
On New Year’s Day 1484, just weeks after Martin Luther was born, Huldrych (Ulrich) Zwingli entered a world trembling on the edge of change. Switzerland was a patchwork of cantons, proud of their independence, yet deeply entangled in foreign wars, selling their young men as mercenaries. The Church was rich and corrupt in many places; the people were often poor and spiritually starved.
Zwingli, a Swiss priest, humanist scholar, and musician, would become the leading reformer of Zürich and a driving force in the Swiss Reformation. When plague struck Zurich in 1519, he stayed instead of fleeing and nearly died. In his plague hymn, he cried to God:
“Help me, O Lord, my strength and rock;
Lo, at the door I hear death’s knock.”
That experience branded on his heart the truth that life and death are in God’s hands. It drove him deeper into Scripture and into a reforming fire that would reshape church, city, and eventually affect ideas of freedom and citizenship that echo into the modern West and America.
This article will show how Zwingli:
- Put God’s Word at the center of public life.
- Sought a Christian community where church and city walked together.
- Advanced ideas that influenced later notions of limited authority and republican freedom—even as he fell into grave sins: persecuting Anabaptists and fusing sword and gospel.
Timeline: Zwingli’s Life and the Swiss Reformation

- 1484 – Born in Wildhaus, a mountain village in Toggenburg (St. Gallen canton).
- 1500–1506 – Studies at Vienna and Basel, exposed to humanism and Erasmus.
- 1519 – Called as people’s priest to Grossmünster in Zürich; plague hits, he nearly dies.
- 1519–1523 – Begins sequential preaching through the New Testament, starting with Matthew—radically different from the Mass system.
- 1523 – Zürich disputations; city council sides with Zwingli and begins official reformation.
- 1525 – New communion liturgy replacing the mass; public breaking with Rome.
- 1525–1527 – Split with Anabaptists; council persecutes them (some executed). Zwingli supports this.
- 1528 – Bern disputation; Bern adopts Reformation, aiding spread across Swiss territories.
- 1531 – Killed as chaplain at the Battle of Kappel, fighting for Zürich’s Protestant cause.
Through all this, Zwingli sought to bring the light of the gospel into civic life—but he also helped bind the sword to the church in ways that would wound many.
“Scripture Alone”: Zwingli’s Passion for the Word

Zwingli’s core conviction can be heard in words later summarized as sola Scriptura—Scripture alone as the highest authority.
A later reflection of his stance says:
“I shall allow myself to be taught better, but only from the Scriptures, based upon the Scriptures which are inspired by God. Scripture alone is our ultimate authority.”
In Zürich he did something revolutionary:
- He preached verse by verse through entire books of the New Testament, in the vernacular, explaining and applying the text.
- He contrasted what he saw in Scripture with practices like indulgences, saint veneration, and the Latin Mass.
One description notes:
“As he began his ministry in Zurich… he read passages from the Bible in the language of his mostly illiterate congregation and, as he read, he would comment… providing interpretation and application to current issues.”
This embodied the conviction that faith comes by hearing the message of Christ. When people heard the Word clearly, the Triune God—Father, Son, and Spirit—could renew hearts, families, and even laws.
“Christ is our justification… our good works, if they are of Christ, are good; but if ours, they are neither right nor good.”
Zwingli
By insisting that Christ alone is our righteousness, he chipped away at systems of control built on fear, superstition, and human merit.
Church and City Together: Freedom and Its Dangers

Zwingli’s Zürich became a kind of laboratory for Christian civic reform.
- He worked closely with the city council, seeing them as partners in reform.
- One writer summarizes his view: “The Christian man is nothing else but a faithful and good citizen and the Christian city nothing other than the Christian church.”
- Church and civic community were seen as “one indivisible body” governed jointly by spiritual and secular officers under Scripture’s authority.
He believed:
- All authority is limited, delegated by God, and answerable to God.
- Priests were subordinate to magistrates, not above them; the medieval papacy had erred by exalting itself over princes.
This had liberating effects:
- The gospel shaped laws, education, and care for the poor.
- The city defended the right to preach Scripture against outside bishops.
- The idea that rulers are under God’s law, not above it, helped plant seeds for later constitutional thinking and republicanism.
Yet there was danger: by merging church and state so closely, Zwingli also created space for coercion in matters of faith.
- He supported using political force to advance reform; “reform could be carried out using political force.”
- Dissenters (like Anabaptists) faced fines, banishment, and even execution under “Christian” magistrates.
So Zwingli advanced freedom from Rome’s clerical supremacy, but often failed to defend freedom of conscience.
The Anabaptist Tragedy: When the Sword Took the Pulpit

