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Waldensians

The Waldensians, also known as Waldenses (/wɔːlˈdɛnsz, wɒl-/), Vallenses, Valdesi, or Vaudois, are adherents of a church tradition that began as an ascetic movement within Western Christianity before the Reformation. Originally known as the Poor of Lyon in the late twelfth century,[1][2][3] the movement spread to the Cottian Alps in what are today France and Italy. The founding of the Waldensians is attributed to Peter Waldo, a wealthy merchant who gave away his property around 1173,[4][2] preaching apostolic poverty as the way to perfection.

Waldensians
Waldensian symbol Lux lucet in tenebris ("A light shines in the darkness")
ClassificationProto-Protestant
OrientationReformed
TheologyTheology of Peter Waldo and other Waldensian theologians, nowadays also that of John Calvin and other Reformed theologians
RegionItaly, Switzerland, France, Germany, Argentina, United States, Uruguay, and elsewhere
FounderPeter Waldo
Originc. 1173
Lyon, Kingdom of Burgundy-Arles in the Holy Roman Empire (now France)
Separated fromCatholic Church

Waldensian teachings came into conflict with the Catholic Church and by 1215 the Waldensians were declared heretical, not because they preached apostolic poverty, which the Franciscans also preached, but because they were not willing to recognize the prerogatives of local bishops over the content of their preaching, nor to recognize standards about who was fit to preach. Pope Innocent III offered the Waldensians the chance to return to the Church, and many did, taking the name "Poor Catholics".[5] Many did not, and were subjected to intense persecution and were confronted with organised and general discrimination in the following centuries. In the sixteenth century, the Waldensians were absorbed into the Protestant movement, under the influence of early Swiss reformer Heinrich Bullinger.

In some aspects the Waldensians of the Middle Ages could be seen as proto-Protestants, but they mostly did not raise the doctrinal objections characteristic of sixteenth-century Protestant leaders.[6] They came to align themselves with Protestantism: with the Resolutions of Chanforan on 12 September 1532, they formally became a part of the Calvinist tradition. They are members of the Community of Protestant Churches in Europe and its affiliates worldwide. They were nearly annihilated in the seventeenth century.

The main denomination within the movement was the Waldensian Evangelical Church, the original church in Italy. In 1975, it merged with the Methodist Evangelical Church to form the Union of Methodist and Waldensian Churches—a majority Waldensian church, with a minority of Methodists.[7][8] Another large congregation is the Evangelical Waldensian Church of Río de la Plata in Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay.[9][10]

Congregations continue to be active in Europe (particularly in the Piedmont region of Northern Italy), South America, and North America. Organizations, such as the American Waldensian Society,[11] maintain the history of the movement and declare their mission as "proclaiming the Christian Gospel, serving the marginalized, promoting social justice, fostering inter-religious work, and advocating respect for religious diversity and freedom of conscience."[12]

Historical sources edit

 
Statue of Peter Waldo at the Luther Monument in Worms

Most modern knowledge of the medieval history of the Waldensians originates almost exclusively from the records and writings of the Roman Catholic Church, the same body that was condemning them as heretics.[13]: 66  Because of "the documentary scarcity and unconnectedness from which we must draw the description of Waldensian beliefs",[13]: 87  much of what is known about the early Waldensians comes from reports like the Profession of faith of Valdo of Lyon (1180); Liber antiheresis by Durando d'Osca (c. 1187–1200); and the Rescriptum of Bergamo Conference (1218).

Earlier documents that provide information about early Waldensian history include the Will of Stefano d'Anse (1187); the Manifestatio haeresis Albigensium et Lugdunensium (c. 1206–1208); and the Anonymous chronicle of Lyon (c. 1220). There are also the two reports written for the Inquisition by Reinerius Saccho (died 1259), a former Cathar who converted to Catholicism, published together in 1254 as Summa de Catharis et Pauperibus de Lugduno (On the Cathars and the Poor of Lyon).[14]

Teachings edit

Waldensians held and preached a number of doctrines as they read from the Bible. These included:

  1. The atoning death and justifying righteousness of Christ;
  2. The Godhead;
  3. The fall of man;
  4. The incarnation of the Son;
  5. A denial of purgatory as the "invention of the Antichrist";[15]
  6. The value of voluntary poverty;
  7. Perhaps, the universal priesthood of believers,[16] as according to de Bourbon they claimed that all good men are priests.[17]

They also rejected a number of concepts that were widely held in Christian Europe of the era. For example, the Waldensians held that temporal offices and dignities were not meant for preachers of the Gospel; that relics were no different from any other bones and should not be regarded as special or holy; that pilgrimage served only to spend one's money; that flesh might be eaten any day if one's appetite served one; that holy water was no more efficacious than rain water; and that prayer was just as effectual if offered in a church or a barn. They were accused, moreover, of speaking blasphemously of the Catholic Church as the harlot of the Apocalypse.[18][19] They rejected what they perceived as the idolatry of the Catholic Church and considered the papacy as the Antichrist of Rome.[20]

La nobla leyczon (The Noble Lesson), written in the Occitan language, gives a sample of the medieval Waldensian belief. Once it was believed that this poem dated between 1190 and 1240,[21][22] but there is evidence that it was written in the first part of the fifteenth century.[23] The poem exists in four manuscripts: two are housed at the University of Cambridge, one at Trinity College in Dublin, and another in Geneva.[24]

The Waldensians taught certain doctrines also held by the Catholic Church, but came into conflict with the Catholic Church by denying some of its sacraments or the manner in which they were performed; Waldensians taught the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist and affirmed the necessity of priests for the offering of the Mass.[25] However they denied the right of sinful priests to give the Eucharist.[26] Early forms of the Waldensian Mass sought to recover the early Christian liturgy and contained a sevenfold repetition of the Lord's Prayer, with the Eucharistic elements being consecrated through the sign of the cross.[1] The Waldensians observed the forty-day fast of Lent and practiced Friday abstinence.[27] Both Waldensian and Catholic sources, however, imply that the Waldensians rejected infant baptism, at least to some extent. This is seen from The Noble Lesson, which refers to Christ specifically calling to baptize those who believed, and Reinerius Saccho mentioning how the Waldensians believed that the "ablution which is given to infants profits nothing".[28][29][30] Thus there seems to have been an understanding among the Waldensians that infants could be saved without baptism.[26] They rejected rejected confession to priests, the practice of venerating the saints, the use of oaths, secular courts and prayers for the dead.[31] They however accepted the Trinity,[32][30] and the earliest Waldensians staunchly defended the Eucharist.[25] Although they later, at least some of them, began to develop a more symbolic view of the bread and wine.[33][34]

Reinerius Saccho gave the following charges against the Waldensians:[28]

  • The Pope is the head of all errors
  • The Monks are Pharisees
  • Christians should obey God instead of the Prelates
  • That no one is above one another in the church
  • No one should kneel before a priest
  • Tithes should not be given
  • Bishops should not have royal rights
  • They condemn the Catholic sacraments
  • The Church has erred by prohibiting the marriage of the clergy[28]

The Waldensians were associated by councils and papal decrees with the Cathars; however they differed radically from them: the Waldensians never accepted Gnostic views, they did not reject the sacraments in total and did not believe in mysticism.[35] The Waldensians saw themselves as a "church within the Church", likely not going further, although they were accused of seeing the Catholic church as the Babylonian harlot.[36]

The Waldensians would, later in their history, adopt a number of doctrines from the Reformed churches due to the French Reformer Guaillaume Farel, who introduced Reformation theology to Waldensian leaders. They officially adopted Reformed theology at a conference at Cianforan 1532. As a result of the conference, the Waldensians officially modified some of their previous positions such as their rejection of secular courts.[37]

History edit

Origins edit

According to legend, Peter Waldo renounced his wealth as an encumbrance to preaching,[38][full citation needed] which led other members of the Catholic clergy to follow his example. Because of this shunning of wealth, the movement was early known as The Poor of Lyon and The Poor of Lombardy.[39]

Though arising to prominence in the twelfth century, some evidence suggests the existence of the Waldenses even before the time of Peter Waldo as early as 1100.[40] Pope Alexander in 1167 at the Third Council of the Lateran lamented the Waldenses as a "pest of long existence".[41][42] While the Inquisitor Reinerius Saccho in the thirteenth century also spoke about the dangers of the Waldenses for among other reasons its antiquity "some say that it has lasted from the time of Sylvester, others, from the time of the Apostles."[43] In the seventeenth century, Waldensian Pastor Henri Arnaud stated that "the Vaudois are, in fact, descended from those refugees from Italy, who, after St Paul had there preached the gospel abandoned their beautiful country, like the woman mentioned in the apocalypse and fled to those wild mountains where they have to this day, handed down the gospel from father to son in the same purity and simplicity as it was preached by St Paul.[44]

The Waldensian movement was characterized from the beginning by lay preaching, voluntary poverty, and strict adherence to the Bible. Between 1175 and 1185, Waldo either commissioned a cleric from Lyon to translate the New Testament into the vernacular—the Arpitan (Franco-Provençal) language[45]—or was himself involved in this translation work.[citation needed]

In 1179, Waldo and one of his disciples went to Rome, where Pope Alexander III and the Roman Curia welcomed them. They had to explain their faith before a panel of three clergymen, including issues that were then debated within the Church, such as the universal priesthood, the gospel in the vulgar tongue, and the issue of voluntary poverty. The results of the meeting were inconclusive, and the Third Lateran Council in the same year condemned Waldo's ideas, but not the movement itself; the leaders of the movement had not yet been excommunicated.[46]

The Waldensians proceeded to disobey the Third Lateran Council and continued to preach according to their own understanding of the Scriptures. In 1184, Waldo and his followers were excommunicated and forced from Lyon. The Catholic Church declared them heretics, stating that the group's principal error was contempt for ecclesiastical power. Rome also accused the Waldensians of teaching innumerable errors.[47]

Waldo and his followers developed a system whereby they would go from town to town and meet secretly with small groups of Waldensians. There they would confess sins and hold service. A traveling Waldensian preacher was known as a barba. The group would shelter the barba and help make arrangements to move on to the next town in secret.[48] Waldo possibly died in the early thirteenth century, possibly in Germany; he was never captured, and his fate remains uncertain.[49]

Early Waldensians belonged to one of three groups:[50][not specific enough to verify]

  • Sandaliati (those with sandals) received sacred orders and were to prove the heresiarchs wrong;
  • Doctores instructed and trained missionaries;
  • Novellani preached to the general population.

They were also called Insabbatati, Sabati, Inzabbatati, or Sabotiers—Some historians such as the Jesuit Jacob Gretser claimed this designation arose from the unusual type of sabot they used as footwear.[51] However, he admitted that his reasoning on this etymology did not have the support of the literature of his day because these sources, he said, contained many errors.[52][53]: 247  Other historians such as Melchior Goldast stated that the name insabbatati was because of Sabbath keeping in the manner of Jews.[54] Jesuit Inquisitor Francis Pegne cited in Nicholas Eymerich famous work the Directorium Inquisitorium stated that "many used to think it [insabbatati] came from Sabbath, and that they [Waldenses] observed the Sabbath according to the custom of the Jews."[55] Likewise in the twelfth century, Inquisitor Moneta of Cremona railed against the Waldenses for seventh day sabbath keeping after the manner of Jews.[56] Johann Gottfried Hering in 1756 in his Compendieuses Church and Heretic Lexicon defined Sabbatati (a sect of the Waldenses) as those who kept the sabbath with the Jews.[57] In the early Waldenses prose tracts there existed an exposition on the 10 commandments which put forth their own explanation on the 4th commandment which defended sabbath keeping.[58][59]

Many among the Waldensians claimed that people such as Claudius of Turin and Berengar of Tours were first representatives of the sect, but in modern times claims of the Waldenses to high antiquity are no longer accepted.[60]

One school of thought attempts to associate Vigilantius with proto-Waldensians in the European Alps.[61]

Catholic response edit

 
Illustrations depicting Waldensians as witches in Le champion des dames, by Martin Le France, 1451
 
Piedmontese children forced from their parents[62]

The Catholic Church viewed the Waldensians as unorthodox, and in 1184 at the Synod of Verona, under the auspices of Pope Lucius III, they were excommunicated. Pope Innocent III went even further during the Fourth Lateran Council in 1215, officially denouncing the Waldensians as heretics.[63][64] In 1211 more than 80 Waldensians were burned as heretics at Strasbourg; this action launched several centuries of persecution that nearly destroyed the movement.[65] Waldensians briefly ruled Buda, the capital of Hungary from 1304 to 1307. The Waldensians in turn excommunicated Pope Benedict XI.[66]

In 1487 Pope Innocent VIII issued a bull[67] Id Nostri Cordis for the extermination of the Vaudois. Alberto de' Capitanei, archdeacon of Cremona, responded to the bull by organizing a crusade to fulfill its order and launched a military offensive in the provinces of Dauphiné and Piedmont.[68] Charles I, Duke of Savoy, eventually interfered to save his territories from further turmoil and promised the Vaudois peace, but not before the offensive had devastated the area and many of the Vaudois had fled to Provence or south to Italy.

The theologian Angelo Carletti di Chivasso, whom Innocent VIII in 1491 appointed Apostolic Nuncio and Commissary conjointly with the Bishop of Mauriana, was involved in reaching a peaceful agreement between Catholics and Waldensians.[69]

Reformation edit

When the news of the Reformation reached the Waldensian Valleys, the Tavola Valdese decided to seek fellowship with the nascent Protestantism. At a meeting held in 1526 in Laus, a town in the Chisone valley, it was decided to send envoys to examine the new movement. In 1532, they met with German and Swiss Protestants and ultimately adapted their beliefs to those of the Reformed Church.

