I am just finishing up Bruce Gordonās excellent bookĀ Zwingli: Godās Armed Prophet. In it, Gordon, almost in passing, notes that in Zwingliās final theological confession, hisĀ Exposition of the Faith,Ā in his dedication to Franceās king, Francis I, he writes the following. You will notice the universalistic intonations of Zwingliās correspondence; Luther, and the Germans
most certainly did. Indeed, in the following quotation, Gordon also supplies Lutherās acerbic response to what I would take, similarly, to be a highlyĀ unChristianĀ way to think about the salvation of pagan peoples.Ā Ā
In his dedication, Zwingli urged the king to rule well, that he might join the heavenly company of exalted monarchs:Ā
Then you may hope to see the whole company and assemblage of all the saints, the wise, the faithful, brave, and good who have lived since the world began. Here you will see the two Adams, the redeemed and the redeemer, Abel, Enoch, Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Judah, Moses, Joshua, Gideon, Samuel, Phineas, Elijah, Elisha, Isaiah, and the Virgin Mother of God of whom he prophesied, David, Hezekiah, Josiah, the Baptist, Peter, Paul; here too, Hercules, Theseus, Socrates, Aristides, Antigonus, Numa, Camillus, theĀ CatosĀ andĀ Scipios, here Louis the Pious, and your predecessors, the Louis, Philips,Ā Pepins, and all your ancestors, who have gone hence in faith. In short there has not been a good man and will not be a holy heart or faithful soul from the beginning of the world to the end thereof that you will not see in heaven with God. And what can be imaginedĀ more glad, what more delightful, what, finally, moreĀ honourableĀ than such a sight?Ā
As Luther and others quickly noted, Zwingliās words were arresting. Alongside the kings of Israel and France, the blessed included Socrates and theĀ Catos. The virtuous pagans would find their place among the elect. From Wittenberg came the caustic reply:Ā
Tell me, any one of you who wants to be a Christian, what need is there of baptism, the sacrament, Christ, the Gospel, or the prophets and Holy Scripture, if such godless heathen, Socrates, Aristides, yes, the cruel Numa, who was the first to instigate every kind of idolatry at Rome by the devilās revelation, as St Augustine writes in the City of God, and Scipio the Epicurean, are saved and sanctified along with the patriarchs, prophets, and apostles in heaven, even though they knew nothing about God, Scripture, the Gospel, Christ, baptism, the sacrament, or the Christian faith? What can such an author, preacher, and teacher believe about the Christian faith except that it is no better than any other faith and that everyone can be saved by his own faith, even an idolater and an Epicurean like Numa and Scipio?Ā
The list was not the first time Zwingli had expressed himself on the salvation of non-Christians. Against his beloved Augustine, he was adamant that unbaptized infants would be saved. On the noble heathen, he had made his point most emphatically in his sermon on providence in 1530, when he claimed that Seneca was āthe unparalleled cultivator of the soul among pagansā. He was a ātheologianā and his works ādivine oraclesā.Ā Ā
Salvation was not limited to Israel or the visible Church. Zwingliās conviction was consistent: God is entirely free in election to choose whom he wills with reasons completely beyond human comprehension. Profound attachment to divine freedom led Zwingli to find God working through the deeds and thoughts of non-Christians. God was the source of all goodness, and faith and goodness were to be found among virtuous pagans as they were somehow part of Godās election. Unlike John Milton later, Zwingli felt no need to explain the ways of God to humanity.1Ā
Interestingly, Zwingli himself, according to Gordonās commentary, has no problem imposing his soteriology on Godās freedom; this is precisely what Karl Barth would not do. Barth, like Zwingli, had a high view of Divine freedom, but just because of that, definitionally, Barth rightly saw that a person, like Zwingli, could not foreclose on said freedom; and āmakeā Godās freedom the cipher by which an array of theologicalĀ adiaphoraĀ might be smuggled into the Divine way. This is what kept Barth et al. from following Zwingliās apparent universalistic-turn. At most, for Barth, Godās freedomĀ couldĀ allow for a hopeful universalism, but not of the sort that we find, ostensibly, in Zwingliās absolute, and even pluralistic form of universalism (I say anachronistically after Paul Tillich). Indeed, I find this rather striking; Zwingli seems to have an incipient form of what would later come to be Karl RahnerāsĀ anonymous ChristianĀ notion. Again, to read modern theologians, and their respective categories, back into someone like Zwingli would be, at best, anachronistic. But at a conceptual level it is interesting that there is at least some inchoate corollary between him and some moderns who would follow latterly.Ā Ā
I found this nugget interesting, and something I didnāt know in regard to Zwingliās soteriological imagination. Maybe youāll find this interesting as well, which is why Iāve shared this.Ā Solo ChristoĀ Ā
1 Bruce Gordon, Zwingli: Godās Armed Prophet (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2021), 238-39.
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