In 1525, a group influenced by Zwingli’s preaching concluded that baptism should be reserved for believers only, not infants. They began baptizing each other as adults—thus the name Anabaptists (“re‑baptizers”).
Zwingli saw this as a grave threat to order and to his vision of a unified Christian city:
- For him, baptism also marked belonging to the covenant community; it was a public sign that the whole city was under God.
- Anabaptists, by rejecting infant baptism and refusing to swear civic oaths, challenged the tight bond between church and state.
He wrote harshly against them and supported the council’s decision to punish and, in some cases, execute them—often by drowning, grimly called “the third baptism.”
This is one of the darkest stains on his legacy:
- A movement born from a desire to obey Scripture ended up persecuting other believers in the name of that same Scripture.
- Instead of persuading by Word and Spirit, Zwingli too often relied on the magistrate’s sword.
God’s Story of Grace overrules human sin, but it does not excuse it. Here we must grieve and learn:
- The Trinitarian God does not need coercion; He wins hearts by truth and love.
- When church and state merge too tightly, violence easily masquerades as zeal.
Swiss Freedom and the Long Shadow Toward the Modern West

The Reformation in Switzerland, spearheaded by Zwingli, brought sweeping civil changes:
- Abolition of the mass, images removed from churches, new structures for poor relief and education.
- Councils and assemblies took on religious as well as civil duties, shaping a tradition of active citizen governance.
Over centuries, Swiss models of republican self‑rule and federal cantons influenced broader European and transatlantic political thought. Later Swiss thinkers would explicitly engage American constitutional ideas as they refined their own systems.
Thus, in a long, complex line:
- Zwingli’s insistence that all authority is limited and answerable to God helped erode absolute clerical power.
- His model of a Scripture‑guided community contributed to the idea that laws and governments must align with higher moral standards.
- This, in turn, resonated with American ideas about law above rulers, freedom of preaching, and the responsibility of citizens under God.
At the same time, America had to learn—often through painful struggle—to separate church and state more clearly than Zwingli did, in order to protect conscience and religious minorities.
God used Zwingli to push the story toward freedom, but others had to correct his errors to protect unity in diversity.
Lessons for Today: Joining the Triune God’s Work of Freedom and Unity

What can churches and believers today learn from Huldrych Zwingli?
Put the Word at the Center
Zwingli’s greatest service was to let Scripture shape preaching, worship, and public life.
- Churches today should major on clear, sequential teaching of the Bible, trusting the Spirit to change hearts.
- Public engagement should flow from God’s Word, not from party platforms or cultural anxieties.
Honor Both Freedom and Community
He sought a Christian city, where everyone lived under God’s gracious rule. That desire is good:
- The Trinity is a community of love; God wants human societies to echo this unity.
- We should care about how laws, schools, and economies reflect God’s justice and compassion.
But we must also learn from his failures:
- Coercion in matters of faith violates the gentle way of Christ.
- We should advocate for religious freedom and conscience even for those who disagree with us.
Practice Humble, Repentant Politics
Zwingli’s political skill helped spread reform, but his willingness to use force against dissenters and to die on a battlefield as a chaplain shows the danger of fusing kingdom and nation too tightly.
For Christians today:
- Engage politics, but remember that Christ’s kingdom is not of this world.
- Be quick to repent when our side does injustice.
- Seek policies that protect the weak, restrain abuse, and allow the gospel to be preached freely.
How This Article Shows God’s Story of Grace
In Zwingli’s story we see:
- The Father ruling over nations and cities, calling them to accountability.
- The Son as the only righteousness of sinners, the center of Zwingli’s preaching.
- The Spirit working through Scripture to awaken whole communities—yet grieved when that same Scripture is used to justify persecution.
Zwingli helped move the Church:
- From superstition to Scripture.
- From clerical tyranny toward shared civic responsibility.
- From unquestioned authority to the idea that all power is delegated and limited under God.
In a broken and fractured world, his life reminds us that:
- God can use bold, flawed reformers to advance freedom and unity.
- We must always test our reforms against love, justice, and the gentle heart of Christ.
- The Triune God still invites us to build communities where Word, worship, and public life point to His kingdom.
Summary
Huldrych Zwingli (1484–1531) led the Swiss Reformation, centering preaching on Scripture and insisting that Christ alone is our righteousness. He worked with Zürich’s council to reshape worship, education, and care for the poor under God’s Word, helping to weaken clerical absolutism and nurture traditions of citizen governance that influenced later ideas of freedom and republicanism in the West and beyond. Yet he also supported the persecution of Anabaptists and fused church and state so tightly that dissent was punished with the sword. His legacy calls the Church today to hold together biblical authority, freedom of conscience, and a humble pursuit of justice in public life, joining the Triune God in building communities of truth, freedom, and unity.
























