The Swiss and French Reformed churches sent William Farel and Anthony Saunier to attend the meeting of Chanforan, which convened on 12 October 1532. Farel invited them to join the Reformation and to emerge from secrecy. A Confession of Faith, with Reformed doctrines, was formulated and the Waldensians decided to worship openly in French.

The French Bible, translated by Pierre Robert Olivétan with the help of Calvin and published at Neuchâtel in 1535, was based in part on a New Testament in the Waldensian vernacular. The churches in Waldensia collected 1500 gold crowns to cover the cost of its publication.[70]

Massacre of Mérindol (1545) edit

 
Massacre of the Mérindol Waldensians in 1545

Outside the Piedmont, the Waldenses joined the local Protestant churches in Bohemia, France, and Germany. After they came out of seclusion and reports were made of sedition on their part, French King Francis I on 1 January 1545 issued the "Arrêt de Mérindol", and assembled an army against the Waldensians of Provence. The leaders in the 1545 massacres were Jean Maynier d'Oppède, First President of the parliament of Provence, and the military commander Antoine Escalin des Aimars, who was returning from the Italian Wars with 2,000 veterans, the Bandes de Piémont. Deaths in the Massacre of Mérindol ranged from hundreds to thousands, depending on the estimates, and several villages were devastated.[71]

The treaty of 5 June 1561 granted amnesty to the Protestants of the Valleys, including liberty of conscience and freedom to worship. Prisoners were released and fugitives permitted to return home, but despite this treaty, the Vaudois, with the other French Protestants, still suffered during the French Wars of Religion in 1562–1598.

As early as 1631, Protestant scholars began to regard the Waldensians as early forerunners of the Reformation, in a manner similar to the way the followers of John Wycliffe and Jan Hus, also persecuted by authorities, were viewed.

Although the Waldensian church was granted some rights and freedoms under French King Henry IV, with the Edict of Nantes in 1598, persecution rose again in the seventeenth century, with an extermination of the Waldensians attempted by the Duke of Savoy in 1655. This led to the exodus and dispersion of the Waldensians to other parts of Europe and even to the Western Hemisphere.

Piedmont Easter edit

In January 1655, the Duke of Savoy commanded the Waldensians to attend Mass or remove to the upper valleys of their homeland, giving them twenty days in which to sell their lands. Being in the midst of winter, the order was intended to persuade the Vaudois to choose the former; however, the bulk of the populace instead chose the latter, abandoning their homes and lands in the lower valleys and removing to the upper valleys. It was written that these targets of persecution, including old men, women, little children and the sick "waded through the icy waters, climbed the frozen peaks, and at length reached the homes of their impoverished brethren of the upper Valleys, where they were warmly received."[72]

By mid-April, when it became clear that the Duke's efforts to force the Vaudois to conform to Catholicism had failed, he tried another approach. Under the guise of false reports of Vaudois uprisings, the Duke sent troops into the upper valleys to quell the local populace. He required that the local populace quarter the troops in their homes, which the local populace complied with. But the quartering order was a ruse to allow the troops easy access to the populace. On 24 April 1655, at 4 a.m., the signal was given for a general massacre.

 
Print illustrating the 1655 massacre in La Torre, from Samuel Moreland's History of the Evangelical Churches of the Valleys of Piedmont, published in London in 1658

The Duke's forces did not simply slaughter the inhabitants. They are reported to have unleashed an unprovoked campaign of looting, rape, torture, and murder. According to one report by a Peter Liegé:

Little children were torn from the arms of their mothers, clasped by their tiny feet, and their heads dashed against the rocks; or were held between two soldiers and their quivering limbs torn up by main force. Their mangled bodies were then thrown on the highways or fields, to be devoured by beasts. The sick and the aged were burned alive in their dwellings. Some had their hands and arms and legs lopped off, and fire applied to the severed parts to staunch the bleeding and prolong their suffering. Some were flayed alive, some were roasted alive, some disemboweled; or tied to trees in their own orchards, and their hearts cut out. Some were horribly mutilated, and of others the brains were boiled and eaten by these cannibals. Some were fastened down into the furrows of their own fields, and ploughed into the soil as men plough manure into it. Others were buried alive. Fathers were marched to death with the heads of their sons suspended round their necks. Parents were compelled to look on while their children were first outraged [raped], then massacred, before being themselves permitted to die.[73]

This massacre became known as the Piedmont Easter. An estimate of some 1,700 Waldensians were slaughtered; the massacre was so brutal it aroused indignation throughout Europe. Protestant rulers in northern Europe offered sanctuary to the remaining Waldensians. Oliver Cromwell, then ruler in England, began petitioning on behalf of the Waldensians, writing letters, raising contributions, calling a general fast in England and threatening to send military forces to the rescue. The massacre prompted John Milton's poem on the Waldenses, "On the Late Massacre in Piedmont".[74] Swiss and Dutch Calvinists set up an "underground railroad" to bring many of the survivors north to Switzerland and even as far as the Dutch Republic, where the councillors of the city of Amsterdam chartered three ships to take some 167 Waldensians to their City Colony in the New World (Delaware) on Christmas Day 1656.[75] Those that stayed behind in France and the Piedmont formed a guerilla resistance movement led by a farmer, Joshua Janavel, which lasted into the 1660s.[76]

 
Waldensian Church of Florence, Italy

Revocation of the Edict of Nantes and the "Glorious Return" edit

In 1685 Louis XIV revoked the 1598 Edict of Nantes, which had guaranteed freedom of religion to his Protestant subjects in France. French troops sent into the French Waldensian areas of the Chisone and Susa Valleys in the Dauphiné forced 8,000 Vaudois to convert to Catholicism and another 3,000 to leave for Germany.

In the Piedmont, the cousin of Louis, the newly ascended Duke of Savoy, Victor Amadeus II, followed his uncle in removing the protection of Protestants in the Piedmont. In the renewed persecution, and in an echo of the Piedmont Easter Massacre of only three decades earlier, the Duke issued an edict on 31 January 1686 that decreed the destruction of all the Vaudois churches and that all inhabitants of the Valleys should publicly announce their error in religion within fifteen days under penalty of death and banishment. But the Vaudois remained resistant. After the fifteen days, an army of 9,000 French and Piedmontese soldiers invaded the Valleys against the estimated 2,500 Vaudois, but found that every village had organized a defense force that kept the French and Piedmontese soldiers at bay.

On 9 April, the Duke of Savoy issued a new edict, enjoining the Waldensians to put down their arms within eight days and go into exile between 21 and 23 April. If able, they were free to sell their land and possessions to the highest bidder.

Waldensian pastor Henri Arnaud (1641–1721), who had been driven out of the Piedmont in the earlier purges, returned from Holland. On 18 April he made a stirring appeal before an assembly at Roccapiatta, winning over the majority in favor of armed resistance. When the truce expired on 20 April, the Waldensians were prepared for battle.

They put up a brave fight over the next six weeks, but by the time the Duke retired to Turin on 8 June, the war seemed decided: 2,000 Waldensians had been killed; another 2,000 had "accepted" the Catholic theology of the Council of Trent. Another 8,000 had been imprisoned, more than half of whom died of deliberately imposed starvation, or of sickness within six months.

But about two or three hundred Vaudois fled to the hills and began carrying out a guerilla war over the next year against the Catholic settlers who arrived to take over the Vaudois lands. These "Invincibles" continued their assaults until the Duke finally relented and agreed to negotiate. The "Invincibles" won the right for the imprisoned Vaudois to be released from prison and to be provided safe passage to Geneva. But the Duke, granting that permission on 3 January 1687, required that the Vaudois leave immediately or convert to Catholicism. This edict led to some 2,800 Vaudois leaving the Piedmont for Geneva, of whom only 2,490 survived the journey.

Arnaud and others now sought help of the allied European powers. He appealed to William of Orange directly from Geneva, while others, amongst whom was the young L'Hermitage, were sent to England and other lands to canvas for support. Orange and the allies were glad of any excuse to antagonise France, whose territorial encroachments on all fronts were intolerable. The League of Augsburg was formed in 1686 under Orange, who promised support to Arnaud. In August 1689, in the midst of the wars between the League of Augsburg and France, Arnaud led 1,000 Swiss exiles, armed with modern weaponry provided by the Dutch, back to the Piedmont. Over a third of the force perished during the 130-mile trek. They successfully re-established their presence in the Piedmont and drove out the Catholic settlers, but they continued to be besieged by French and Piedmontese troops.

By 2 May 1689, with only 300 Waldensian troops remaining, and cornered on a high peak called the Balsiglia, by 4,000 French troops with cannons, the final assault was delayed by storm and then by cloud cover. The French commander was so confident of completing his job the next morning that he sent a message to Paris that the Waldensian force had already been destroyed. However, when the French awoke the next morning they discovered that the Waldensians, guided by one of their number familiar with the Balsiglia, had already descended from the peak during the night and were now miles away.

The French pursued, but only a few days later a sudden change of political alliance by the Duke, from France to the League of Augsburg, ended the French pursuit of the Waldensians. The Duke agreed to defend the Waldensians and called for all other Vaudois exiles to return home to help protect the Piedmont borders against the French, in what came to be known as the "Glorious Return".[77]

Religious freedom after the French Revolution edit

 
Waldensian Church entrance in Rome, Italy

After the French Revolution, the Waldenses of Piedmont were assured liberty of conscience and, in 1848, the ruler of Savoy, King Charles Albert of Sardinia, granted them civil rights.

Enjoying religious freedom, the Waldensians began migrating outside their valleys. By the time of Italian unification, the Waldensian had congregations throughout the peninsula, some originated by preaching, others by migration.[78] However, poverty, societal discrimination, and demographic pressure led the Waldensians to emigrate, first as seasonal workers to the French Riviera and Switzerland, and later to Colonia Valdense in Uruguay, Jacinto Aráuz in La Pampa, Argentina and ultimately, to the United States.[79] Those who remained in Italy have experienced upward social mobility. Waldensian companies dominated Turin's chocolate industry for the latter half of the nineteenth century and are generally credited with the invention of gianduja (hazelnut chocolate).[80]

Waldensian scholarship also flourished in the nineteenth century. Copies of the Romaunt version of the Gospel of John were preserved in Paris and Dublin. The manuscripts were used as the basis of a work by William Stephen Gilly published in 1848, in which he described the history of the New Testament in use by the Waldensians.[81] The Waldensian College began training ministers in 1855, first in Torre Pellice. A few years later, the Waldensian College relocated to Florence and, in 1922, to Rome. Economic and social integration have eased acceptance of ethnic Waldensians into Italian society.[citation needed] Writers like Italo Calvino and politicians like Domenico Maselli and Valdo Spini are of Waldensian background. The church has also attracted intellectuals as new adherents and supporters and enjoys significant financial support from non-adherent Italians.

In 2015, after a historic visit to a Waldensian Temple in Turin, Pope Francis, in the name of the Catholic Church, asked Waldensian Christians for forgiveness for their persecution. The Pope apologized for the Church's "un-Christian and even inhumane positions and actions".[82]

Characteristics of the modern Waldensian Church edit

The present Waldensian Church considers itself to be a Protestant church of the Reformed tradition originally framed by Huldrych Zwingli and John Calvin.[46] It recognizes as its doctrinal standard the confession of faith published in 1655 and based on the Reformed confession of 1559. It admits only two ceremonies, baptism and the Lord's Supper.[46] Supreme authority in the body is exercised by an annual synod, and the affairs of the individual congregations are administered by a consistory under the presidency of the pastor.[46]

Over the centuries, Waldensian churches have been established in countries as far away from France as Uruguay and the United States where the active Waldensian congregations continue the purpose of the Waldensian movement. The contemporary and historic Waldensian spiritual heritage describes itself as proclaiming the Gospel, serving the marginalized, promoting social justice, fostering inter-religious work, and advocating respect for religious diversity and freedom of conscience.[11] Today, the Waldensian Church is member of the World Communion of Reformed Churches, the World Methodist Council, the Federation of Evangelical Churches in Italy, and the World Council of Churches.

Influence edit

The Waldensians were influences to the Zwickau Prophets who came out in support of believer's baptism.[83] The Waldensians also influenced some in the Bohemian reformation, especially Petr Chelčický.[84] Petr Chelčický was influenced by the Waldensians very early in his life, as there existed Waldensian congregations in the area of his birth.[85]

However, on the other hand, some Hussites rejected Waldensian doctrines, including Jacob of Miles.[84]

Appraisal by Protestants edit

 
The Vaudois taking their oath. Anonymous illustration published in 1886.

Some Protestants have considered the Waldensians to be the oldest Non-Catholic Christian community in Western and Central Europe, and the oldest Protestant denomination.[86][87][88] Early Protestants felt a spiritual kinship to the Waldensians and wrote positively about them. John Milton, for example, wrote in his sonnet "On the Late Massacre in Piedmont" of the 1655 massacre and persecution of the Waldensians.

