillaume Briçonnet. Farel soon became regent of the college. By 1522 he was appointed a diocesan preacher by the Reformist bishop of Meaux, Guillaume Briçonnet. Farel now could invite a number of evangelical Humanists to work in his diocese to help implement his reform program within the Catholic Church.

This group of Humanists also included Josse van Clichtove, Martial Mazurier, Gérard Roussel, and François Vatable. The members of the Meaux circle were of different talents but they generally emphasized the study of the Bible and a return to the theology of the early Church. While working with Lefevre in Meaux, Farel came under the influence of Lutheran ideas and became an avid promoter of them. After condemnation by the Sorbonne, Farel evangelized fervently in the Dauphiné.

Farel was forced to flee to Switzerland because of controversy that was aroused by his writings against the use of images in Christian worship. He spent time at Zurich with Huldrych Zwingli and at Strasbourg, with Martin Bucer. He convinced Neuchâtel to join the Reform in 1530.[7]

Farel established himself in Geneva in 1532, where he remained as minister, drawing Calvin to the city, but breaking with him over the Eucharist. He, along with Calvin, was banished from Geneva in 1538, in part for his rigorous positions, and retired to Neuchâtel, where he spent the rest of his life. In 1558, when he was sixty-nine, Farel married Marie Thorel, who was a teenager. Scott Manetsch notes that Calvin was "flabbergasted and irate" at the marriage, "fearing that his friend's scandalous action would inflict irreparable damage on the cause of the Reformation throughout Europe."[8]

Although Farel was a friend of Calvin's,[9] he was a promoter of Lutheran ideas in his youth.[10]

References

  1. González 1984, p. 65
  2. Latourette & Winter 1975, p. 758
  3. Latourette & Winter 1975, p. 751
  4. Latourette & Winter 1975, p. 891
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  6. Latourette & Winter 1975, p. 750
  7. González 1984, p. 68
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  9. MacVicar 1955, p. 175
  10. Marshall 2007

Sources

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  • PAST, Fonds: Archives de la société des pasteurs et ministres neuchâtelois (13e-20e). Archives de l'État de Neuchâtel.

External links