SOURCE: Europe 1450 to 1789: Encyclopedia of the Early Modern World, vol. 4.
NOTE: The attached text is the pre-publication working copy of the published article. Consult
the published version before citing this text.
PIETISM. Historians have had difficulty agreeing about a definition for Pietism. A major reason is that the
term has been controversial since its first use in German Lutheran territories in the 1670s. Today
historians debate how narrowly or broadly to define the subject. However, there is general agreement
that, although in a narrow sense a Lutheran (and in part also a Reformed Protestant) phenomenon of the
later seventeenth century and the eighteenth century, Pietism had roots in the concerns of those
sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Christians who wanted to realize the ideals of discipline and
godliness in their personal and collective lives.
This impulse developed in part out of a dissatisfaction with institutional, hierarchical Protestantism
and its emphasis on salvation by faith alone. While pious theologians and lay people usually agreed that
faith was necessary for salvation, they insisted that sanctification was also essential. In other words,
merely dogmatic religion was not enough, for on its own it could lead to moral decline and institutional
complacency. True faith had to transform believers.
A wide range of Christians shared this kind of conviction before the rise of Pietism in the narrow
sense. Among those who held a lasting influence for later Pietists were Catholic mystics, British Puritans,
Protestant nonconformists and spiritualists, and Dutch Reformed and German Lutheran clergymen
concerned about moral reform.
The "Pietism" Controversies. By the early 1690s the definition of "Pietism" had become a subject
of heated public debate across Lutheran Germany. The Pietism controversies were important because
with them godliness was transformed from a subject for a minority of Protestants to an issue which
divided believers and resulted in deep and lasting changes in the character of Lutheranism and even
Protestantism as a whole.
The roots of the controversy began in the 1670s, and at their center was the Lutheran pastor
Philipp Jakob Spener (1635–1705). In 1675 while based in Frankfurt am Main Spener published Pia
Desideria: or Heartfelt Desires for a God-Pleasing Improvement of the True Protestant Church. In Pia
Desideria Spener outlined a program to improve the quality of the clergy and the moral lives of believers
according to a biblical model in the hopes of a better future for Christians. He did not intend his proposals
to undermine the established Orthodox Lutheran hierarchy; reforms, he felt, should take place within
existing institutional structures and be led by ordained clergymen.
A key part of Spener's reform plan involved the collegia pietatis, small devotional sessions held in
addition to regular church services, during which participants prayed and read the Bible together to
encourage one another to live upright lives. Spener had helped organize such meetings in Frankfurt as
early as 1670. With the publication of Pia Desideria and clerical networking, the movement to renew
Christendom through moral reform spread throughout Lutheran Germany. Moderates like Spener tried to
avoid unwanted conflicts with authorities by limiting and controlling lay participation in the Bible reading
sessions.
Nonetheless, the spread of conventicles was ecclesiastically, politically and socially contentious.
Within a few decades conventicles had risen from a phenomenon of limited, localized popularity to the
main form of pious sociability. As the conventicles spread, so to did the involvement of laymen and
laywomen, as well as ecclesiastical and theological experimentation. Many orthodox clergymen and some
secular rulers felt the devotional meetings were an unregulated breeding ground for sectarianism and
political subversion. Therefore, numerous territorial rulers published edicts forbidding the private meeting,
often to no avail.
The movement entered a new phase with the sudden upsurge in revivalist excitement between
1689 and 1693. Developments in Leipzig were especially important. During a controversy there about
conventicles the name "Pietist", which until then had been used only occasionally in Germany, became a
widely recognized name for the supporters of reform. Enthusiastic theology students like August Hermann
Francke (1663-1727) were among those forced to leave Leipzig when authorities banned the growing
movement in 1690. These activists formed the core of the spreading popular movement. The reform
message which had been championed since the 1670s predominantly by moderate clergymen was
transformed into the message of a younger, more exuberant generation of Lutherans fired by missionary
zeal.
In this new phase intense conversion experiences, anticlerical tendencies and apocalyptic
expectations also became common among those who participated in conventicles. Particularly
noteworthy were waves of lay prophecy which occurred in numerous German towns in the early 1690s;
the most publicized cases involved women and caused public scandals. Thereafter, the moderates,
including Spener and Francke, distanced themselves from the popular movement and eventually broke
their connections with the pious conventicles. Another important post-1689 development was a pamphlet
war fought between reformers and their Orthodox Lutheran opponents. Between about 1690 and 1720
hundreds of polemical pamphlets were exchanged on a range of issues, among them the definition of
"Pietism".
Pietism after the 1690s. Despite opposition, Pietism flourished throughout the eighteenth century,
and was influential in Germany, the Netherlands, Switzerland, and Scandinavia, as well as in England
and the North American colonies. There were Calvinist Pietists in the eighteenth century. Perhaps the
most significant was Gerrit Tersteegen (1697-1769). However, when investigating eighteenth-century
Pietism, historians commonly focus on several German Lutheran groupings.
