ON OCTOBER 31, 2017, WE COMMEMORATE THE 500 YEAR ANNIVERSARY OF THE REFORMATION WITH MARTIN LUTHER. This month Desiring God is featuring great men and women who were part of this world-changing movement. Here's the first in its month long series:
PETER WALDO / Died by 1218
The First Tremor
by Jon
Bloom
More than three hundred years before
Martin Luther was born, an unlikely reformer suddenly appeared in the city of
Lyon in southeast France. His protests against doctrines and practices of the
Roman Catholic Church were strong tremors foretelling the coming spiritual
earthquake called the Reformation. And the movement he launched survived to join
the great Reformation. He is known to history as Peter Waldo.
Many details about Waldo are not
known, including his name. We don’t know if Peter was his real first name, since
it doesn’t appear in any document until 150 years after his death. His last name
was most likely something like Valdès or Vaudès — Valdo(Waldo) was the Italian
adaptation. We also don’t know the year Peter was born or the precise year he
died — historians disagree over whether he died between 1205 and 1207 or between
1215 and 1218.
But we do know a few earthshaking
things.
A Rich Ruler Repents
In 1170, Peter was a very wealthy, well-known merchant in the city of Lyon. He had a wife, two daughters, and lots of property. But something happened — some say he witnessed the sudden death of a friend, others say he heard a spiritual song of a traveling minstrel — and Peter became deeply troubled over the spiritual state of his soul and desperate to know how he could be saved.
The first thing he resolved was to
read the Bible. But since it only existed in the Latin Vulgate, and his Latin
was poor, he hired two scholars to translate it into the vernacular so he could
study it.
Next, he sought spiritual counsel
from a priest, who pointed him to the rich young ruler in the Gospels and quoted
Jesus: “One thing you still lack. Sell all that you have and distribute to the
poor, and you will have treasure in heaven; and come, follow me” (Luke 18:22).
Jesus’s words pierced Waldo’s heart. Like the rich young ruler, Waldo suddenly
realized he had been serving Mammon, not God. But unlike the rich young ruler
who walked away from Jesus, Waldo repented and did exactly what Jesus said: he
gave away all he had to the poor (after making adequate provision for his wife
and daughters). From that point on, he determined to live in complete dependence
on God for his provision.
“Jesus’s words pierced Waldo’s heart.
Like the rich young ruler, Waldo suddenly realized he had been serving Mammon, not God.”
Like the rich young ruler, Waldo suddenly realized he had been serving Mammon, not God.”
A Movement Is Born
Waldo immediately began to preach from his Bible in the streets of Lyon, especially to the poor. Many were converted, and by 1175 a sizable group of men and women had become Waldo’s disciples. They too gave away their possessions and were preaching (women as well as men). The people started calling them the “Poor of Lyons.” Later, as the group grew into a movement and spread throughout France and other parts of Europe, they became known as “The Waldensians.”
The more Waldo studied Scripture, the
more troubled he became over certain doctrines, practices, and governing
structures of the Catholic Church — not to mention its wealth. And he boldly
spoke out against these things. But since the Church officially prohibited lay
preaching, Waldo and his ragtag band drew opposition from church leaders.
A Sign to Be
Opposed
The Archbishop of Lyons was particularly irked by this uneducated, self-appointed reform movement and moved to squash it. But in 1179, Waldo appealed directly to Pope Alexander III and received his approval. However, only five years later the new Pope, Lucius III, sided with the Archbishop and he excommunicated Waldo and his followers.
In the earlier years, the Waldensian
movement was a reform movement. Peter Waldo never intended to leave the church,
and he held to numerous traditional Catholic doctrines. But after the
excommunication, and continuing beyond Waldo’s death, the Waldensian’s
Protestant-like convictions increased and solidified.
Eventually, the Waldensians came to
reject all claims to authority besides Scripture, all mediators between God and
man except Jesus, all sacraments apart from those attested to in the Bible
(i.e., baptism and communion), and a host of other Catholic doctrines.
Jon Bloom
(@Bloom_Jon) serves as author, board chair, and co-founder of Desiring God. He
is author of three books, Not by Sight, Things Not Seen, and Don’t Follow Your
Heart. He and his wife live in the Twin Cities with their five children.
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