Entre désintérêt et prétexte
Pierre Bayle et Luther
Abstract
Pierre Bayle seems to have had little interest for the figure of Luther. The article on the Reformer in his Dictionnaire is thus primarily devoted to a refutation of Catholic calumnies, behind which Bayle sees an attempt by the papal clergy to discredit the French Protestants in the aftermath of the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes. Nevertheless, a closer reading of the « Luther » article reveals how the Reformer also functioned as a pretext for Bayle to reflect on themes that actually lie beyond his primary historiographical objective. These themes include sexual ethics in their political and anthropological dimensions (as occasioned by the bigamous marriage of the Landgrave of Hesse) ; the inspiration of Scripture (through Luther’s description of the Epistle of James as an «epistle of straw») ; determinism (by way of the conflict between Erasmus and Luther) ; and, finally, the relationship between faith and reason (as occasioned by Luther’s doctrine of twofold truth).
- Pierre-Olivier Léchot, Théodore de Bèze spirituel, Revue d'histoire du protestantisme: Vol. 4 n° 4 (2019):
- Pierre-Olivier Léchot, Entre prudence et solidarité, Revue d'histoire du protestantisme: Vol. 2 n° 3 (2017): Varia
- Matthieu Arnold, Pierre-Olivier Léchot, Introduction, Revue d'histoire du protestantisme: Vol. 2 n° 1-2 (2017): Le Luther des Français