
This week, join Meeter Center director Karin Maag for a show-and-tell featuring amazing medals commemorating the Reformation from the Meeter Center's collection. We are fortunate to have received an extensive set of medals from a local collector, to add to the medals we already had - many of these mark significant anniversaries of Calvin's life, but others, like the ones featured in today's short video, highlight significant dates or events that helped shape Reformed identity. The iconography, symbols, and artistic talent together make these medals truly engaging witnesses to the ongoing significance of the Reformation well after the sixteenth century.
The video version of this podcast can be watched here: https://youtu.be/08QEBuOTLcU
Mar 18, 2022
6 min

We heard from Dr. Maximilian Miguel Scholz, assistant professor of History, Florida State University, speaking about his upcoming book, _Strange Brethren: Refugees, Religious Bonds, and Reformation in Frankfurt, 1554-1608_ (University of Virginia Press - release date January 17, 2022). Following Max's presentation of the main themes of his book, we had responses from Dr. Jesse Spohnholz (Washington State University) and Dr. Mirjam van Veen (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam), both of whom have published works and ongoing projects on religious refugees in the early modern era. After that, we hed our open forum discussion by Zoom chat.
Mar 11, 2022
1 hr 20 min

We were delighted to host another Reformation Conversations Webinar this fall, this time focusing on Dr. Bruce Gordon’s upcoming biography of the Swiss Reformer Huldrych Zwingli. The session took place on Thursday, Nov. 4, from 1 PM to 2:30 PM. Bruce Gordon is the Titus Street Professor of Ecclesiastical History at Yale Divinity School, where he has served since 2008. His research focuses on the Reformation and its reception, especially in the Swiss lands. In 2009, he published his biography of John Calvin (Yale University Press), one of the best English-language biographies of the Genevan Reformer. Now he has turned his attention to the leading early Reformer of the city of Zurich in his monograph, _Huldrych Zwingli: God’s Armed Prophet_, due to be released by Yale University Press on November 30, 2021.
Nov 4, 2021
1 hr 19 min

Here is the recording of the final presentation in our summer 2021 webinar series, featuring Martin Klauber. Dr. Klauber is an Affiliate Professor at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School in Deerfield, Illinois, and our 2019 Emo Van Halsema fellowship recipient. He began his fellowship with two weeks of study at the Meeter Center in 2019 and returned this year to complete his research. His presentation is titled “Pierre Allix (1641-1717) Pastor at Charenton: Preparation for the Lord's Supper.” According to Philip Benedict, one of the key areas of Huguenot publications during the seventeenth century were devotional books designed to help prepare believers to partake of the Lord’s Supper. The pastors at the great temple at Charenton which served the Reformed community in Paris were at the forefront of these efforts. Jean Claude, the famous Charenton pastor at the time of the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685, also took his turn at this type of devotional literature in 1682 with his _L’examen de soy-mesme pour se bien preparer à la communion_. Claude’s treatise experienced a brief period in the sun for the first two years after its initial publication with seven French and one English edition. His colleague Pierre Allix penned a similar work, _Preparation à la Sainte Cene_. Allix saw his own work go through three editions in French and one in English. This presentation will focus on Allix and his _Preparation à la Sainte Cene_, showing how he contributed to the literature and practice of preparing for the Lord’s Supper for French Protestants. This event will took place on Friday, August 13th.
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Aug 13, 2021
1 hr

Here is our next presentation in our summer webinar series, featuring Max Rogland. Dr. Rogland is the Senior Minister at Rose Hill Presbyterian Church in Columbia, South Carolina, and the 2021 recipient of our Emo Van Halsema Fellowship. His presentation, titled "Chasing the Wind? Pursuing the Annotations in the 1637 Statenbijbel (Dutch) Translation of Ecclesiastes," considers the link between the interpretation of Ecclesiastes and views on the book's authorship in the 16th and 17th centuries, taking the Annotations of the Statenvertaling as a starting point. According to these Annotations, "Many of the Learned are of the opinion, that Salomon wrote this Book in his old age, after that he had for many years together turned away from the right path of true godliness; but was now again converted unto God..." Such remarks not only indicate the existence of other interpretive approaches to the book but could even suggest that some voices were already denying its Solomonic authorship, as became common in later scholarship. In this presentation, Dr. Rogland seeks to clarify the Annotations' intent in their historical context. Dr. Rogland's talk took place on Thursday, August 5th.
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Aug 13, 2021
33 min

Here is the next presentation in our summer webinar series, featuring Christine Kooi. Dr. Kooi is the Lewis C. and Katheryn J. Price Professor of European History at Louisiana State University, and the 2020 recipient of our Friends of the Meeter Center Fellowship. She will speak about her forthcoming book, _Reformation in the Low Countries, 1500-1620_, which is slated to be published by Cambridge University Press next year. This project is the first-ever book-length narrative in English of the Reformation in entirety of the Low Countries (modern-day Belgium, Luxemburg and the Netherlands). An attempt to synthesize more than a half-century's worth of scholarly research on religious change (Protestant and Catholic) in the Netherlands during the sixteenth century, it focuses on the relationship between religion and politics, especially its contribution to the Revolt of the Netherlands against the Habsburgs and the formation of the region's two successor states, the Dutch Republic and the Southern Netherlands.
Jul 23, 2021
1 hr 21 min

