| The Edict of
Banishment, 1729-1736 from
J. E. Hutton's History of the Moravian Church
But Zinzendorf was not long allowed to tread
the primrose path of peace. As the news of his
proceedings spread in Germany, many orthodox
Lutherans began to regard him as a nuisance, a
heretic, and disturber of the peace; and one
critic made the elegant remark "When Count
Zinzendorf flies up into the air, anyone who
pulls him down by the legs will do him a great
service." He was accused of many crimes, and
had many charges to answer. He was accused of
founding a new sect, a society for laziness; he
was accused of holding strange opinions, opposed
to the teaching of the Lutheran Church; he was
accused of being a sham Christian, a sort of
religious freak; and now he undertook the task of
proving these accusations were false, and of
showing all fair-minded men in Germany that the
Brethren at Herrnhut were as orthodox as Luther,
as respected as the King, and as pious as good
old Dr. Spener himself. His methods were bold and
straight forward.
Aug 12, 1729
He began by issuing a manifesto, entitled the
"Notariats-Instrument". As the document
was signed by all the Herrnhut Brethren, they
must have agreed to its statements; but, on the
other hand, it is fairly certain that it was
drawn-up by Zinzendorf himself. It throws a flood
of light on his state of mind. He had begun to
think more highly of the Moravian Church. He
regarded the Moravians as the kernel of the
Herrnhut colony, and now he deliberately informed
the public that, so far from being a new sect,
these Moravians were descendants of an ancient
Church. They were, he declared, true heirs of the
Church of the Brethren; and that Church, in days
gone by, had been recognized by Luther,Calvin and
others as a true Church of Christ. In doctrine
that Church was as orthodox as the Lutheran; in
discipline it was far superior. As long,
therefore, as the Brethren were allowed to do so,
they would maintain their old constitution and
discipline; and yet, on the other hand, they
would not be Dissenters. They were not Hussites;
they honoured the Augsburg Confession; They would
still attend the Berthelsdorf Parish Church; and,
desirous of cultivating fellowship with all true
Christians, they announced their broad position
in the sentence: "We acknowledge no public
Church of God except where the pure Word of God
is preached, and where the members live as holy
children of God." Thus Zinzendorf made his
policy fairly clear. He wanted to preserve the
Moravian Church inside the Lutheran Church! (1)
His next move was more daring. He was a man of
fine missionary zeal. As the woman who found the
lost piece of silver invited her friends and
neighbors to share in her joy, so Zinzendorf
wished all Christians to share in the treasure
which he had discovered at Herrnhut. He believed
that the Brethren there were called to a
worldwide mission. He wanted Herrnhut to be a
city set on a hill. "I have no
sympathy," he said, "with those
comfortable people who sit warming themselves
before the fire of the future life." He did
not sit long before the fire himself. He visited
the University of Jena, founded a society among
the students, and so impressed the learned
Spangenberg that that great theological scholar
soon became a Brother at Herrnhut himself. He
visited the University of Halle, and founded
another society students there. He visited
Elmsdorf in Vogtland, and founded a society
consisting of members of the family of Count
Reuss. He visited Berleburg in Westphalia, made
the acquaintance of John Conrad Dippel, and tried
to lead that straying sheep back to the
Lutheranfold. He visited Bdington in
Hesse, discoursed on Christian fellowship to the
"French Prophets", or "Inspired
Ones", and tried to teach their hysterical
leader Rock, a little wisdom, sobriety and
charity. He attended the coronation of Christian
VI, King of Denmark, at Copenhagen, was warmly
welcomed by His Majesty, received the Order of
the Danebrog, saw Eskimos from Greenland and a
negro from St. Thomas, and thus opened the door,
as we shall see later on, for the great work of
foreign missions. Meanwhile, he was sending
messengers in all directions. He sent two
Brethren to Copenhagen, with a short historical
account of Herrnhut. He sent two others to London
to see the Queen, and to open upnegotiations with
the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge. He
sent another to Sweden; others to Hungary and
Austria; others to Switzerland; others to
Moravia; others to the Baltic Provinces, Livonia
and Esthonia. And everywhere his object was the
same - the formation of societies for Christian
fellowship within the National Church.
At this point, however, he acted like a
fanatic, and manifested the first symptoms of
that weak trait in his character which nearly
wrecked his career. As he pondered one day on the
state of affairs at Herrnhut, it suddenly flashed
upon his mind that the Brethren would do far
better without their ancient constitution.
Jan 7th 1731
He first consulted the Elders and Helpers; he
then summoned the whole congregation; and there
and then he deliberately proposed that the
Brethren should abolish their regulations,
abandon their constitution, cease to be Moravians
and become pure Lutherans. At that moment
Zinzendorf was calmly attempting to destroy the
Moravian Church. He did not want to see that
Church revive. For some reason of his own, which
he never explained in print, he had come to the
conclusion that the Brethren would serve Christ
far better without any special regulations of
their own. But the Brethren were not disposed to
meek surrender. The question was keenly debated.
At length, however, both side agreed to appeal to
a strange tribunal. For the first time in the
history of Herrnhut a critical question of Church
policy was submitted to the Lot. (2)
The Brethren took two slips of paper and put them
into a box. On the first were the words "To
them that are without law, as without law, that I
might gain them that are without law," I
Cor. ix, 21; on the second the words,
"Therefore,Brethren, stand fast, and hold
the traditions which ye have been taught,"
2Thess. ii, 15. At that moment the fate of the
Church hung in the balance; the question at issue
was one of life and death; and the Brethren spent
a long time in anxious prayer. If the first slip
of paper was drawn, the Church would cease to
exist; if the second, she might still live by the
blessing of God. Young Christel, Zinzendorf's
son, now entered the room. He drew the second
slip of paper, and the Moravian Church was saved.