It was once held that the Waldenses were first taught by Paul the Apostle who visited Spain and then allegedly traveled on to Piedmont. As the Catholic Church indulged in excesses in the time of Constantine (Roman Emperor from 306 to 337) – the account tells – the Waldenses held true to their apostolic faith of poverty and piety. These claims were discounted in the nineteenth century.[89]

There were also other claims that the Waldensians predated Peter Waldo's activities in the late twelfth century. In his A History of the Vaudois Church (1859),[90] Antoine Monastier quotes Bernard, abbot of Foncald, who wrote at the end of the twelfth century that the Waldensians arose during the papacy of Lucius.[91] Monastier takes Bernard to mean Lucius II, in office from 1144 to 1145, and concludes that the Waldenses were active before 1145. Bernard also says that the same Pope Lucius condemned them as heretics, but they were condemned by Pope Lucius III in 1184.[92]

Monastier also says that Eberard de Béthune, writing in 1210 (although Monastier says 1160), claimed that the name Vaudois meant "valley dwellers" or those who "dwell in a vale of sorrow and tears", and was in use before the times of Peter Waldo.

Waldensians feature in the theories of Baptist successionism and Landmarkism concerning an alleged continuous tradition of practices and beliefs from John the Baptist onwards.[93]

Some historical writers suggest Waldensian beliefs came from missionaries from the early church and that their history may have its origins in the apostolic age,[94] though this idea itself stems from Baptist Successionism, an idea that was very popular among some nineteenth-century church historians but has been largely rejected by modern scholars in the field. The Roman Inquisitor Reinerus Sacho, writing c. 1230, held the sect of the Vaudois to be of great antiquity, thus preceding Waldo by centuries. According to some early baptist sources there are also accounts of Paulicians, Petrobusians, and Pasaginians, along with the Waldenses of the Alps, who kept Saturday as the Lord's day.[95][96] Some Anabaptist and Baptist authors have pointed to the Waldensians as an example of earlier Christians who were not a part of the Catholic Church, and who held beliefs they interpreted to be similar to their own. In the seventeenth to the nineteenth century, Dutch and German Mennonite writers like van Braght, Martyrs Mirror (1660)[97] and Steven Blaupot ten Cate, Geschiedkundig onderzoek (1844),[98][99] linked Anabaptist origins to the Waldensians. Baptist authors like John L. Waller also linked their origins to the Waldensians.[100][101][102][103][104][105][106][self-published source?] James Aitken Wylie (1808–1890) likewise believed the Waldensians preserved the apostolic faith and its practices during the Middle Ages.[107]

Still later, Seventh-day Adventist Ellen G. White taught that the Waldenses were preservers of biblical truth during the Great Apostasy of the Catholic Church.[108] She claimed the Waldenses kept the seventh-day Sabbath,[109] engaged in widespread missionary activity, and "planted the seeds of the Reformation" in Europe.[110][111] Despite the claims of that the Waldensians were observant of resting on the Sabbath, Waldensians historians like Emilio Comba, Giorgio Spini, and Gabriel Audisio[112] have stated the confusion is due to either the name of shoes worn by their travelling preachers or of their accusation's of holding Witches' Sabbath, as the inquisitors often charged heretics in general.[113] Though other Waldenses sources do suggest there were groups who kept the sabbath.[53]

Scholar Michael W. Homer links the belief in an ancient origin of the Waldensians to three seventeenth-century pastors, Jean-Paul Perrin of the Reformed Church of France and the Waldensian pastors Pierre Gilles and Jean Léger, who posited that the Waldensians were descendants of Primitive Christianity.[114]

Some authors[115][116] try to date a Reformation-era Waldensian confession of faith back into the Middle Ages in 1120 to assert their claim of doctrinal antiquity.[117] However, in the current historiography from the Waldensians themselves it is asserted that this confession was drafted in 1531.[118][119]

Protestant theology in Germany was interested in the doctrinal antiquity and apostolic continuity being expressed by the Waldensian faith. The high independence of the communities, lay preaching, voluntary poverty, and strict adherence to the Bible and its early translation through Peter Waldo have been credited to prove an ancient origin of Protestantism as the true interpretation of the faith. Mere anti-Catholic sentiments and controversies, for example in the Kulturkampf, played a role. Heinrich Gottlieb Kreussler's 1830 History of the Reformation contains a ballade about the fate of the Waldensians and quotes Jean Léger's [fr] History of the Waldenians (1750) (authored with Siegmund Jakob Baumgarten, published by Johann Jacob Korn) as proof of an early origin of the Waldensians.[120][121][122] The strong German Protestant support for the Waldensian diaspora community in Italy—leading staff of the Gustavus Adolphus Union (GAW) praised them as one of the most interesting churches of all[123]—was not confined to a theological fascination. It led to extensive financial support, loans, exchange of priesters and communities, aid missions and political interventions for the Italian Waldensians and their charitable efforts, starting from the seventeenth century.[123][124] After World War II, the Evangelical Church in Germany actively contributed to reconciliation efforts with Italy and France based on its relationship with the Waldensian community.[123] The GAW has ongoing links with the Waldensians in Italy.

Waldensians by region edit

Italy edit

 
The Waldensian Church in Milan, built in 1949, incorporates materials from the demolished gothic church of San Giovanni in Conca.

In 1848, after many centuries of harsh persecution, the Waldensians acquired legal freedom in the Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia as a result of the liberalising reforms which followed Charles Albert of Sardinia's granting a constitution (the Statuto Albertino). Subsequently, the Waldensian Evangelical Church, as it became known, developed and spread through the Italian peninsula.

The Waldensian church was able to gain converts by building schools in some of the poorer regions of Italy, including Sicily. There is still a Waldensian church in the town of Grotte, at the southwest of the island.[125] German Protestants have been supportive of the Waldensians in Italy since the seventeenth century.

During the Nazi occupation of North Italy in the Second World War, Italian Waldensians were active in saving Jews faced with imminent extermination, hiding many of them in the same mountain valley where their own Waldensian ancestors had found refuge in earlier generations.[126][127]

After 1945, the Evangelical Church in Germany led by Theophil Wurm (who was also Bishop of Württemberg) issued the Stuttgart Declaration of Guilt and actively contributed to reconciliation efforts with Italy (and France) based on relationships with the diaspora. The 1948 centenary festivities of the Savoy civil rights declaration were used for efforts of EKD leading staff to support German Italian reconciliation after World War II.[123] A most fruitful cooperation was established at the community level, with Waldensian delegates from both sides pioneering.[123] 1949, Guglielmo Del Pesco (1889–1951), moderator of the Tavola Valdese (Waldensian round table), was invited back to Maulbronn, celebrating the 250th anniversary of the Waldensian emigration to Germany.[123] He was unable to come for reasons of health but sent A. Jalla, a teacher, described as being full of spite and hatred against all things German after 1945, but who joined in the effort for reconciliation 1949.[123] Based on these experiences, the first town-twinning partnership between Germany and France was signed 1950 between Ludwigsburg and the Protestant exclave Montbéliard, again based on a special connection of the Württemberg Landeskirche. The German Gustavus Adolphus Union is supportive of Waldesian projects and charitable efforts in Italy till the present.[128]

In 1975, the Waldensian Church joined the Methodist Evangelical Church in Italy to form the Union of Waldensian and Methodist Churches. It has 50,000 members (45,000 Waldensians, of whom 30,000 in Italy and some 15,000 divided between Argentina and Uruguay, and 5,000 Methodists).

The eight per thousand tax (Italian: otto per mille) introduced 1985 in Italy greatly helped the Waldensian community. The eight per thousand law allows taxpayers to choose to whom they devolve a compulsory 8 ‰ = 0.8% ('eight per thousand') from their annual income tax return. They may choose an organised religion recognised by Italy or a social assistance scheme run by the Italian State. While the Waldensians have only about 25,000 enlisted members, more than 600,000 Italians are willing to support the Waldensian community and its charitable works.[129] The ordination of women and, since 2010, the blessing of same-sex unions[130][131] are allowed.

South America edit

 
Festivities celebrating the 150th anniversary of Italian immigration to Colonia Valdense, Uruguay.

The first Waldensian settlers from Italy arrived in South America in 1856. From that date there have been several migrations, especially to Argentina, such as the town of Jacinto Aráuz in the southern part of the province of La Pampa, where they arrived around 1901. As of 2016 the Waldensian Church of the Río de La Plata (which forms a united church with the Waldensian Evangelical Church) has approximately 40 congregations and 15,000 members shared between Uruguay and Argentina.[132]

The Uruguayan town of Colonia Valdense, in the department of Colonia, is the administrative center of the Waldensian Evangelical Church of the River Plate. In 1969, the Church established a mission in Barrio Nuevo, which became a soup kitchen for Saturdays and Sundays, for 500 poor families. Missionary activity has led to the conversion of new people without Waldensian ancestry, who are called "new Waldensian".[133]

From Uruguay or directly from Italy, some Waldensian families also found a home in Brazil. There, they ended up joining the local Protestant churches.[134]

United States edit

 
The Waldensian Presbyterian Church in the town of Valdese, North Carolina. This congregation belongs to the Presbyterian Church (USA).

Since colonial times there have been Waldensians who sailed to America, as marked by the presence of them in New Jersey and Delaware. Many Waldensians, having escaped persecution in their homelands by making their way to the tolerant Dutch Republic, crossed the Atlantic to start anew in the New Netherland colony, establishing the first church in North America on Staten Island in 1670.[135]

In the late nineteenth century many Italians, among them Waldensians, emigrated to the United States. They founded communities in New York City; Boston; Chicago; Monett, Missouri; Galveston, Texas; Rochester, New York; Hunter, Utah; and Ogden, Utah.[136] The Monett congregation was among the first to be established in the United States, in 1875, by some 40 settlers who had formed the original South American settlement in Uruguay in the 1850s. With the outbreak of the Uruguayan Civil War they had fled violence in the Uruguayan countryside, traveling first back to Europe then across the Northern Atlantic to New York and by train to southern Missouri. Waldensians living in the Cottian Alps region of Northern Italy continued to migrate to Monett until the early 1900s, augmenting the original colony, and founded another, larger settlement in Valdese, North Carolina, in 1893. The first Waldenses settled in North Carolina in 1893.[137] Both the Monett and Valdese congregations use the name Waldensian Presbyterian Church.

In 1853 a group of approximately 70 Waldensians, including men, women, and children, left their homes in the Piedmont Valleys and migrated to Pleasant Green, Hunter, and Ogden, Utah, after being converted to Mormonism by Lorenzo Snow. These Waldensians maintained their cultural heritage, while passing on their mixture of Mormon and Waldensian faiths to their descendants. Their descendants still consider themselves both Mormon and Waldensian, and have met occasionally over the many decades to celebrate both heritages.[138][139][140][141]

In 1906, through the initiative of church forces in New York City, Waldensian interest groups were invited to coalesce into a new entity, The American Waldensian Aid Society (AWS), organized "to collect funds and apply the same to the aid of the Waldensian Church in Italy and elsewhere ... and to arouse and maintain interest throughout the US in the work of said Church." Today, this organization continues as the American Waldensian Society. The American Waldensian Society recently marked its Centennial with a conference and celebrations in New York City.

By the 1920s most of the Waldensian churches and missions merged into the Presbyterian Church due to the cultural assimilation of the second and third generations.

The work of the American Waldensian Society continues in the United States today. The American Waldensian Society aims to foster dialogue and partnership among Waldensian Churches in Italy and South America and Christian churches within North America in order to promote a compelling vision of Waldensian Christian witness for North America. Thus, the American Waldensian Society makes public the contemporary and historic heritage to which Waldensian spirituality is committed: Tell the Story; Encourage "Crossings"; and Provide Financial Support.[142]

The best known Waldensian Churches in America were in New York, Monett, Missouri and in Valdese, North Carolina. The church in New York City was disbanded by the mid-1990s.[143]

The American Waldensian Society assists churches, organizations and families in the promotion of Waldensian history and culture. The society allies with those who work to preserve their millennial heritage among their descendants. For example, over the course of 45 years, the Old Colony Players in Valdese, North Carolina, have staged From this Day Forward, an outdoor drama telling the story of the Waldenses and the founding of Valdese.[137]

The Waldensian Presbyterian churches in the United States and the American Waldensian Society have links with the Italian-based Waldensian Evangelical Church, but, unlike the South American Waldensian communities, today they are independent institutions from the European organization.

Germany edit

 
Coat of arms of Le Bourcet (part of Althengstett) in Württemberg
 
Arnaud's fountain in Perouse (Württemberg)

Several thousand Waldenses fled from Italy and France to Germany. Henri Arnaud (1641–1721), pastor and leader of the Piedmont Waldensians, rescued his co-religionists from their dispersion under the persecution of Victor Amadeus II the Duke of Savoy. Eberhard Louis, Duke of Württemberg invited the Waldensians to his territory. When the Waldensians were exiled a second time, Arnaud accompanied them in their exile to Schönenberg, and continued to act as their pastor until his death.

Those who remained in Germany were soon assimilated by the State Churches (Lutheran and Reformed) and they are a part of various Landeskirchen in the Evangelical Church in Germany. The new settlers were free in their religious services, and kept holding them in French till the nineteenth century. The Waldensian community is often overlooked, as the Huguenots were larger in number. Henri Arnaud's home in Schönenberg close to Ötisheim is a Museum today. A memorial plate refers to the introduction of potatoes in Württemberg by the Waldensians.

 
The Waldensian stone was erected north of Neuhengstett in 1881 to commemorate the Waldensian families who originally settled there.

Main parts of the Waldensian refugees found a new home in Hessen-Darmstadt, Kassel, Homburg, Nassau-Dillenburg and in the then Grand Duchée Württemberg. The founded new communities in Rohrbach, Wembach und Hahn (today part of Ober-Ramstadt), Walldorf (today Mörfelden-Walldorf), Bad Homburg-Dornholzhausen, Gottstreu and Gewissenruh (Oberweser), Charlottenberg. Still today, French family names (Gille, Roux, Granget, Conle, Gillardon, Common, Jourdan, Piston, Richardon, Servay, Conte, Baral, Gay, Orcellet or Salen) show the Savoyard background. Stuttgart hosts as well an Italian Waldensian community with about 100 members.

