Modern use of the term crypto-Philippist Beginning in the 20th century, some scholars began using the term crypto-Philippist in place of the word crypto-Calvinist. However, there is no change in the meaning of the term.
History When Luther died in 1546, his closest friend and ally,
Philipp Melanchthon, became the leading Lutheran theologian of the
Protestant Reformation. He was by training not a theologian but rather a classics scholar, and his theological approach became more or less
irenic both toward
Catholicism and toward
Calvinism, an approach that his disciples, called
Philippists, also followed. This attitude towards the Reformed doctrine of the Eucharist had become evident already in 1540, when Melanchthon had published another version of the
Augsburg Confession ("
Variata"), in which the article on the
Real Presence differed essentially from what had been expressed in 1530. The wording is as follows: • Edition of 1530: "Concerning the Lord's Supper, they teach that the body and blood of Christ are truly present, and are distributed (communicated) to those that eat in the Lord's Supper; and they disapprove of those that teach otherwise." • "Variata" edition of 1540: "Concerning the Lord's Supper, they teach that with bread and wine are truly exhibited the body and blood of Christ to those that eat in the Lord's Supper." The altered edition was made the basis of negotiations with the Roman Catholics at the Colloquies of
Worms and
Ratisbon in 1541, and at the later Colloquies in 1546 and 1557. It was printed (with the title and preface of the Invariata) in
Corpus Doctrinae Philippicum in 1559; it was expressly approved by the Lutheran princes at the Convention of Naumburg in 1561, after Melanchthon's death, as an improved modification and authentic interpretation of the Confession, and was adhered to by the Melanchthonians and the Reformed even after the adoption of the
Book of Concord (1580).
John Calvin also signed it. However, it did not have the legal status given to the original version by the
Peace of Augsburg.
Second Sacramentarian Controversy The Real Presence for Luther was beyond any doubt: The host consecrated is
Christ's body, while for Melanchthon the words spoken during the establishment by Jesus only promised that his body and blood were received. Melanchthon rejected the doctrine of ubiquity and spoke about the personal presence of Christ in the Eucharist, without any further definitions. The theology of Melanchthon's school in general was opposed by Lutherans, who were called Flacians by their opponents. Later they were called "
Gnesio-Lutherans".
Matthias Flacius had been the leader against
Philippism in earlier controversies, but even Gnesio-Lutherans did not pay much attention to the doctrine of the Eucharist until
Joachim Westphal began, in 1552, to write against those who denied the Real Presence. When
John Calvin himself answered him in 1555, there was open, inter-Protestant controversy about Eucharist, which involved
Lasco,
Bullinger,
Ochino,
Valerandus Polanus,
Beza, and
Bibliander on the
Reformed side and
Timann,
Heshusius Paul von Eitzen,
Schnepff,
E. Alberus,
Gallus,
Flacius,
Judex,
Brenz, and
Andreä on the Lutheran side. The
Colloquy of Worms in 1557 was an attempt to achieve unity among Lutherans, but it failed. During these controversies the
State Church of the
Electorate of the Palatinate, where Philippism predominated, changed from the Lutheran to the
Reformed faith under
Frederick III (1560). The
Heidelberg Catechism, which was written there, was also meant to form bridges between Lutherans and Reformed in Germany – one of its authors,
Zacharias Ursinus, was Melanchthon's disciple.
Great Adoration Controversy There were a number of local controversies, such as the Saligerian Controversy in Lübeck in 1568 and 1574, a controversy in Rostock in 1569, a controversy in Bremen in 1554 involving Melanchthon's friend
Albert Rizaeus Hardenberg, and a controversy in Danzig in 1561–1562. The earliest of these incidents had happened with
Simon Wolferinus, pastor of St. Andreas at Eisleben in 1543, while Martin Luther still lived. The controversy was also about
eucharistic adoration, which was defended by "Gnesio-Lutherans" and also many other Lutherans outside of the Flacian party, including
Johann Hachenburg,
Andreas Musculus,
Jakob Rungius, and
Laurentius Petri. This belief was shared by
Nikolaus Selnecker,
Martin Chemnitz, and
Timotheus Kirchner. A feast of victory of genuine Lutheranism over Philippism was celebrated in one of the German principalities with prayers for the preservation of the doctrine of justification and the doctrine of the adoration of the Sacrament.
Paul Eber was one of the main Philippist opponents of eucharistic adoration. == In Saxony ==