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Huguenot - Religious beliefs |  | Huguenot - Religious beliefs: Encyclopedia II - Huguenot - Religious beliefs |  | Huguenot predecessors included the pro-reform and Gallican Roman Catholics, like Jacques Lefevre. Later, Huguenots followed the Lutheran movement, and finally, Calvinism. They shared John Calvin's fierce reformation beliefs which decried the priesthood, sacraments and doctrines of the Roman Catholic Church. They believed in salvation as an act of God as much as in creation as an act of God, and thus that only God's predestined mercy toward the elect made them fit for salvation. Some see this dual emphasis on creation and on salvation, and God's sovereignty over both, as a cornerstone principle for Huguenot developments in ar ...
See also:Huguenot, Huguenot - Origin of the name, Huguenot - Religious beliefs, Huguenot - Wars of Religion, Huguenot - Flight, Huguenot - External link |  | | Huguenot, Huguenot - External link, Huguenot - Flight, Huguenot - Origin of the name, Huguenot - Religious beliefs, Huguenot - Wars of Religion |  | |
|  |  | Huguenot: Encyclopedia II - Huguenot - Religious beliefs
Huguenot - Religious beliefs
Huguenot predecessors included the pro-reform and Gallican Roman Catholics, like Jacques Lefevre. Later, Huguenots followed the Lutheran movement, and finally, Calvinism. They shared John Calvin's fierce reformation beliefs which decried the priesthood, sacraments and doctrines of the Roman Catholic Church. They believed in salvation as an act of God as much as in creation as an act of God, and thus that only God's predestined mercy toward the elect made them fit for salvation. Some see this dual emphasis on creation and on salvation, and God's sovereignty over both, as a cornerstone principle for Huguenot developments in architecture and textiles and other merchandise.
Above all, Huguenots became known for their fiery criticisms of worship as performed in the Roman Catholic Church, in particular the focus on ritual and what seemed an obsession with death and the dead. They believed the ritual, images, saints, pilgrimages, prayers, and hierarchy of the Catholic Church did not help anyone toward redemption. They saw Christian faith as something to be expressed in a strict and godly life, in obedience to Biblical laws, out of gratitude for God's mercy. Like other Protestants of the time, they felt that the Roman church needed radical cleansing of its impurities, and that the Pope represented a worldly kingdom, which sat in mocking tyranny over the things of God, and was ultimately doomed. Rhetoric like this became more fierce as events unfolded, and stirred up the hostility of the Catholic establishment.
Huguenots faced periodic persecution from the outset of the Reformation; but Francis I (reigned 1515–1547) initially protected them from Parlementary measures designed for their extermination. The Affair of the Placards of 1534 changed the king's posture toward them: he stepped away from restraining persecution of the movement. Still, Huguenot numbers grew rapidly between 1555 and 1562, chiefly amongst the nobles and city-dwellers. During this time, their opponents first dubbed the Protestants Huguenots; but they called themselves reformés, "Reformed". They organized their first national synod in 1558, in Paris. By 1562, they had a total membership estimated at at least a million, especially numerous in the southern and central parts of the country. The Huguenots in France likely peaked in number at approximately two million, compared to approximately sixteen million Catholics during the same period.
Violently opposed to the Catholic Church, the Huguenots attacked images, monasticism, and church buildings. Most of the cities in which the Huguenots gained a hold saw iconoclast attacks, in which altars and images in churches, and sometimes the buildings themselves were torn down. Bourges, Montauban and Orleans suffered particularly.
Other related archives13 colonies, 1555, 1561, 1562, 1572, 1574, 1598, 1624, 1661, 1685, 1687, 16th, 17 September, 1724, 17th, 1924, 24 August, Affair of the Placards, Afrikaner Calvinists, Alexander Hamilton, Amboise plot, Andre Lortie, Andrew Lortie, Bourbon, Bourges, Calvin's Institutes, Calvinism, Cape of Good Hope, Cardinal Mazarin, Charleston, South Carolina, Chesterfield County, Christianity, Confessions of faith, Congregationalist, December 31, Denmark, Edict of Fontainebleau, Edict of Nantes, Edict of Saint-Germain, Eidgenosse, England, February 23, Five Solas, Five Points (TULIP), France, Francis I, Frederick William, Frederick the Great, French Calvinists, French Revolution, French Wars of Religion, French and Indian War, Gallican, Gaspard de Coligny, Geneva, German Democratic Republic, Guise, Henry IV, Henry of Navarre, Holy See, House of Guise, Huguenot, Huguenot Memorial Bridge, Jacques Lefevre, James River, January 17, John Calvin, John Jay, Jonathan Edwards, Karl Barth, La Rochelle, London, Lothar de Maiziere, Louis XIV, Lutheran, March 1, Montauban, Netherlands, New France, New Paltz, New York, New Rochelle, New York, New York City, North America, Old Truman Brewery, Orleans, Parlementary, Paul Revere, Petticoat Lane, Pilgrims, Plantations of Ireland, Pope, Powhatan County, Presbyterian, Princeton theologians, Protestant, Protestantism, Prussia, Puritan theology, Puritans, Reformed, Reformed Baptist, Reformed Church, Regulative principle, Religion in France, Richmond, Virginia, Roman Catholic Church, Shoreditch, Spitalfields, St. Augustine, St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre, Staten Island, Swiss Confederation, Switzerland, Synod of Dort, Tenterground, The Reformation, Theodore Beza, Tours, Ulster, United States, Valois, Virginia Colony, Wandsworth, Wassy, Williamite war in Ireland, alliance, brain drain, civil wars, dragonnades, hierarchy, holy war, iconoclast, linen, monasticism, pilgrimages, power, prayers, predestined, priesthood, redemption, reformation, ritual, sacraments, saints, silk, transubstantiation
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Religious beliefs", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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