Municipality names like Pinache, Serres (both now part of Wiernsheim), Großvillars (part of Oberderdingen), Kleinvillars, Perouse show the French heritage, the latter communities are close to Maulbronn and its UNESCO world heritage site monastery and school. Maulbronn was the place of the festivities for the 250th anniversary of the Waldensian emigration to Germany,[123] which played as well an important role in German Italian reconciliation after World War II.[123]

The Waldensian community is active and has various associations maintaining the specific heritage and keep relationships with their counterparts in Italy and South America.[144][145][146][147] That includes as well a close watch on the ecumene, with the Waldensian-influenced theologians being more doubtful about a stronger cooperation with the Catholic Church than others.

See also edit

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Further reading edit

  • Arnold, Eberhard (1984) The Early Anabaptists, Plough Publishing House ISBN 978-0-87486-192-1
  • Audisio, Gabriel (2007), Preachers by Night The Waldensian Barbes (15th–16th Centuries), ISBN 978-90-04-15454-4
  • Audisio, Gabriel (1999) The Waldensian Dissent: Persecution and Survival, c.1170–c.1570, Cambridge Medieval Textbooks. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-55984-7
  • Bellito, Christopher M., (Ed.), A Companion to the Waldenses in the Middle Ages ISBN 9789004420410
  • Bost, Ami (1848) History of the Bohemian and Moravian Brethren, pp. 4–5, Religious Tract Society of London
  • Cameron, Euan (2001) The Waldenses: Rejections of Holy Church in Medieval Europe ISBN 0-631-22497-1, ISBN 978-0-631-22497-6
  • Comba, Emilio (1978) History of the Waldenses of Italy, from their origin to the Reformation ISBN 0-404-16119-7
  • Jones, William (1816), The History of the Waldenses: Connected with a Sketch of the Christian Church from the Birth of Christ to the Eighteenth Century (Vol. 2, 2nd ed.), London: Gale and Fenner
  • Muston, Alexis (1978) The Israel of the Alps : a complete history of the Waldenses and their colonies : prepared in great part from unpublished documents ISBN 0-404-16140-5
  • Sossi, Andrea (2010), Medioevo Valdese 1173–1315. Povertà, Eucarestia e Predicazione: Tra identità minoritaria e rappresentazione cifrata del rapporto tra l'uomo e l'Assoluto, UNI Service Editrice, Trento.
  • Wylie, James Aitken (c.1860) History of the Waldenses ISBN 1-57258-185-9 online ebook