To Zinzendorf this was an event of momentous
importance. As soon as that second slip of paper
was drawn, he felt convinced that God had
sanctioned the renewal of the Moravian Church.
Jan 19-22, 1732
Next year an event occurred to strengthen his
convictions. A body of commissioners from Dresden
apeared at Herrnhut. They attended all the Sunday
services, had private interviews with the
Brethren, and sent in their report to the Saxon
Government. The Count's conduct had excited
public alarm. He had welcomed not only Moravians
at Herrnhut, but Schwenkfelders at Bertheldorf;
and, therefore, he was now suspected of
harbouring dangerous fanatics. For a long time
the issue hung doubtful; but finally the
Government issued a decree that while the
Schwenkfelders must quit the land, the Moravians
should be allowed to stay aslong as they behaved
themselves quietly.
April 4th, 1733
But Zinzendorf was not yet satisfied. He
regarded the edict as an insult.he words about
"behaving quietly" looked like a
threat. As long as the Brethren were merely
"tolerated", their peace was in
constant danger; and a King who had driven out
the Schwenkfelders might soon drive out the
Herrnhuters. He was disgusted. At the time when
the edict was issued, he himself was returning
from avisit to Tbingen. He had laid the
whole case of the Brethren before the
Tbingen Theological Faculty. He asked
these theological experts to say whether the
Brethren could keep their discipline and yet be
considered good Lutherans; andthe experts, in
reply, had declared their opinion that the
Herrnhut Brethren were as loyal Lutherans as any
in the land. Thus the Brethren were standing now
on a shaky floor. According to the
Tbingen Theological Faculty they were
god members of the National Church; according to
the Government they were a "sect" to be
tolerated!
1734
Next year he adopted three defensive measures.
First, he divided the congregation at Herrnhut
into two parts, the Moravian and the purely
Lutheran; next, he had himself ordained as a
Lutheran clergyman; and third, he dispatched a
few Moravians to found a colony in Georgia. He
was now, he imagined, prepared for the worst. If
the King commanded the Moravians to go, the Count
had his answer ready. As he himself was a
Lutheran clergyman, he would stay at Herrnhut and
minister to the Herrnhut Lutherans; and the
Moravians could sail away to Georgia, and live
inperfect peace in the land of the free.
1735
Next year he made his position stronger still.
As the Moravians in Georgia would require their
own ministers, he now had David Nitschmann
consecrated a Bishop by Daniel Ernest Jablonsky
(March 13th). The new Bishop was not to exercise
his function in Germany. He was a Bishop for the
foreign field only; he sailed with the second
batch of colonists for Georgia; and thus
Zinzendorf maintained the Moravian Episcopal
Succession, not from any sectarian motives, but
because he wished to help the Brethren when the
storm burst over their heads.
1736
For what really happened, however, Zinzendorf
was unprepared. As he made these various
arrangements for the Brethren, he entirely
overlooked the fact that he himself was in
greater danger than they. He was far more widely
hated than he imagined. He was condemned by the
Pietists because he had never experienced
theirsudden and spasmodic method of conversion.
He offended his own relatives when he became a
clergyman; he was accused of having disgraced his
rank as Count; he disgusted a number of other
noblemen at Dresden; and the result of this
strong feeling was that Agustus III, King of
Saxony, issued an edict banishing Zinzendorffrom
his kingdom. He was accused in this Royal edict
of three great crimes. Hehad introduced religious
novelties; he had founded conventicles; and he
had taught false doctrine. Thus Zinzendorf was
banished from Saxony as a heretic. Assoon,
however, as the Government had dealt with
Zinzendorf, they sent a commissionto Herrnhut;
and the second commission came to the conclusion
that the Brethrenwere most desirable Lutherans,
and might be allowed to stay. Dr. Lscher,
one ofthe commissioners burst into tears.
"Your doctrine", he said, "is as
pure as ours, but we do not possess your
discipline." At first sight this certainly
looks like a contradiction, but the explanation
is not far to seek. We find it in the report
issued by the Commission. It was a shameless
confession of mercenary motives. In that report
the commissioners deliberately stated that if
good workmen like the Brethren were banished from
Herrnhut the Government would lose so much in
taxes; and, therefore, the Brethren were allowed
to stay because they brought grist to the mill.
At the same time, they were forbidden to make any
proselytes; and thus it was hoped that the
Herrnhut heresy would die a natural death.
When Zinzendorf heard of his banishment, he
was not amazed. "What matter!" he said.
"Even had I been allowed by law, I could not
have remained in Herrnhut at all during the next
ten years." He had plans further afield.
"We must now," he added, "gather
together the Pilgrim Congregation and proclaim
the Savior to the World."
1737-1738
It is true that the edict of banishment was
repealed; it is true that he was allowed to
return to Herrnhut; but a year later a new edict
was issued, and the Count was sternly expelled
from his native land.
<Previous Chapter
Notes:
(1) Was this true to
Luther or was it not? According to Ritschl it was
not(Geschichte des Peitismus, III. 248);
according to J. T. Muller, it was(Zinzendorf als
Erneuer, p. 40) I agree with the latter writer.
(2) It is not clear
from the evidence who suggested the use of the
Lot. According to Zinzendorf's diary it was the
Brethren; but I suspect that hehimself was the
first to suggest it. There is no proof that the
Brethren were already fond of the Lot; but there
is plenty of proof that the Pietists were,and
Zinzendorf had probably learned it from them.
(see Ritschl II., 434, etc.)
<Previous
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The full edition of J. E. Hutton's History of
the Moravian Church is available online at http://everydaycounselor.com/hutton/intro.htm
Special thanks to Dave Turck, who has
transcribed the book.
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