One of the most significant institutional forms of Pietism was centered in Halle. Under the influence
of Spener, the Prussian government established a new university there in the early 1690s. Several of the
theology students expelled from Leipzig in 1690 were on its faculty. Among them was Francke. In addition
to professorial duties, he was instrumental in the foundation of a set of influential institutions. These
included an orphanage and orphan schools (established 1695), and several domestic and international
missionary organizations. One of the unique characteristics of Pietism based in Halle was the importance
placed on repentance for sins and a personal experience of conversion to a godly life. While encouraging
education in religion and practical sciences, Francke and other leaders also emphasized discipline among
orphans and students. This became the model for educational reform in the Prussian state in the
eighteenth century.
The other major officially sanctioned form of eighteenth-century Pietism was based in Württemberg.
The church leader Johann Valentin Andreä (1586-1654) had promoted piety and discipline there. His
lasting influence among members of the Lutheran church hierarchy made it easier for secular authorities
after the 1690s to accept Pietist reforms. Although conversion experiences were not as central as in
Halle, strict godly living became a widely accepted norm in Württemberg's universities, churches and
households. Thus, unlike Pietists in Halle and Prussia, who established close connections with the
nobility, Pietism in Württemberg had a much broader social base. Also in contrast to Halle, Württemberg's
university elite encouraged not only useful skills and piety, but also academic theology and biblical
scholarship.
While leaders in Halle, Prussia and Württemberg discouraged conventicles as a main form of
fellowship, the meetings of the pious were a central feature of Pietism based in Herrnhut. There in the
1720s the Unity of Brethren (also called Moravians), a group of lay Christians with pre-Reformation roots,
came under the charismatic leadership of Count Nicolaus Ludwig von Zinzendorf (1700-1760), a former
of student of Halle. While he rejected the strict regimentation of life in Halle, Zinzendorf shared an
emphasis on conversion. Zinzendorf's willingness to ally himself with a nonconformist community is an
example of the ecumenical attitude typical of this branch of Pietism. Its missionary communities
established themselves throughout central Europe, as well as in Georgia and Pennsylvania.
Zinzendorf was influenced not only by Pietism in Halle, but also by a range of nonconformists
whose experiences had been shaped by the extraordinary events of the 1690s. Historians sometimes use
the label "radical Pietism" to identify this diverse range of individuals and small groups. Radicals
distanced themselves from institutionalized Protestantism, often going as far as to separate themselves
from the official territorial church. Among the characteristics shared by many (but not all) in these circles
were: the centrality of conventicles and personal conversion experiences; lay as opposed to clerical
leadership, with women often playing key roles; mysticism, apocalyptic expectations and prophetic
tendencies; innovations in sacramental practice; and unconventional attitudes toward sexual norms.
Radical Pietism had no single representative, institution or geographical center.
Impact and Comparisons. Pietism's impact on early modern European society is difficult to
evaluate, because it was so varied. Its adherents came from a wide range of social stations, and their
actions and beliefs both supported and undermined established social and political norms. Philosophically
Pietists participated in both the Enlightenment and the Romantic movement. Although often vehemently
anti-papal, they contributed to the weakening of confessional boundaries, especially among Protestant
churches. Protestant revivalism and evangelicalism of the eighteenth and nineteenth century owe much
to Pietist traditions.
The godly impulse so characteristic of Pietism was also shared by other religious groups in the
eighteenth century. In Christian Europe these included Catholic Jansenists and Protestant Camisards in
France, as well as English Methodists. Scholars could also find similarities (although not direct historical
connections) with Jewish Hasidism in eastern Europe and the Sikh Khalsa in Mogul India.
Primary Works
Erb, Peter C., ed. Pietists: Selected Writings. New York, 1983. Excerpts from the works of Spener,
Francke, Tersteegen, Zinzendorf, and others.
Spener, Philipp Jakob. Pia Desideria. Translated and edited by Theodore G. Tappert. Philadelphia, 1964.
Secondary Works
Fulbrook, Mary. Piety and Politics: Religion and the Rise of Absolutism in England, Württemberg and
Prussia. Cambridge, 1983.
Gawthrop, Richard L. Pietism and the Making of Eighteenth-Century Prussia. Cambridge, 1993.
Geschichte des Pietismus. Vol. 1: Der Pietismus vom siebzehnten bis zum frühen achtzehnten
Jahrhundert, edited by Martin Brecht. Vol. 2: Der Pietismus im achtzehnten Jahrhundert, edited by Martin
Brecht and Klaus Deppermann. Vol. 3: Der Pietismus im neunzehnten und zwanzigsten Jahrhundert,
edited by Ulrich Gäbler. Vol. 4: Glaubenswelt und Lebenswelten des Pietismus, edited by Hartmut
Lehmann. Göttingen, 1993-.
Pietismus und Neuzeit: Ein Jahrbuch zur Geschichte des neueren Protestantismus. Göttingen, 1974-.
The major journal on the subject.
Stoeffler, F. Ernest. German Pietism during the Eighteenth Century. Leiden, 1973.
Wallmann, Johannes. Der Pietismus. Göttingen, 1990.
MICHAEL D. DRIEDGER