The Meeter Center is pleased to present our summer scholar presentation series, featuring this year’s visiting scholars who are pursuing their research at the Meeter Center. The first of these took place on July 1, 2021, and our speakers were Amanda Eurich and Preston Hill. Dr. Eurich, our 2019 Faculty Fellowship recipient, is professor of history at Western Washington University. Dr. Hill, a recipient of our Student Fellowship award in 2020, received his Ph. D. from the University of St. Andrews in Scotland this spring. After each scholar spoke, there followed a time of questions and discussion. A brief summary of their presentations appears below. "Coras under Cover: Rage and Resistance in the French Wars of Religion" Presented by Amanda Eurich The sixteenth-century French jurist, Jean de Coras, is largely known to Anglophone audiences as the judge who presided over a notorious case of identity theft that seized the imagination of celebrated writers, such as Michel de Montaigne. In real life, Coras himself was playing a double game, just like the peasant, Pansette, who briefly managed to steal the wife and property of a companion-in-arms, Martin Guerre. In 1568, Coras was expelled from office, along with seven of his Protestant co-religionaries, all deemed guilty of heresy and treason and condemned to death in absentia. In exile, Coras joined the service of Jeanne d'Albret, titular head of the militant Protestant party in France, as her chancellor and superintendent of finance, overseeing the funding of the Protestant insurgency and its armies in the field. He also began honing his skills as a Protestant propagandist, publishing two highly inflammatory works, which situate Coras among the earliest proponents of Huguenot resistance theory. In _A Political Question: Is it legal for subjects to negotiate with their prince_ (1570), Jean de Coras developed a highly original challenge to royal power and authority that finds reverberations in Theodore Beza's _Du Droit des magistrats_ (1574). These philosophical connections along with the more personal exchanges that may have occurred between Coras and Beza frame the research I am doing at the Meeter Center this summer. “The Death of the Soul: Christ’s Descent into Hell in the Thought of Calvin, Lefèvre, and Cusa” Presented by Preston Hill There currently exists a substantial lacuna in scholarship on the place of Christ’s descent into hell in the theology of John Calvin. The impression given by this scarcity is that Calvin had little to say about the descensus or that what he did have to say is so obvious as to require only minimal secondary exposition. However, a mere glance beyond the Institutes to Calvin’s other writings significantly unsettles such an opinion. Calvin devoted five times more space in his Institutes to explaining the descent into hell than any other clause of the Apostles’ Creed, and this explanation repeats the same interpretation already developed in his first treatise the Psychopannychia. Although Calvin defended his interpretation throughout his commentaries, sermons, letters, and final edition of the Institutes, the secondary literature on this theme is virtually non-existent in scholarship to date. This presentation aims to show that the French Humanist scholar Jacques Lefevre d'Etaples' reliance on Nicholas of Cusa demonstrates an organic stream of teaching in the late medieval period within which Calvin’s own theology of Christ's descent into hell is obviously situated. Calvin, Lefèvre, and Cusa all understood the descent into hell as Christ’s experience of the second death, or the death of the soul. The major finding advanced here is that Calvin’s descensus theology was far from novel despite suggestions to the contrary in many popular summaries of Calvin’s theology.
Jul 23, 2021
1 hr 29 min

Join Reformation scholars Philip Benedict (Emeritus Professor, Institut d'histoire de la Réformation, Geneva) and Michael Bruening (Associate Professor, History Department, Missouri University of Science and Technology) in conversation with Meeter Center Director Karin Maag on the key themes of their recent books, including fresh insights regarding John Calvin's role and status in the course of the Reformation in French-speaking areas. Philip Benedict has recently published _Season of Conspiracy: Calvin, the French Reformed Churches and Protestant Plotting in the Reign of Francis II_ (American Philosophical Society, 2020). Michael Bruening's monograph, _Refusing to Kiss the Slipper: Opposition to Calvinism in the Francophone Reformation_, has just been released by Oxford University Press.
Jul 23, 2021
1 hr 29 min

In this episode Meeter Center Curator Paul Fields chats with Tom Lambert about paleography. Dr. Lambert has conducted workshops on paleography for the Meeter Center on many occasions, and will do so again this summer.
Jun 11, 2021
20 min

Join Reformation scholars Philip Benedict (Emeritus Professor, Institut d'histoire de la Réformation, Geneva) and Michael Bruening (Associate Professor, History Department, Missouri University of Science and Technology) in conversation with Meeter Center Director Karin Maag on the key themes of their recent books, including fresh insights regarding John Calvin's role and status in the course of the Reformation in French-speaking areas. Philip Benedict has recently published _Season of Conspiracy: Calvin, the French Reformed Churches and Protestant Plotting in the Reign of Francis II_ (American Philosophical Society, 2020). Michael Bruening's monograph, _Refusing to Kiss the Slipper: Opposition to Calvinism in the Francophone Reformation_, has just been released by Oxford University Press.
Jun 2, 2021
1 hr 29 min
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