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Moses Amayraut (1596 - 1664),
also known as Amyraldus, was a French Protestant theologian and metaphysician
Born at Bourgueil, in the valley of
Anjou. His father was a lawyer, and, designing Moses for his own profession, sent him on
the completion of his study of the humanities at Orléans to the university of
Poitiers.
At the university he took the degree of licentiate (B.A.) of laws. On his way home from the university he passed through
Saumur, and, having visited the pastor of the Protestant church there, was introduced
by him to Philippe de Mornay, governor of the city. Struck with young Amyraut's ability and culture, they both urged him to
change from law to theology. His father advised him to revise his philological and philosophical studies, and read over Calvin's
Institutions, before finally determining. He did so, and decided for theology.
He thereupon removed to Saumur--destined to be for ever associated with his name--and studied under J. Cameron, who ultimately
regarded him as his greatest scholar. He had a brilliant course, and was in due time licensed as a minister of the French
Protestant Church. The contemporary civil wars and excitements hindered his advancement. His first church was in Saint-Aignan, in
the province of Maine. There he remained two years. The eminent theologian Jean Daille, being then removed to Paris, advised the
church at Saumur to secure Amyraut as his successor, praising him "as above himself." The university of Saumur at the same time
had fixed its eyes on him as professor of theology. The great churches of Paris and
Rouen also contended for him, and to win him sent their deputies to the provincial
synod of Anjou.
Amyraut had left the choice to the synod. He was appointed to Saumur in 1633, and to the professor's chair along with the
pastorate. On the occasion of his inauguration he maintained for thesis De Sacerdotio Christi. His co-professors were Louis
Cappel and Josue de la Place, who also were Cameron's pupils. Very beautiful was the lifelong friendship of these three
remarkable men, who collaborated in the Theses Salmurienses, a collection of theses propounded by candidates in theology prefaced
by the inaugural addresses of the three professors. Full of energy, Amyraut very speedily gave to French Protestantism a new
force.
In 1631 he published his Traite des religions, a book that still lives; and from this year onward he was a foremost
man in the church. Chosen to represent the provincial synod of Anjou, Touraine and Maine at the national synod held in 1631 at
Charenton, he was appointed as orator to present to the king The Copy of their Complaints and Grievances for the
Infractions and Violations of the Edict of Nantes.
Previous deputies had addressed the king on their bended knees, whereas the representatives of the Catholics had been
permitted to stand. Amyraut consented to be orator only if the assembly authorized him to stand. There was intense resistance.
Cardinal Richelieu himself, preceded by lesser dignitaries,
condescended to visit Amyraut privately, to persuade him to kneel; but Amyraut held resolutely to his point and carried it. His
"oration" on this occasion, which was immediately published in the French Mercury, remains a striking landmark in the history of
French Protestantism. During his absence on this matter the assembly debated "Whether the Lutherans who desired it, might be admitted into communion with the Reformed Churches of France at the Lord's Table." It was decided in the affirmative previous to his return; but he approved with
astonishing eloquence, and thereafter was ever in the front rank in maintaining intercommunion between all churches holding the main doctrines of the Reformation.
P. Bayle recounts the title-pages of no fewer than thirty-two books of which Amyraut was the author. These show that he took
part in all the great controversies on predestination and Arminianism which then so agitated and harassed all Europe.
Substantially he held fast the Calvinism of his preceptor Cameron; but, like
Richard Baxter in England, by his breadth and charity he exposed himself to all
manner of misconstruction. In 1634 he published his Traité de la predestination, in which he tried to mitigate the
harsh features of predestination by his Universalismus hypotheticus. God, he taught, predestines all men to
happiness on condition of their having faith. This gave rise to a charge of heresy, of which he was acquitted at the national
synod held at Alençon in 1637, and presided over by Benjamin Basnage (1580-1652). The charge was brought up again at the national
synod of Charenton in 1644, when he was again acquitted. A third attack at the synod of Loudun in 1659 met with no better success. The university of Saumur became the university of French
Protestantism.
Amyraut had as many as a hundred students in attendance upon his prelections. Another historic part filled by Amyraut was in
the negotiations originated by Pierre le Gouz de la Berchere (1600-1653), first president of the parlement of Grenoble, when
exiled to Saumur, for a reconciliation and reunion of the Catholics of France with the
French Protestants. Very large were the concessions made by Richelieu in his personal interviews with Amyraut; but, as with the
Worcester House negotiations in England between the Church of England and nonconformists, they inevitably fell through. On all sides the statesmanship and eloquence of
Amyraut were conceded. His De l'elevation de la foy et de l'abaissement de la raison en la creance des mysteres de la
religion (1641) gave him early a high place as a metaphysician. Exclusive of his controversial writings, he left behind
him a very voluminous series of practical evangelical books, which have long remained the fireside favourites of the peasantry of
French Protestantism. Amongst these are Estat des fideles apres la mort; Sur l'oraison dominicale; Du merite des
oeuvres; Traité de la justification; and paraphrases of books of the Old and New Testament. His closing years were
weakened by a severe fall he met with in 1657. He died on the 18th of January 1664.
See Edm. Saigey, Moses Amyraut, sa vie et ses écrits (1849); Alex. Schweizer in Tüb. theol. Jahrbb., 1852, pp. 41 ff. 155 ff.,
Protestant. Central-Dogmen (1854 ff.), ii. 225 ff., and in Herzog-Hauck, Realencyklopädie; Bayle, s.v.; Biog. Univ., s.v.; John
Quick's Synod. in Gall. Reform. pp. 352-357; Ibid. MS. Icones Sacrae Gallicanae: Life of Cameron.
Initial text from 1911 encyclopedia -- Please update as needed
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