External links edit

waldensians, waldensian, redirects, here, ship, waldensian, also, known, waldenses, ɔː, vallenses, valdesi, vaudois, adherents, church, tradition, that, began, ascetic, movement, within, western, christianity, before, reformation, originally, known, poor, lyon. Waldensian redirects here For the ship see SS Waldensian The Waldensians also known as Waldenses w ɔː l ˈ d ɛ n s iː z w ɒ l Vallenses Valdesi or Vaudois are adherents of a church tradition that began as an ascetic movement within Western Christianity before the Reformation Originally known as the Poor of Lyon in the late twelfth century 1 2 3 the movement spread to the Cottian Alps in what are today France and Italy The founding of the Waldensians is attributed to Peter Waldo a wealthy merchant who gave away his property around 1173 4 2 preaching apostolic poverty as the way to perfection WaldensiansWaldensian symbol Lux lucet in tenebris A light shines in the darkness ClassificationProto ProtestantOrientationReformedTheologyTheology of Peter Waldo and other Waldensian theologians nowadays also that of John Calvin and other Reformed theologiansRegionItaly Switzerland France Germany Argentina United States Uruguay and elsewhereFounderPeter WaldoOriginc 1173 Lyon Kingdom of Burgundy Arles in the Holy Roman Empire now France Separated fromCatholic ChurchWaldensian teachings came into conflict with the Catholic Church and by 1215 the Waldensians were declared heretical not because they preached apostolic poverty which the Franciscans also preached but because they were not willing to recognize the prerogatives of local bishops over the content of their preaching nor to recognize standards about who was fit to preach Pope Innocent III offered the Waldensians the chance to return to the Church and many did taking the name Poor Catholics 5 Many did not and were subjected to intense persecution and were confronted with organised and general discrimination in the following centuries In the sixteenth century the Waldensians were absorbed into the Protestant movement under the influence of early Swiss reformer Heinrich Bullinger In some aspects the Waldensians of the Middle Ages could be seen as proto Protestants but they mostly did not raise the doctrinal objections characteristic of sixteenth century Protestant leaders 6 They came to align themselves with Protestantism with the Resolutions of Chanforan on 12 September 1532 they formally became a part of the Calvinist tradition They are members of the Community of Protestant Churches in Europe and its affiliates worldwide They were nearly annihilated in the seventeenth century The main denomination within the movement was the Waldensian Evangelical Church the original church in Italy In 1975 it merged with the Methodist Evangelical Church to form the Union of Methodist and Waldensian Churches a majority Waldensian church with a minority of Methodists 7 8 Another large congregation is the Evangelical Waldensian Church of Rio de la Plata in Argentina Paraguay and Uruguay 9 10 Congregations continue to be active in Europe particularly in the Piedmont region of Northern Italy South America and North America Organizations such as the American Waldensian Society 11 maintain the history of the movement and declare their mission as proclaiming the Christian Gospel serving the marginalized promoting social justice fostering inter religious work and advocating respect for religious diversity and freedom of conscience 12 Contents 1 Historical sources 2 Teachings 3 History 3 1 Origins 3 2 Catholic response 3 3 Reformation 3 3 1 Massacre of Merindol 1545 3 3 2 Piedmont Easter 3 4 Revocation of the Edict of Nantes and the Glorious Return 3 5 Religious freedom after the French Revolution 3 6 Characteristics of the modern Waldensian Church 3 7 Influence 4 Appraisal by Protestants 5 Waldensians by region 5 1 Italy 5 2 South America 5 3 United States 5 4 Germany 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistorical sources edit nbsp Statue of Peter Waldo at the Luther Monument in WormsMost modern knowledge of the medieval history of the Waldensians originates almost exclusively from the records and writings of the Roman Catholic Church the same body that was condemning them as heretics 13 66 Because of the documentary scarcity and unconnectedness from which we must draw the description of Waldensian beliefs 13 87 much of what is known about the early Waldensians comes from reports like the Profession of faith of Valdo of Lyon 1180 Liber antiheresis by Durando d Osca c 1187 1200 and the Rescriptum of Bergamo Conference 1218 Earlier documents that provide information about early Waldensian history include the Will of Stefano d Anse 1187 the Manifestatio haeresis Albigensium et Lugdunensium c 1206 1208 and the Anonymous chronicle of Lyon c 1220 There are also the two reports written for the Inquisition by Reinerius Saccho died 1259 a former Cathar who converted to Catholicism published together in 1254 as Summa de Catharis et Pauperibus de Lugduno On the Cathars and the Poor of Lyon 14 Teachings editWaldensians held and preached a number of doctrines as they read from the Bible These included The atoning death and justifying righteousness of Christ The Godhead The fall of man The incarnation of the Son A denial of purgatory as the invention of the Antichrist 15 The value of voluntary poverty Perhaps the universal priesthood of believers 16 as according to de Bourbon they claimed that all good men are priests 17 They also rejected a number of concepts that were widely held in Christian Europe of the era For example the Waldensians held that temporal offices and dignities were not meant for preachers of the Gospel that relics were no different from any other bones and should not be regarded as special or holy that pilgrimage served only to spend one s money that flesh might be eaten any day if one s appetite served one that holy water was no more efficacious than rain water and that prayer was just as effectual if offered in a church or a barn They were accused moreover of speaking blasphemously of the Catholic Church as the harlot of the Apocalypse 18 19 They rejected what they perceived as the idolatry of the Catholic Church and considered the papacy as the Antichrist of Rome 20 La nobla leyczon The Noble Lesson written in the Occitan language gives a sample of the medieval Waldensian belief Once it was believed that this poem dated between 1190 and 1240 21 22 but there is evidence that it was written in the first part of the fifteenth century 23 The poem exists in four manuscripts two are housed at the University of Cambridge one at Trinity College in Dublin and another in Geneva 24 The Waldensians taught certain doctrines also held by the Catholic Church but came into conflict with the Catholic Church by denying some of its sacraments or the manner in which they were performed Waldensians taught the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist and affirmed the necessity of priests for the offering of the Mass 25 However they denied the right of sinful priests to give the Eucharist 26 Early forms of the Waldensian Mass sought to recover the early Christian liturgy and contained a sevenfold repetition of the Lord s Prayer with the Eucharistic elements being consecrated through the sign of the cross 1 The Waldensians observed the forty day fast of Lent and practiced Friday abstinence 27 Both Waldensian and Catholic sources however imply that the Waldensians rejected infant baptism at least to some extent This is seen from The Noble Lesson which refers to Christ specifically calling to baptize those who believed and Reinerius Saccho mentioning how the Waldensians believed that the ablution which is given to infants profits nothing 28 29 30 Thus there seems to have been an understanding among the Waldensians that infants could be saved without baptism 26 They rejected rejected confession to priests the practice of venerating the saints the use of oaths secular courts and prayers for the dead 31 They however accepted the Trinity 32 30 and the earliest Waldensians staunchly defended the Eucharist 25 Although they later at least some of them began to develop a more symbolic view of the bread and wine 33 34 Reinerius Saccho gave the following charges against the Waldensians 28 The Pope is the head of all errors The Monks are Pharisees Christians should obey God instead of the Prelates That no one is above one another in the church No one should kneel before a priest Tithes should not be given Bishops should not have royal rights They condemn the Catholic sacraments The Church has erred by prohibiting the marriage of the clergy 28 The Waldensians were associated by councils and papal decrees with the Cathars however they differed radically from them the Waldensians never accepted Gnostic views they did not reject the sacraments in total and did not believe in mysticism 35 The Waldensians saw themselves as a church within the Church likely not going further although they were accused of seeing the Catholic church as the Babylonian harlot 36 The Waldensians would later in their history adopt a number of doctrines from the Reformed churches due to the French Reformer Guaillaume Farel who introduced Reformation theology to Waldensian leaders They officially adopted Reformed theology at a conference at Cianforan 1532 As a result of the conference the Waldensians officially modified some of their previous positions such as their rejection of secular courts 37 History editOrigins edit According to legend Peter Waldo renounced his wealth as an encumbrance to preaching 38 full citation needed which led other members of the Catholic clergy to follow his example Because of this shunning of wealth the movement was early known as The Poor of Lyon and The Poor of Lombardy 39 Though arising to prominence in the twelfth century some evidence suggests the existence of the Waldenses even before the time of Peter Waldo as early as 1100 40 Pope Alexander in 1167 at the Third Council of the Lateran lamented the Waldenses as a pest of long existence 41 42 While the Inquisitor Reinerius Saccho in the thirteenth century also spoke about the dangers of the Waldenses for among other reasons its antiquity some say that it has lasted from the time of Sylvester others from the time of the Apostles 43 In the seventeenth century Waldensian Pastor Henri Arnaud stated that the Vaudois are in fact descended from those refugees from Italy who after St Paul had there preached the gospel abandoned their beautiful country like the woman mentioned in the apocalypse and fled to those wild mountains where they have to this day handed down the gospel from father to son in the same purity and simplicity as it was preached by St Paul 44 The Waldensian movement was characterized from the beginning by lay preaching voluntary poverty and strict adherence to the Bible Between 1175 and 1185 Waldo either commissioned a cleric from Lyon to translate the New Testament into the vernacular the Arpitan Franco Provencal language 45 or was himself involved in this translation work citation needed In 1179 Waldo and one of his disciples went to Rome where Pope Alexander III and the Roman Curia welcomed them They had to explain their faith before a panel of three clergymen including issues that were then debated within the Church such as the universal priesthood the gospel in the vulgar tongue and the issue of voluntary poverty The results of the meeting were inconclusive and the Third Lateran Council in the same year condemned Waldo s ideas but not the movement itself the leaders of the movement had not yet been excommunicated 46 The Waldensians proceeded to disobey the Third Lateran Council and continued to preach according to their own understanding of the Scriptures In 1184 Waldo and his followers were excommunicated and forced from Lyon The Catholic Church declared them heretics stating that the group s principal error was contempt for ecclesiastical power Rome also accused the Waldensians of teaching innumerable errors 47 Waldo and his followers developed a system whereby they would go from town to town and meet secretly with small groups of Waldensians There they would confess sins and hold service A traveling Waldensian preacher was known as a barba The group would shelter the barba and help make arrangements to move on to the next town in secret 48 Waldo possibly died in the early thirteenth century possibly in Germany he was never captured and his fate remains uncertain 49 Early Waldensians belonged to one of three groups 50 not specific enough to verify Sandaliati those with sandals received sacred orders and were to prove the heresiarchs wrong Doctores instructed and trained missionaries Novellani preached to the general population They were also called Insabbatati Sabati Inzabbatati or Sabotiers Some historians such as the Jesuit Jacob Gretser claimed this designation arose from the unusual type of sabot they used as footwear 51 However he admitted that his reasoning on this etymology did not have the support of the literature of his day because these sources he said contained many errors 52 53 247 Other historians such as Melchior Goldast stated that the name insabbatati was because of Sabbath keeping in the manner of Jews 54 Jesuit Inquisitor Francis Pegne cited in Nicholas Eymerich famous work the Directorium Inquisitorium stated that many used to think it insabbatati came from Sabbath and that they Waldenses observed the Sabbath according to the custom of the Jews 55 Likewise in the twelfth century Inquisitor Moneta of Cremona railed against the Waldenses for seventh day sabbath keeping after the manner of Jews 56 Johann Gottfried Hering in 1756 in his Compendieuses Church and Heretic Lexicon defined Sabbatati a sect of the Waldenses as those who kept the sabbath with the Jews 57 In the early Waldenses prose tracts there existed an exposition on the 10 commandments which put forth their own explanation on the 4th commandment which defended sabbath keeping 58 59 Many among the Waldensians claimed that people such as Claudius of Turin and Berengar of Tours were first representatives of the sect but in modern times claims of the Waldenses to high antiquity are no longer accepted 60 One school of thought attempts to associate Vigilantius with proto Waldensians in the European Alps 61 Catholic response edit nbsp Illustrations depicting Waldensians as witches in Le champion des dames by Martin Le France 1451 nbsp Piedmontese children forced from their parents 62 The Catholic Church viewed the Waldensians as unorthodox and in 1184 at the Synod of Verona under the auspices of Pope Lucius III they were excommunicated Pope Innocent III went even further during the Fourth Lateran Council in 1215 officially denouncing the Waldensians as heretics 63 64 In 1211 more than 80 Waldensians were burned as heretics at Strasbourg this action launched several centuries of persecution that nearly destroyed the movement 65 Waldensians briefly ruled Buda the capital of Hungary from 1304 to 1307 The Waldensians in turn excommunicated Pope Benedict XI 66 In 1487 Pope Innocent VIII issued a bull 67 Id Nostri Cordis for the extermination of the Vaudois Alberto de Capitanei archdeacon of Cremona responded to the bull by organizing a crusade to fulfill its order and launched a military offensive in the provinces of Dauphine and Piedmont 68 Charles I Duke of Savoy eventually interfered to save his territories from further turmoil and promised the Vaudois peace but not before the offensive had devastated the area and many of the Vaudois had fled to Provence or south to Italy The theologian Angelo Carletti di Chivasso whom Innocent VIII in 1491 appointed Apostolic Nuncio and Commissary conjointly with the Bishop of Mauriana was involved in reaching a peaceful agreement between Catholics and Waldensians 69 Reformation edit When the news of the Reformation reached the Waldensian Valleys the Tavola Valdese decided to seek fellowship with the nascent Protestantism At a meeting held in 1526 in Laus a town in the Chisone valley it was decided to send envoys to examine the new movement In 1532 they met with German and Swiss Protestants and ultimately adapted their beliefs to those of the Reformed Church The Swiss and French Reformed churches sent William Farel and Anthony Saunier to attend the meeting of Chanforan which convened on 12 October 1532 Farel invited them to join the Reformation and to emerge from secrecy A Confession of Faith with Reformed doctrines was formulated and the Waldensians decided to worship openly in French The French Bible translated by Pierre Robert Olivetan with the help of Calvin and published at Neuchatel in 1535 was based in part on a New Testament in the Waldensian vernacular The churches in Waldensia collected 1500 gold crowns to cover the cost of its publication 70 Massacre of Merindol 1545 edit Main article Massacre of Merindol nbsp Massacre of the Merindol Waldensians in 1545Outside the Piedmont the Waldenses joined the local Protestant churches in Bohemia France and Germany After they came out of seclusion and reports were made of sedition on their part French King Francis I on 1 January 1545 issued the Arret de Merindol and assembled an army against the Waldensians of Provence The leaders in the 1545 massacres were Jean Maynier d Oppede First President of the parliament of Provence and the military commander Antoine Escalin des Aimars who was returning from the Italian Wars with 2 000 veterans the Bandes de Piemont Deaths in the Massacre of Merindol ranged from hundreds to thousands depending on the estimates and several villages were devastated 71 The treaty of 5 June 1561 granted amnesty to the Protestants of the Valleys including liberty of conscience and freedom to worship Prisoners were released and fugitives permitted to return home but despite this treaty the Vaudois with the other French Protestants still suffered during the French Wars of Religion in 1562 1598 As early as 1631 Protestant scholars began to regard the Waldensians as early forerunners of the Reformation in a manner similar to the way the followers of John Wycliffe and Jan Hus also persecuted by authorities