William Farel, Guillaume Farel, (1489 – September
13 1565), was a French evangelist, and a founder of the
Reformed Church in the cantons of Neuchâtel, Berne and Geneva, and the Canton of Vaud Switzerland. He is most often remembered for having persuaded John
Calvin to remain in Geneva in 1536, and for persuading him
to return there in 1541, after their expulsion in 1538. They
influenced the government of Geneva to the point that it became a theocratic state, the "Protestant
Rome", where Protestants took refuge and non-Protestants were persecuted. Together with Calvin, Farel worked to train
missionary preachers who spread the Protestant cause to other countries, and especially to
France.
Farel was a fiery preacher and an energetic critic of the Roman Catholic
Church. In the earliest years of the Reformation in France, he was a pupil
of the pro-reform Catholic priest, Jacques
Lefevre d'Etaples. With Lefevre he became a member of the Cercle de Meaux gathered together from 1519 by the
reform-minded bishop of Meaux, Guillaume
Briçonnet, who invited 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.
He 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 Ulrich
Zwingli and at Strasbourg, with Martin Bucer. He
convinced Neuchâtel to join the Reform in 1530.
He established himself in Geneva in 1532, where he remained as minister, drawing Calvin to the city, but breaking with him
over the Eucharist. He was banished from Geneva in 1538, in part for his rigorous positions,
and retired to Neuchâtel, where he died.
Statue of Farel in front of the collegiale of
Neuchâtel, where Farel was pastor in his late
years.
It is interesting to note that, although Farel was a friend of Calvin's, he was a promoter of Lutheran ideas in his youth.
Today, Calvinism and Lutheranism are two completely separate denominations, but Farel's relationship with both would show that
they once had more in common than what they share today.
See also
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