were viewed Although the Waldensian church was granted some rights and freedoms under French King Henry IV with the Edict of Nantes in 1598 persecution rose again in the seventeenth century with an extermination of the Waldensians attempted by the Duke of Savoy in 1655 This led to the exodus and dispersion of the Waldensians to other parts of Europe and even to the Western Hemisphere Piedmont Easter edit Main articles Piedmontese Easter and Savoyard Waldensian wars In January 1655 the Duke of Savoy commanded the Waldensians to attend Mass or remove to the upper valleys of their homeland giving them twenty days in which to sell their lands Being in the midst of winter the order was intended to persuade the Vaudois to choose the former however the bulk of the populace instead chose the latter abandoning their homes and lands in the lower valleys and removing to the upper valleys It was written that these targets of persecution including old men women little children and the sick waded through the icy waters climbed the frozen peaks and at length reached the homes of their impoverished brethren of the upper Valleys where they were warmly received 72 By mid April when it became clear that the Duke s efforts to force the Vaudois to conform to Catholicism had failed he tried another approach Under the guise of false reports of Vaudois uprisings the Duke sent troops into the upper valleys to quell the local populace He required that the local populace quarter the troops in their homes which the local populace complied with But the quartering order was a ruse to allow the troops easy access to the populace On 24 April 1655 at 4 a m the signal was given for a general massacre nbsp Print illustrating the 1655 massacre in La Torre from Samuel Moreland s History of the Evangelical Churches of the Valleys of Piedmont published in London in 1658The Duke s forces did not simply slaughter the inhabitants They are reported to have unleashed an unprovoked campaign of looting rape torture and murder According to one report by a Peter Liege Little children were torn from the arms of their mothers clasped by their tiny feet and their heads dashed against the rocks or were held between two soldiers and their quivering limbs torn up by main force Their mangled bodies were then thrown on the highways or fields to be devoured by beasts The sick and the aged were burned alive in their dwellings Some had their hands and arms and legs lopped off and fire applied to the severed parts to staunch the bleeding and prolong their suffering Some were flayed alive some were roasted alive some disemboweled or tied to trees in their own orchards and their hearts cut out Some were horribly mutilated and of others the brains were boiled and eaten by these cannibals Some were fastened down into the furrows of their own fields and ploughed into the soil as men plough manure into it Others were buried alive Fathers were marched to death with the heads of their sons suspended round their necks Parents were compelled to look on while their children were first outraged raped then massacred before being themselves permitted to die 73 This massacre became known as the Piedmont Easter An estimate of some 1 700 Waldensians were slaughtered the massacre was so brutal it aroused indignation throughout Europe Protestant rulers in northern Europe offered sanctuary to the remaining Waldensians Oliver Cromwell then ruler in England began petitioning on behalf of the Waldensians writing letters raising contributions calling a general fast in England and threatening to send military forces to the rescue The massacre prompted John Milton s poem on the Waldenses On the Late Massacre in Piedmont 74 Swiss and Dutch Calvinists set up an underground railroad to bring many of the survivors north to Switzerland and even as far as the Dutch Republic where the councillors of the city of Amsterdam chartered three ships to take some 167 Waldensians to their City Colony in the New World Delaware on Christmas Day 1656 75 Those that stayed behind in France and the Piedmont formed a guerilla resistance movement led by a farmer Joshua Janavel which lasted into the 1660s 76 nbsp Waldensian Church of Florence ItalyRevocation of the Edict of Nantes and the Glorious Return edit In 1685 Louis XIV revoked the 1598 Edict of Nantes which had guaranteed freedom of religion to his Protestant subjects in France French troops sent into the French Waldensian areas of the Chisone and Susa Valleys in the Dauphine forced 8 000 Vaudois to convert to Catholicism and another 3 000 to leave for Germany In the Piedmont the cousin of Louis the newly ascended Duke of Savoy Victor Amadeus II followed his uncle in removing the protection of Protestants in the Piedmont In the renewed persecution and in an echo of the Piedmont Easter Massacre of only three decades earlier the Duke issued an edict on 31 January 1686 that decreed the destruction of all the Vaudois churches and that all inhabitants of the Valleys should publicly announce their error in religion within fifteen days under penalty of death and banishment But the Vaudois remained resistant After the fifteen days an army of 9 000 French and Piedmontese soldiers invaded the Valleys against the estimated 2 500 Vaudois but found that every village had organized a defense force that kept the French and Piedmontese soldiers at bay On 9 April the Duke of Savoy issued a new edict enjoining the Waldensians to put down their arms within eight days and go into exile between 21 and 23 April If able they were free to sell their land and possessions to the highest bidder Waldensian pastor Henri Arnaud 1641 1721 who had been driven out of the Piedmont in the earlier purges returned from Holland On 18 April he made a stirring appeal before an assembly at Roccapiatta winning over the majority in favor of armed resistance When the truce expired on 20 April the Waldensians were prepared for battle They put up a brave fight over the next six weeks but by the time the Duke retired to Turin on 8 June the war seemed decided 2 000 Waldensians had been killed another 2 000 had accepted the Catholic theology of the Council of Trent Another 8 000 had been imprisoned more than half of whom died of deliberately imposed starvation or of sickness within six months But about two or three hundred Vaudois fled to the hills and began carrying out a guerilla war over the next year against the Catholic settlers who arrived to take over the Vaudois lands These Invincibles continued their assaults until the Duke finally relented and agreed to negotiate The Invincibles won the right for the imprisoned Vaudois to be released from prison and to be provided safe passage to Geneva But the Duke granting that permission on 3 January 1687 required that the Vaudois leave immediately or convert to Catholicism This edict led to some 2 800 Vaudois leaving the Piedmont for Geneva of whom only 2 490 survived the journey Arnaud and others now sought help of the allied European powers He appealed to William of Orange directly from Geneva while others amongst whom was the young L Hermitage were sent to England and other lands to canvas for support Orange and the allies were glad of any excuse to antagonise France whose territorial encroachments on all fronts were intolerable The League of Augsburg was formed in 1686 under Orange who promised support to Arnaud In August 1689 in the midst of the wars between the League of Augsburg and France Arnaud led 1 000 Swiss exiles armed with modern weaponry provided by the Dutch back to the Piedmont Over a third of the force perished during the 130 mile trek They successfully re established their presence in the Piedmont and drove out the Catholic settlers but they continued to be besieged by French and Piedmontese troops By 2 May 1689 with only 300 Waldensian troops remaining and cornered on a high peak called the Balsiglia by 4 000 French troops with cannons the final assault was delayed by storm and then by cloud cover The French commander was so confident of completing his job the next morning that he sent a message to Paris that the Waldensian force had already been destroyed However when the French awoke the next morning they discovered that the Waldensians guided by one of their number familiar with the Balsiglia had already descended from the peak during the night and were now miles away The French pursued but only a few days later a sudden change of political alliance by the Duke from France to the League of Augsburg ended the French pursuit of the Waldensians The Duke agreed to defend the Waldensians and called for all other Vaudois exiles to return home to help protect the Piedmont borders against the French in what came to be known as the Glorious Return 77 Religious freedom after the French Revolution edit nbsp Waldensian Church entrance in Rome ItalyAfter the French Revolution the Waldenses of Piedmont were assured liberty of conscience and in 1848 the ruler of Savoy King Charles Albert of Sardinia granted them civil rights Enjoying religious freedom the Waldensians began migrating outside their valleys By the time of Italian unification the Waldensian had congregations throughout the peninsula some originated by preaching others by migration 78 However poverty societal discrimination and demographic pressure led the Waldensians to emigrate first as seasonal workers to the French Riviera and Switzerland and later to Colonia Valdense in Uruguay Jacinto Arauz in La Pampa Argentina and ultimately to the United States 79 Those who remained in Italy have experienced upward social mobility Waldensian companies dominated Turin s chocolate industry for the latter half of the nineteenth century and are generally credited with the invention of gianduja hazelnut chocolate 80 Waldensian scholarship also flourished in the nineteenth century Copies of the Romaunt version of the Gospel of John were preserved in Paris and Dublin The manuscripts were used as the basis of a work by William Stephen Gilly published in 1848 in which he described the history of the New Testament in use by the Waldensians 81 The Waldensian College began training ministers in 1855 first in Torre Pellice A few years later the Waldensian College relocated to Florence and in 1922 to Rome Economic and social integration have eased acceptance of ethnic Waldensians into Italian society citation needed Writers like Italo Calvino and politicians like Domenico Maselli and Valdo Spini are of Waldensian background The church has also attracted intellectuals as new adherents and supporters and enjoys significant financial support from non adherent Italians In 2015 after a historic visit to a Waldensian Temple in Turin Pope Francis in the name of the Catholic Church asked Waldensian Christians for forgiveness for their persecution The Pope apologized for the Church s un Christian and even inhumane positions and actions 82 Characteristics of the modern Waldensian Church edit Further information Calvinism The present Waldensian Church considers itself to be a Protestant church of the Reformed tradition originally framed by Huldrych Zwingli and John Calvin 46 It recognizes as its doctrinal standard the confession of faith published in 1655 and based on the Reformed confession of 1559 It admits only two ceremonies baptism and the Lord s Supper 46 Supreme authority in the body is exercised by an annual synod and the affairs of the individual congregations are administered by a consistory under the presidency of the pastor 46 Over the centuries Waldensian churches have been established in countries as far away from France as Uruguay and the United States where the active Waldensian congregations continue the purpose of the Waldensian movement The contemporary and historic Waldensian spiritual heritage describes itself as proclaiming the Gospel serving the marginalized promoting social justice fostering inter religious work and advocating respect for religious diversity and freedom of conscience 11 Today the Waldensian Church is member of the World Communion of Reformed Churches the World Methodist Council the Federation of Evangelical Churches in Italy and the World Council of Churches Influence edit The Waldensians were influences to the Zwickau Prophets who came out in support of believer s baptism 83 The Waldensians also influenced some in the Bohemian reformation especially Petr Chelcicky 84 Petr Chelcicky was influenced by the Waldensians very early in his life as there existed Waldensian congregations in the area of his birth 85 However on the other hand some Hussites rejected Waldensian doctrines including Jacob of Miles 84 Appraisal by Protestants edit nbsp The Vaudois taking their oath Anonymous illustration published in 1886 Some Protestants have considered the Waldensians to be the oldest Non Catholic Christian community in Western and Central Europe and the oldest Protestant denomination 86 87 88 Early Protestants felt a spiritual kinship to the Waldensians and wrote positively about them John Milton for example wrote in his sonnet On the Late Massacre in Piedmont of the 1655 massacre and persecution of the Waldensians It was once held that the Waldenses were first taught by Paul the Apostle who visited Spain and then allegedly traveled on to Piedmont As the Catholic Church indulged in excesses in the time of Constantine Roman Emperor from 306 to 337 the account tells the Waldenses held true to their apostolic faith of poverty and piety These claims were discounted in the nineteenth century 89 There were also other claims that the Waldensians predated Peter Waldo s activities in the late twelfth century In his A History of the Vaudois Church 1859 90 Antoine Monastier quotes Bernard abbot of Foncald who wrote at the end of the twelfth century that the Waldensians arose during the papacy of Lucius 91 Monastier takes Bernard to mean Lucius II in office from 1144 to 1145 and concludes that the Waldenses were active before 1145 Bernard also says that the same Pope Lucius condemned them as heretics but they were condemned by Pope Lucius III in 1184 92 Monastier also says that Eberard de Bethune writing in 1210 although Monastier says 1160 claimed that the name Vaudois meant valley dwellers or those who dwell in a vale of sorrow and tears and was in use before the times of Peter Waldo Waldensians feature in the theories of Baptist successionism and Landmarkism concerning an alleged continuous tradition of practices and beliefs from John the Baptist onwards 93 Some historical writers suggest Waldensian beliefs came from missionaries from the early church and that their history may have its origins in the apostolic age 94 though this idea itself stems from Baptist Successionism an idea that was very popular among some nineteenth century church historians but has been largely rejected by modern scholars in the field The Roman Inquisitor Reinerus Sacho writing c 1230 held the sect of the Vaudois to be of great antiquity thus preceding Waldo by centuries According to some early baptist sources there are also accounts of Paulicians Petrobusians and Pasaginians along with the Waldenses of the Alps who kept Saturday as the Lord s day 95 96 Some Anabaptist and Baptist authors have pointed to the Waldensians as an example of earlier Christians who were not a part of the Catholic Church and who held beliefs they interpreted to be similar to their own In the seventeenth to the nineteenth century Dutch and German Mennonite writers like van Braght Martyrs Mirror 1660 97 and Steven Blaupot ten Cate Geschiedkundig onderzoek 1844 98 99 linked Anabaptist origins to the Waldensians Baptist authors like John L Waller also linked their origins to the Waldensians 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 self published source James Aitken Wylie 1808 1890 likewise believed the Waldensians preserved the apostolic faith and its practices during the Middle Ages 107 Still later Seventh day Adventist Ellen G White taught that the Waldenses were preservers of biblical truth during the Great Apostasy of the Catholic Church 108 She claimed the Waldenses kept the seventh day Sabbath 109 engaged in widespread missionary activity and planted the seeds of the Reformation in Europe 110 111 Despite the claims of that the Waldensians were observant of resting on the Sabbath Waldensians historians like Emilio Comba Giorgio Spini and Gabriel Audisio 112 have stated the confusion is due to either the name of shoes worn by their travelling preachers or of their accusation s of holding Witches Sabbath as the inquisitors often charged heretics in general 113 Though other Waldenses sources do suggest there were groups who kept the sabbath 53 Scholar Michael W Homer links the belief in an ancient origin of the Waldensians to three seventeenth century pastors Jean Paul Perrin of the Reformed Church of France and the Waldensian pastors Pierre Gilles and Jean Leger who posited that the Waldensians were descendants of Primitive Christianity 114 Some authors 115 116 try to date a Reformation era Waldensian confession of faith back into the Middle Ages in 1120 to assert their claim of doctrinal antiquity 117 However in the current historiography from the Waldensians themselves it is asserted that this confession was drafted in 1531 118 119 Protestant theology in Germany was interested in the doctrinal antiquity and apostolic continuity being expressed by the Waldensian faith The high independence of the communities lay preaching voluntary poverty and strict adherence to the Bible and its early translation through Peter Waldo have been credited to prove an ancient origin of Protestantism as the true interpretation of the faith Mere anti Catholic sentiments and controversies for example in the Kulturkampf played a role Heinrich Gottlieb Kreussler s 1830 History of the Reformation contains a ballade about the fate of the Waldensians and quotes Jean Leger s fr History of the Waldenians 1750 authored with Siegmund Jakob Baumgarten published by Johann Jacob Korn as proof of an early origin of the Waldensians 120 121 122 The strong German Protestant support for the Waldensian diaspora community in Italy leading staff of the Gustavus Adolphus Union GAW praised them as one of the most interesting churches of all 123 was not confined to a theological fascination It led to extensive financial support loans exchange of priesters and communities aid missions and political interventions for the Italian Waldensians and their charitable efforts starting from the seventeenth century 123 124 After World War II the Evangelical Church in Germany actively contributed to reconciliation efforts with Italy and France based on its relationship with the Waldensian community 123 The GAW has ongoing links with the Waldensians in Italy Waldensians by region editItaly edit nbsp The Waldensian Church in Milan built in 1949 incorporates materials from the demolished gothic church of San Giovanni in Conca In 1848 after many centuries of harsh persecution the Waldensians acquired legal freedom in the Kingdom of Piedmont Sardinia as a result of the liberalising reforms which followed Charles Albert of Sardinia s granting a constitution the Statuto Albertino Subsequently the Waldensian Evangelical Church as it became known developed and spread through the Italian peninsula The Waldensian church was able to gain converts by building schools in some of the poorer regions of Italy including Sicily There is still a Waldensian church in the town of Grotte at the southwest of the island 125 German Protestants have been supportive of the Waldensians in Italy since the seventeenth century During the Nazi occupation of North Italy in the Second World War Italian Waldensians were active in saving Jews faced with imminent extermination hiding many of them in the same mountain valley where their own Waldensian ancestors had found refuge in earlier generations 126 127 After 1945 the Evangelical Church in Germany led by Theophil Wurm who was also Bishop of Wurttemberg issued the Stuttgart Declaration of Guilt and actively contributed to reconciliation efforts with Italy and France based on relationships with the diaspora The 1948 centenary festivities of the Savoy civil rights declaration were used for efforts of EKD leading staff to support German Italian reconciliation after World War II 123 A most fruitful cooperation was established at the community level with Waldensian delegates from both sides pioneering 123 1949 Guglielmo Del Pesco 1889 1951 moderator of the Tavola Valdese Waldensian round table was invited back to Maulbronn celebrating the 250th anniversary of the Waldensian emigration to Germany 123 He was unable to come for reasons of health but sent A Jalla a teacher described as being full of spite and hatred against all things German after 1945 but who joined in the effort for reconciliation 1949 123 Based on these experiences the first town twinning partnership between Germany and France was signed 1950 between Ludwigsburg and the Protestant exclave Montbeliard again based on a special connection of the Wurttemberg Landeskirche The German Gustavus Adolphus Union is supportive of Waldesian projects and charitable efforts in Italy till the present 128 In 1975 the Waldensian Church joined the Methodist Evangelical Church in Italy to form the Union of Waldensian and Methodist Churches It has 50 000 members 45 000 Waldensians of whom 30 000 in Italy and some 15 000 divided between Argentina and Uruguay and 5 000 Methodists The eight per thousand tax Italian otto per mille introduced 1985 in Italy greatly helped the Waldensian community The eight per thousand law allows taxpayers to choose to whom they devolve a compulsory 8 0 8 eight per thousand from their annual income tax return They may choose an organised religion recognised by Italy or a social assistance scheme run by the Italian State While the Waldensians have only about 25 000 enlisted members more than 600 000 Italians are willing to support the Waldensian community and its charitable works 129 The ordination of women and since 2010 the blessing of same sex unions 130 131 are allowed South America edit nbsp Festivities celebrating the 150th anniversary of Italian immigration to Colonia Valdense Uruguay The first Waldensian settlers from Italy arrived in South America in 1856 From that date there have been several migrations especially to Argentina such as the town of Jacinto Arauz in the southern part of the province of La Pampa where they arrived around 1901 As of 2016 update the Waldensian Church of the Rio de La Plata which forms a united church with the Waldensian Evangelical Church has approximately 40 congregations and 15 000 members shared between Uruguay and Argentina 132 The Uruguayan town of Colonia Valdense in the department of Colonia is the administrative center of the Waldensian Evangelical Church of the River Plate In 1969 the Church established a mission in Barrio Nuevo which became a soup kitchen for Saturdays and Sundays for 500 poor families Missionary activity has led to the conversion of new people without Waldensian ancestry who are called new Waldensian 133 From Uruguay or directly from Italy some Waldensian families also found a home in Brazil There they ended up joining the local Protestant churches 134 United States edit nbsp The Waldensian Presbyterian Church in the town of Valdese North Carolina This congregation belongs to the Presbyterian Church USA Since colonial times there have been Waldensians who sailed to America as marked by the presence of them in New Jersey and Delaware Many Waldensians having escaped persecution in their homelands by making their way to the tolerant Dutch Republic crossed the Atlantic to start anew in the New Netherland colony establishing the first church in North America on Staten Island in 1670 135 In the late nineteenth century many Italians among them Waldensians emigrated to the United States They founded communities in New York City Boston Chicago Monett Missouri Galveston Texas Rochester New York Hunter Utah and Ogden Utah 136 The Monett congregation was among the first to be established in the United States in 1875 by some 40 settlers who had formed the original South American settlement in Uruguay in the 1850s With the outbreak of the Uruguayan Civil War they had fled violence in the Uruguayan countryside traveling first back to Europe then across the Northern Atlantic to New York and by train to southern Missouri Waldensians living in the Cottian Alps region of Northern Italy continued to migrate to Monett until the early 1900s augmenting the original colony and founded another larger settlement in Valdese North Carolina in 1893 The first Waldenses settled in North Carolina in 1893 137 Both the Monett and Valdese congregations use the name Waldensian Presbyterian Church In 1853 a group of approximately 70 Waldensians including men women and children left their homes in the Piedmont Valleys and migrated to Pleasant Green Hunter and Ogden Utah after being converted to Mormonism by Lorenzo Snow These Waldensians maintained their cultural heritage while passing on their mixture of Mormon and Waldensian faiths to their descendants Their descendants still consider themselves both Mormon and Waldensian and have met occasionally over the many decades to celebrate both heritages 138 139 140 141 In 1906 through the initiative of church forces in New York City Waldensian interest groups were invited to coalesce into a new entity The American Waldensian Aid Society AWS organized to collect funds and apply the same to the aid of the Waldensian Church in Italy and elsewhere and to arouse and maintain interest throughout the US in the work of said Church Today this organization continues as the American Waldensian Society The American Waldensian Society recently marked its Centennial with a conference and celebrations in New York City By the 1920s most of the Waldensian churches and missions merged into the Presbyterian Church due to the cultural assimilation of the second and third generations The work of the American Waldensian Society continues in the United States today The American Waldensian Society aims to foster dialogue and partnership among Waldensian Churches in Italy and South America and Christian churches within North America in order to promote a compelling vision of Waldensian Christian witness for North America Thus the American Waldensian Society makes public the contemporary and historic heritage to which Waldensian spirituality is committed Tell the Story Encourage Crossings and Provide Financial Support 142 The best known Waldensian Churches in America were in New York Monett Missouri and in Valdese North Carolina The church in New York City was disbanded by the mid 1990s 143 The American Waldensian Society assists churches organizations and families in the promotion of Waldensian history and culture The society allies with those who work to preserve their millennial heritage among their descendants For example over the course of 45 years the Old Colony Players in Valdese North Carolina have staged From this Day Forward an outdoor drama telling the story of the Waldenses and the founding of Valdese 137 The Waldensian Presbyterian churches in the United States and the American Waldensian Society have links with the Italian based Waldensian Evangelical Church but unlike the South American Waldensian communities today they are independent institutions from the European organization Germany edit nbsp Coat of arms of Le Bourcet part of Althengstett in Wurttemberg nbsp Arnaud s fountain in Perouse Wurttemberg Several thousand Waldenses fled from Italy and France to Germany Henri Arnaud 1641 1721 pastor and leader of the Piedmont Waldensians rescued his co religionists from their dispersion under the persecution of Victor Amadeus II the Duke of Savoy Eberhard Louis Duke of Wurttemberg invited the Waldensians to his territory When the Waldensians were exiled a second time Arnaud accompanied them in their exile to Schonenberg and continued to act as their pastor until his death Those who remained in Germany were soon assimilated by the State Churches Lutheran and Reformed and they are a part of various Landeskirchen in the Evangelical Church in Germany The new settlers were free in their religious services and kept holding them in French till the nineteenth century The Waldensian community is often overlooked as the Huguenots were larger in number Henri Arnaud s home in Schonenberg close to Otisheim is a Museum today A memorial plate refers to the introduction of potatoes in Wurttemberg by the Waldensians nbsp The Waldensian stone was erected north of Neuhengstett in 1881 to commemorate the Waldensian families who originally settled there Main parts of the Waldensian refugees found a new home in Hessen Darmstadt Kassel Homburg Nassau Dillenburg and in the then Grand Duchee Wurttemberg The founded new communities in Rohrbach Wembach und Hahn today part of Ober Ramstadt Walldorf today Morfelden Walldorf Bad Homburg Dornholzhausen Gottstreu and Gewissenruh Oberweser Charlottenberg Still today French family names Gille Roux Granget Conle Gillardon Common Jourdan Piston Richardon Servay Conte Baral Gay Orcellet or Salen show the Savoyard background Stuttgart hosts as well an Italian Waldensian community with about 100 members Municipality names like Pinache Serres both now part of Wiernsheim Grossvillars part of Oberderdingen Kleinvillars Perouse show the French heritage the latter communities are close to Maulbronn and its UNESCO world heritage site monastery and school Maulbronn was the place of the festivities for the 250th anniversary of the Waldensian emigration to Germany 123 which played as well an important role in German Italian reconciliation after World War II 123 The Waldensian community is active and has various associations maintaining the specific heritage and keep relationships with their counterparts in Italy and South America 144 145 146 147 That includes as well a close watch on the ecumene with the Waldensian influenced theologians being more doubtful about a stronger cooperation with the Catholic Church than others See also editPeter Waldo Arnoldists Czech reformers Petr Chelcicky Jan Hus Jerome of Prague and Hussitism Durand of Huesca later re converted to Catholicism early Spanish follower of Peter Waldo Frederick Henry Snow Pendleton Anglican protector who worked with the Waldensians in South America Henri Arnaud a Waldensian writer pastor and soldier List of Italian religious minority politicians Lollards Proto Protestantism Restorationism Waldensian Evangelical Church John Charles Beckwith Luserna San Giovanni Val Pellice Waldensian valleysReferences edit a b Macy Gary 1984 The Theologies of the Eucharist in the Early Scholastic Period A Study of the Salvific Function of the Sacrament According to the Theologians C 1080 c 1220 Clarendon Press p 57 ISBN 978 0 19 826669 3 a b Weber N 1912 Waldenses Catholic Encyclopedia New Advent Retrieved 28 January 2019 The real founder of the sect was a wealthy merchant of Lyons who in the early documents is called Waldes Waldo On the feast of the Assumption 1176 he disposed of the last of his earthly possessions and shortly after took the vow of poverty A History of the Waldensians Waldenses Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 28 January 2019 little is known with certainty about the reputed founder Valdes also called Peter Waldo or Valdo As a layman Valdes preached 1170 1176 in Lyon France E Cameron Waldenses Rejection of the Holy Church in Medieval Europe Oxford 2000 pp 49 62 Cameron 2000 pp 264 284 Patto di integrazione globale tra le chiese metodiste e valdesi Chiesa Evangelica Valdese Unione delle chiese Metodiste e Valdesi Retrieved 23 March 2014 Per un patto tra la Chiesa Assemblee di Dio e la Chiesa valdese PDF 20 September 2009 Retrieved 23 March 2014 Quienes somos IEVRP in Spanish Retrieved 9 April 2019 South America www waldensian org Retrieved 9 April 2019 a b American Waldensian Society Retrieved 26 February 2014 Stroud James Edward October 2011 The Knights Templar amp the Protestant Reformation Xulon Press p 70 ISBN 978 1 61904 906 2 a b Pita Gonzalo 2014 Waldensian and Catholic Theologies of History in the XII XIV Centuries Part I Journal of the Adventist Theological Society 25 2 65 87 Medieval Sourcebook Accusations against the Waldensians Fordham University Retrieved 26 February 2014 Moreland Samuel 1658 History of the Evangelical Churches of the Valleys of Piedmont Henry Hills Vos J G April 1996 The Use and Abuse of Church History Ordained Servant 5 2 Philip Schaff History of the Christian Church Volume V The Middle Ages A D 1049 1294 Christian Classics Ethereal Library www ccel org Retrieved 7 August 2022 Inquisitor Reyenerious A D 1250 and extracted by Allix Chap 22 Morland Samuel 1658 The history of the Evangelical churches of the valleys of Piemont containing a most exact geographical description of the place and a faithfull account of the doctrine life and persecutions of the ancient inhabitants Together with a most naked and punctual relation of the late bloudy massacre 1655 And a narrative of all the following transactions to the year of Our Lord 1658 Princeton Theological Seminary Library London Printed by Henry Hills for Adoniram Byfield p 143 Lawrence Eugene 1876 Historical Studies pp 202 204 Bosio Enrico La Nobla Leyczon consideree au point de vue de la doctrine de la morale et de l histoire in French Bulletin de la Societe d Histoire Vaudoise no 2 dic 1885 pp 20 36 TAYLOR Daniel T 1856 The Voice of the Church on the Coming and Kingdom of the Redeemer Or a History of the Doctrine of the Reign of Christ on Earth Revised and Edited with a Preface by H L Hastings Third Edition p 129 Montet Edouard La noble lecon texte original d apres le manuscrit de Cambridge 1888 pp 19 26 Montet Edouard La noble lecon texte original d apres le manuscrit de Cambridge 1888 p 19 a b Alvarez Sandra 15 November 2012 The Eucharist and the Negotiation of Orthodoxy in the High Middle Ages Medievalists Retrieved 21 May 2023 The earliest Waldensian sources show a strong belief in the presence of Christ in the Eucharist They drew on Peter Lombards Sentences to respond to the Cathars and explain how evil men could consume the Eucharist Nothing here was heretical or deviated from Orthodoxy a b Schaff Philip History of the Christian Church Volume V The Middle Ages A D 1049 1294 Christian Classics Ethereal Library www ccel org Retrieved 29 July 2022 Audisio Gabriel 2007 Preachers by Night The Waldensian Barbes 15th 16th Centuries BRILL p 192 ISBN 978 90 04 15454 4 a b c Anderson Roberta Bellenger Dominic 17 June 2013 Medieval Worlds A Sourcebook Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 40513 6 William Jones History of the Christian Church From the Birth of Christ to the 18th Century Delmarva Publications Inc a b Waldenses Description History amp Beliefs www britannica com Retrieved 22 January 2023 Waldenses Description History amp Beliefs Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 22 January 2023 Philip Schaff History of the Christian Church Volume V The Middle Ages A D 1049 1294 Christian Classics Ethereal Library www ccel org Retrieved 29 July 2022 Waldenses Description History amp Beliefs Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 10 November 2023 Audisio Gabriel 2007 Preachers by Night The Waldensian Barbes 15th 16th Centuries Leiden Boston Brill p 44 ISBN 9789004154544 Schaff Philip History of the Christian Church Volume V The Middle Ages A D 1049 1294 Christian Classics Ethereal Library www ccel org Retrieved 7 August 2022 Philip Schaff History of the Christian Church Volume V The Middle Ages A D 1049 1294 Christian Classics Ethereal Library www ccel org Retrieved 11 November 2023 Waldenses Description History amp Beliefs Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 24 January 2023 Liber visionum et miraculorum Anonymous Chronicles of Lyon Tourn Giorgio 1999 Les Vaudois l etonnante aventure d un peuple eglise Claudiana Minahan J 2002 Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations S Z Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations Ethnic and National Groups Around the World Greenwood Press p 2031 ISBN 978 0 313 32384 3 Retrieved 11 August 2023 Leger Jean 1669 Histoire generale des Eglises evangeliques des vallees de Piemont ou vaudoises divisee en deux livres par Jean Leger Pasteur amp Moderateur des Eglises des Vallees amp depuis la violence de la Persecution appele a l Eglise Wallonne de Leyde Le tout enrichi de Tailles douces in French chez Jean Le Carpentier p 155 Gilly William Stephen 1831 Waldensian Researches During a Second Visit to the Vaudois of Piemont With an Introductory Inquiry Into the Antiquity and Purity of the Waldensian Church C J G amp F Rivington Tuy Lucas de 1613 Lucae Tudensis Episcopi scriptores aliquot succedanei contra sectam Waldensium nunc primum in lucem editi cum prolegomenis et notis in Latin excudebat Andreas Angermarius p 54 Arnaud Henri 1710 Histoire de la glorieuse rentree des Vaudois in French Harris M Roy 1984 Old Waldensian Some linguistic and editorial observations Romance Philology 38 2 pp 200 225 a b c d Waldenses Catholic Encyclopedia 1 October 1912 Retrieved 26 February 2014 via New Advent Brooke Rosalind B 1975 The Coming of the Friars New York Routledge pp 72 73 Comba Emilio 1978 History of the Waldenses of Italy from their origin to the Reformation New York AMS Press ISBN 978 0 4041 6119 4 Biller Peter August 2006 Goodbye to Waldensianism Past amp Present 192 192 3 33 doi 10 1093 pastj gtl004 ISSN 0031 2746 JSTOR 4125197 Herbermann Charles George 1913 The Catholic Encyclopedia p 250 Universal Knowledge Foundation Gretser J 1738 Opera omnia antehac ab ipsomet auctore accurate recognita opusculis multis notis et paralipomenis pluribus propriis locis in hac editione insertis aucta et illustrata nunc selecto ordine ad certos titul Lutherus academicus et Waldenses sumptibus Joannis Conradi Peez p 112 1 Gretser Jacob 1738 Opera omnia antehac ab ipsomet auctore accurate recognita opusculis multis notis et paralipomenis pluribus propriis locis in hac editione insertis aucta et illustrata nunc selecto ordine ad certos titulos revocata in Latin p 112 a b Damstegt Gerard Autumn 2016 Decoding Ancient Waldenses Names New Discoveries Andrews University Seminary Studies 54 2 Goldast Melchior 1607 Melchioris Haiminsfeldii Goldasti Rationale Constitutionum Imperialium Autoschediasthen Sive Extemporale In quo cum ipsis Constitutionibus argumenta dicuntur tum Sacri Romani Imperii iura aduersus Caesaris Baronii Cardinalis Romani Annales elenchos praescribuntur p 78 in Latin Eymerich O P Nicolau 1595 Directorium Inquisitorum in Latin sumptibus Simeonis Vasalini p 225 Moneta of Cremona Ricchini Tommaso Agostino Sintes Giovanni Battista Fratta Domenico Maria Pomarede Silvio Palearini Nicolo Palearini Marco 1743 Venerabilis patris Monetae Cremonensis ordinis praedicatorum S P dominico aequalis Adversus Catharos et Valdenses libri quinque quos ex manuscriptis codd Vaticano Bononiensi ac Neapolitano Getty Research Institute Romae Ex typographia Palladis Excudebant Nicolaus et Marcus Palearini pp 475 476 Hering Johann Gottfried 1756 Compendieuses Kirchen und Ketzer Lexicon In welchem Alle Ketzereyen und Secten und deren Urheber und Stiffter von derer Apostel Zeiten her wie auch die meisten geistlichen Orden angezeiget und beschrieben darnebst auch viele zur Kirchen Historie dienende Termini und Sachen angefuhret und erklahret werden in German Fulde p 537 Unattributed 1524 Waldensian prose tracts IE TCD MS 260 in Latin France Dominique Vigneaux d Angrogne pp f 209 r Blair Adam 1832 History of the Waldenses With an Introductory Sketch of the History of the Christian Churches in the South of France and North of Italy Till These Churches Submitted to the Pope when the Waldenses Continued as Formerly Independent of the Papal See A Black p 527 Waldenses Catholic Encyclopedia Retrieved 5 November 2021 via New Advent Accounts of the Waldenses Sketches of the Waldenses Religious Tract Society 1846 p 18 Retrieved 2 March 2022 returning to the region of the Alps he Vigilantius found a body of Christians like minded with himself with these he gladly united and laboured Piedmontese Children Forced from their parents The Wesleyan Juvenile Offering A Miscellany of Missionary Information for Young Persons Wesleyan Missionary Society X 108 October 1853 Retrieved 29 February 2016 Audisio Gabriel 1999 The Waldensian Dissent Persecution and Survival c 1170 c 1570 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 14 16 22 ISBN 978 0 521 55984 3 Compare Blainey Geoffrey 26 October 2011 A Short History of Christianity Camberwell Victoria Penguin published 2011 p 430 ISBN 9780857962553 Retrieved 17 February 2018 The Waldensians eschewed the Cathars who were busy in the same regions at the same time While the Cathars were heretics the Waldensians generally were not Their real act of defiance was quietly to deny the existence of purgatory Ellwood R S Alles G D 2007 Waldensians The Encyclopedia of World Religions New York Facts on File p 471 ISBN 978 1 4381 1038 7 Galambosi Peter 2018 A budai eretnekmozgalom 1304 1307 The Heretical Movement in Buda 1304 1307 In Kadas Istvan Skorka Renata Weisz Boglarka eds Veretek utak katonak Gazdasagtorteneti tanulmanyok a magyar kozepkorrol in Hungarian MTA Bolcseszettudomanyi Kutatokozpont pp 223 245 ISBN 978 963 416 124 0 Innocent VIII 1669 Id nostri cordis Histoire generale des Eglises Evangeliques des Vallees du Piemont ou Vaudoises Vol 2 p 8 Baronio Cesare 1663 Annales ecclesiastici in Latin Mascardus Bl Angelo Carletti di Chivasso Catholic Encyclopedia Retrieved 30 April 2016 Wylie J A 1888 History of the Waldenses Dalcassian Publishing Company p 62 Knecht R J 1984 Francis I Cambridge University Press p 405 ISBN 978 0 5212 4344 5 James Dabney McCabe 1874 Cross and crown or The sufferings and triumphs of the heroic men and women who were persecuted for the religion of Jesus Christ National Pub Co p 66 Retrieved 16 November 2018 Wylie J A 1996 1860 History of the Waldenses Hartland p 132 ISBN 9780923309305 dead link Milton Sonnet 18 Dartmouth edu Archived from the original on 25 July 2008 Retrieved 26 February 2014 Scharf Thomas J 1888 History of Delaware 1609 1888 L J Richards amp Co Philadelphia Vol 1 Vol 2 Janavel Regard eu org Retrieved 26 February 2014 Stephens Prescot 1998 The Waldensian Story A Study in Faith Intolerance and Survival Lewes Sussex Book Guild ISBN 978 1 8577 6280 8 Giorgio Spini 1971 L Evangelo e il berretto frigio Storia del movimento evangelico in Italia Vol I Claudiana Turin Watt George B 1941 Waldenses in the New World Durham North Carolina Duke University Press Bachstadt Malan Camusso Christian 2002 Per Una Storia dell Industria Dolciaria Torinese il Caso Caffarel p 63 Doctoral thesis Economics and Business Universita degli Studi di Torino Gilly William Stephen 1848 The Romaunt Version of the Gospel According to St John with an Introductory History of the Version of the New Testament Anciently in Use Among the Old Waldenses London J Murray Francis asks forgiveness for Waldensian persecutions killings National Catholic Reporter 22 June 2015 Retrieved 14 February 2021 Brackney William H 3 May 2012 Historical Dictionary of Radical Christianity Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 7365 0 a b David Zdenek V 29 July 2003 Finding the Middle Way The Utraquists Liberal Challenge to Rome and Luther Woodrow Wilson Center Press ISBN 978 0 8018 7382 9 Brock Peter 8 March 2015 Pacifism in Europe to 1914 Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1 4008 6749 3 Adogame A Shankar S 2012 Religion on the Move New Dynamics of Religious Expansion in a Globalizing World International Studies in Religion and Society Brill p 208 ISBN 978 90 04 24337 8 Retrieved 10 March 2023 Prudlo D S 2016 Certain Sainthood Canonization and the Origins of Papal Infallibility in the Medieval Church Cornell University Press p 59 ISBN 978 1 5017 0152 8 Retrieved 10 March 2023 Kim E J F Bush L 2012 The Rise of the Global South The Decline of Western Christendom and the Rise of Majority World Christianity Wipf amp Stock p 196 ISBN 978 1 61097 970 2 Retrieved 10 March 2023 Weber N 1912 Waldenses Catholic Encyclopedia New Advent Retrieved 28 January 2019 The first Waldensian congregations it was maintained were established by St Paul who on his journey to Spain visited the valleys of Piedmont In the nineteenth century however it became evident to critics that the Waldensian documents had been tampered with See also Monastier Antoine 1847 A History of the Vaudois Church from Its Origin And of the Vaudois of Piedmont to the Present Day Histoire de l Eglise vaudoise depuis son origine et des vaudois du Piemont jusqu a nos jours translated from the French ed London Religious Tract Society published 1848 Retrieved 25 February 2019 Monastier Antoine 1859 A History of the Vaudois Church from Its Origin London Religious Tract Society p 58 Weber N 1912 Waldenses Catholic Encyclopedia New Advent Retrieved 28 January 2019 Pope Lucius III consequently included them among the heretics against whom he issued a Bull of excommunication at Verona in 1184 Garrett James Leo 2009 6 Baptist Landmarkism Baptist Theology A Four century Study Baptist Series reprint ed Macon Georgia Mercer University Press p 216 ISBN 9780881461299 Retrieved 25 February 2019 George Herbert Orchard 1796 1861 an English Baptist pastor in Bedfordshire sought to trace Baptist churches from the time of John the Baptist through such groups as the Montanists Novationists Donatists Paulicians Patarines Petrobrusians Arnoldists Albigenses Waldenses Unitas Fratrum Lollards and Anabaptists Thereby Baptist church successionism was added to the body of Landmark beliefs Lawrence Eugene 1876 Historical Studies p 199 Benedict David 1813 A General History of the Baptist Denomination in America And Other Parts of the World Lincoln amp Edmands no 53 Cornhill p 413 Luc d Achery 1723 Spicilegium sive collectio veterum aliquot scriptorum qui in Galliae bibliothecis delituerant Olim editum opera ac studio d Lucae d Achery in Latin National Central Library of Rome p 210 Theileman van Braght 2009 Martyrs Mirror Scottdale Pennsylvania Herald Press p 287 Steven Blaupot ten Cate 1844 Geschiedkundig onderzoek naar den Waldenzischen oorsprong van de Nederlandsche Doopsgezinden Amsterdam Frederik Muller Geschiedkundig onderzoek at the Internet Archive Waller John L 1847 The Western Baptist Review Were the Waldenses Baptists or Pedo Baptists A G Hodges and Company printers pp 30 32 Lateran 4 1215 Ewtn com Retrieved 26 February 2014 Brian Tierney 1970 The Middle Ages Volume 1 p 223 Sources of Medieval History New York Alfred Knopf quoted from S R Maitland 1832 History of the Albigenses and Waldenses G H Orchard 1987 A Concise History of Baptists p 180 Texarkana Bogard Press Thomas Armitage 1988 A History of the Baptists pp 302 303 Watertown Wisconsin Baptist Heritage Press Greg Wilson 1 September 1988 Waldenses Were Independent Baptists Landmark Independent Baptist Church Retrieved 26 February 2014 waldenses confessions of faith Baptistdocuments tripod com Retrieved 26 February 2014 Wylie J A 1882 The History of Protestantism White Ellen G 1870 Chapter 4 The Waldenses The Great Controversy Dollinger Johann 1890 Beitrage zur Sektengeschichte Des Mittelalters in German 2nd ed Munich p 661 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Andrews J N 1873 Chapter 21 The Sabbath During the Dark Ages History of the Sabbath Andrews J N 1873 Chapter 25 Sabbath Keepers During The Reformation Times From The Fifteenth To The Seventeenth Century History of the Sabbath Audisio Gabriel The Waldensian dissent persecution and survival c 1170 c 1570 Cambridge University Press 1999 pp 72 77 The first historian on the Waldensians Gerolamo Miolo in his Historia breve et vera de gl affari de i valdesi delle Valli 1587 explicitly stated that Thus began the appellation of Poors of Lyon also called Waldensians Lyonists insabbati because they did not observe either the Sabbath nor any feasts p 84 Homer Michael W May 2006 Seeking Primitive Christianity in the Waldensian Valleys Protestants Mormons Adventists and Jehovah s Witnesses in Italy Nova Religio University of California Press 9 4 8 doi 10 1525 nr 2006 9 4 005 JSTOR 10 1525 nr 2006 9 4 005 William Jones 1832 The History of the Christian Church The Ages Digital Library Perrin Jean Paul 1847 History of the Ancient Christians PDF retrieved 26 February 2014 La Confesion de fe de los Valdenses llamada del ano 1120 August 1935 Boletin de la Sociedad Sudamericana de Historia Valdense p 58 La Confesion de fe de los Valdenses llamada del ano 1120 August 1935 Boletin de la Sociedad Sudamericana de Historia Valdense pp 57 60 Vinay Valdo December 1972 Memoires de George Morel l importanza del codice valdese c 5 18 Ms 259 del Trinity College di Dublino per la storia dell adesione dei Valdesi alla Riforma Bollettino della Societa di Studi Valdesi Bulletin de la Societe d Histoire Vaudoise pp 93 132 Jean Leger Siegmund Jacob Baumgartens Johann Jacob Korn 1750 Algemeine Geschichte der Waldenser oder der evangelischen Kirchen in den Thalern von Piemont Heinrich Gottlieb Kreussler 1830 Ruckblicke auf die Geschichte der Reformation oder Luther in Leben und That zur Erinnerung an die dreihundertjahrige Augsburgische Confessions similar in F Bender 1850 Geschichte der Waldenser History is the Waldensians a b c d e f g h i Barbro Lovisa 1994 Italienische Waldenser und das protestantische Deutschland 1655 bis 1989 Italian Waldensianism and protestant Germany 1655 to 1989 Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht Gottingen ISBN 978 3 5255 6539 1 Paul R Tarmann 2010 Der Armutsbegriff der Waldenser eine sozialphilosophische Annaherung Frankfurt am Main Lang ISBN 978 3 6316 0203 4 Chiesa Evangelica Pentecostale L Eterno Nostra Giustizia Grotte info 26 December 2012 Retrieved 26 February 2014 Scotland Nigel 2012 Christianity Outside the Box Learning from Those Who Rocked the Boat Wipf amp Stock Publishers p 72 Whittaker Andrew 2010 Italy Be Fluent in Italian Life and Culture Thorogood Publishing p 280 Gustavus Adolphus Union website Common projects in German GAW Waldenser entries Valdese OPM Tavola otto per mille della dichiarazione irpef alla chiesa valdese www ottopermillevaldese org Archived from the original on 12 January 2019 Retrieved 15 March 2016 Italian Protestants approve same sex blessings Presbyterian Church U S A 7 September 2010 Retrieved 26 May 2016 Gaetano Pecoraro 27 August 2010 Coppie gay storica apertura della Chiesa valdese Ma si aspetta ancora una legge Il Fatto Quotidiano in Italian Retrieved 30 April 2016 South America American Waldensian Society 2016 Retrieved 6 July 2016 Geymonat Roger El templo y la escuela los valdenses en el Uruguay Cal y Canto 1994 Valdenses no Brasil Ensaios e Notas in Brazilian Portuguese 17 February 2017 Retrieved 20 May 2023 Morris Ira Morris s Memorial History of Staten Island New York Volume 1 1898 page 40 Regions Europe Countries Italy Global Mormonism Project Brigham Young University a b Waldenses Settle in Burke County This Day in North Carolina History N C Department of Natural amp Cultural Resources 29 May 2016 Retrieved 29 May 2019 Homer Michael W Fall 2000 Like the Rose in the Wilderness The Mormon Mission in the Kingdom of Sardinia PDF Mormon Historical Studies Mormon Historic Sites Foundation 1 2 25 62 Homer Michael W 2002 Il Libro di Mormon Anticipating Growth beyond Italy s Waldensian Valleys Journal of Book of Mormon Studies Maxwell Institute For Religious Scholarship Brigham Young University 11 1 40 44 doi 10 5406 jbookmormstud 11 1 0040 S2CID 193621954 archived from the original on 1 July 2013 retrieved 22 December 2011 Stoke Diane 1985 The Mormon Waldensians PDF MA Department of History Brigham Young University Harold B Lee Library Digital Collections Platene Giuseppe 1 April 1989 To A Home in the Land of the Free Christianity Today Who We Are Waldensian org Retrieved 26 February 2014 Medieval New York Waldensians in New York City Fordham University 3 May 1998 Retrieved 26 February 2014 Deutsche Waldenservereinigung www waldenser de in German Retrieved 20 May 2023 Deutsche Waldenserorte Archived from the original on 1 June 2017 Retrieved 30 April 2016 Weidenmann Waldenserort Nordhausen Retrieved 30 April 2016 Waldenserkirche Evangelische Waldenser Kirchengemeinde Retrieved 30 April 2016 Further reading editArnold Eberhard 1984 The Early Anabaptists Plough Publishing House ISBN 978 0 87486 192 1 Audisio Gabriel 2007 Preachers by Night The Waldensian Barbes 15th 16th Centuries ISBN 978 90 04 15454 4 Audisio Gabriel 1999 The Waldensian Dissent Persecution and Survival c 1170 c 1570 Cambridge Medieval Textbooks Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 55984 7 Bellito Christopher M Ed A Companion to the Waldenses in the Middle Ages ISBN 9789004420410 Bost Ami 1848 History of the Bohemian and Moravian Brethren pp 4 5 Religious Tract Society of London Cameron Euan 2001 The Waldenses Rejections of Holy Church in Medieval Europe ISBN 0 631 22497 1 ISBN 978 0 631 22497 6 Comba Emilio 1978 History of the Waldenses of Italy from their origin to the Reformation ISBN 0 404 16119 7 Jones William 1816 The History of the Waldenses Connected with a Sketch of the Christian Church from the Birth of Christ to the Eighteenth Century Vol 2 2nd ed London Gale and Fenner Muston Alexis 1978 The Israel of the Alps a complete history of the Waldenses and their colonies prepared in great part from unpublished documents ISBN 0 404 16140 5 Sossi Andrea 2010 Medioevo Valdese 1173 1315 Poverta Eucarestia e Predicazione Tra identita minoritaria e rappresentazione cifrata del rapporto tra l uomo e l Assoluto UNI Service Editrice Trento Wylie James Aitken c 1860 History of the Waldenses ISBN 1 57258 185 9 online ebookExternal links edit nbsp Wikisource has the text of a 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article about Waldensians nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Waldensians nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Waldensians American Waldensian Society North America Waldenses at Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online The Waldensian Movement From Waldo to the Reformation Portals nbsp Christianity nbsp France nbsp Italy nbsp History nbsp Religion Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Waldensians amp oldid 1184689585, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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