Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
The Catholicity of the Reformation: Musings on Reason, Will, and Natural Law, Part 6
The Catholicity of the Reformation: Musings on Reason, Will, and Natural Law, Part 6
Feb 12, 2026 2:18 AM

This post sketches out the rough outline of Jerome Zanchi’s understanding of natural law. An interesting difference between Zanchi and Martyr is that Thomistic elements are far more important in Zanchi’s theology than in Martyr’s theology.

The historian John Patrick Donnelly thinks Zanchi is the best example of “Calvinist Thomism,” meaning a theologian who was Reformed in theology and Thomistic in philosophy and methodology. Zanchi was born and raised near Bergamo where he entered the Augustinian Canons and received a Thomistic training. Martyr was his prior at Lucca and was instrumental in his conversion to Protestantism. Zanchi spent ten years as a Nicodemite, or crypto-Calvinist, teaching theology before fleeing north to Geneva in 1552, where he studied for a year under Calvin. Later he served as professor of theology at Strasbourg, Heidelberg, and Neustadt until his death in 1590. After his death his relatives gathered most of his writings into his Opera in eight large tomes, which went through three editions. In all, there were about seventy printings of his writings. (See John Patrick Donnelly, “Calvinist Thomism,” Viator 7 (1976): 444).

Zanchi planned a great Protestant “summa” modeled after Thomas’ Summa theologica. According to Donnelly, the first four volumes of Zanchi’s Opera, which appeared under separate titles as he finished them at Heidelberg, cover the same material at twice the length as the first half of Thomas’s Summa. Even though Zanchi pleted his “summa,” it is unrivaled for thoroughness and synthetic power in sixteenth-century Protestant theology. (See Donnelly, “Calvinist Thomism,” 444).

Zanchi begins his analysis of natural law by noticing that canon lawyers and theologians restrict their idea of natural law to human nature, defining it as “the mon to all nations and that’s obeyed everywhere by natural instinct not by any statue.” Civil lawyers also use this definition for the law of nations because all people employ these laws and are led by them. Examples of such laws include statues concerning God, public worship, religion, obedience to superiors and the state, and defense of oneself, one’s family, and the state.

Zanchi distinguishes three levels to natural law as follows. On the first and most basic level, natural law teaches self-preservation, an mon to all living things. On the second level, natural law teaches that the human race should be advanced through procreation and education of offspring; this level is shared with the animals. On the third level, natural law teaches people to worship God and to do justice to their neighbor; this level applies only to humans.

Zanchi thinks natural law must be understood within what is called the three primary estates (creation, fall, and redemption). Before sin entered the world, natural law was perfectly a part of all people. He says, “Divine will and the precepts for doing some things and avoiding others had been co-created with Adam when the image of God was breathed into him.” After the fall, however, it “was almost entirely blotted out as was any law that looks to God and the worship of him or to our neighbors and the just and fair relationship with them.” The first and second levels of natural law — instinct and procreation — were badly warped. While some sliver of the third — worship and justice — remained in humanity at large. While the fall did not blot out natural law, it did make it so that human nature on its own was now an unreliable guide. Based on his reading of Jeremiah 31:31-34 and Romans 2:15, Zanchi thought God reinscribed general, natural principles of worship, goodness, fairness, and honesty into humanity a second time.

After surveying various definitions of natural law, Zanchi lays out his own jam-packed definition.

Natural law is the will of God, and consequently, the divine rule and principle for knowing what to do and what not to do. It is, the knowledge of what is good or bad, fair or unfair, upright or shameful, that was inscribed upon the hearts of all people by God himself also after the fall. For this reason, we are all universally taught what activities should be pursued and what should be avoided; that is, to do one thing and to avoid another, and we know that we are obligated and pushed to act for the glory of God, our own good, and the welfare of our neighbor both in private and in public. In addition, we know that if we do what should be avoided or avoid what we should do, we are condemned; but if we do the opposite, we are defended and absolved.

There are several ideas to notice in this definition but I want to focus only on two.

First, the definition draws attention to the fact that God originally inscribed natural law on everyone’s heart. And second, it shows that God also reinscribed natural law a second time after the fall. Given the corruption that set in after the fall, Zanchi argues that natural law e from nature or human nature but e instead from God. He says, “Natural law, however, being a principle of reason is a good, divine, and spiritual thing. Thus, it e from somewhere besides nature; that is, it must . . e from God.” If natural law came from nature or from human nature, says Zanchi, “then it would exist equally in all people; for those things that are shared by all people naturally exist equally in all people.” But some are clearly wiser, more concerned with justice, and more zealous for God than others are. Zanchi’s definition emphasizes that natural law does not now arise from natural instinct but is rather a gift of God, a natural revelation of the Creator’s will. According to him, those within the Augustinian tradition “call it natural law as the apostle Paul does because the principles of justice and honesty have been inscribed on our hearts by God and those little sparks of heavenly light (as Cicero calls them) appear inside of us as innate and natural.”

Following from the definition, Zanchi lists three functions of natural law that correspond with certain goods. First, natural law is a “trait shared with all other living things that we protect and save ourselves. This includes eating, drinking, sleeping, resting, moving, using medicine, clothes, and so forth. This produces these laws: A healthy lifestyle is praised while an unhealthy one is rejected; it is permitted to drive off force with force.” Second, natural law is a “trait shared with all animals, that we endeavor to propagate our species, that we take time for having and rearing children, and the other things related to it; that is, that we pay attention to domestic affairs.” Third, natural law is a “trait applying to all human beings, that we know and worship God and that we maintain munity among human beings.” This third aspect is typically divided into two categories, just as the Decalogue is divided into two tablets: one concerns knowledge and worship of God (piety), while the other concerns loving our neighbor (justice).

Part 7 will be the final installment in this series.

This entry has been cross-posted to my blog, Common Notions.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Wealth: What is it good for?
On the Economix blog at the New York Times, Uwe E. Reinhardt wrote a post titled “How Businesses Create Wealth.” That elicited attention from menter who wondered where he was “trying to go with this essay.” Reinhardt, an economics professor at Princeton, answers with “Companies: What Are They Good For?” He also cites an article from Acton’s Journal of Markets & Morality: “A Communitarian Model of Business: A Natural-Law Perspective.” Reinhardt: Actually, I was not trying to go anywhere with...
Berlinski Responds to Radosh
If you read this post about Claire Berlinski’s recent article in City Journal, and the follow-up post calling attention to Ron Radosh’s critique of the article, then you may be interested in Berlinski’s return volley here. ...
Bottle Deposits and Behavior
I have taken an unofficial and unplanned hiatus from PowerBlogging over the last few weeks as I worked toward finishing up a book manuscript that you’ll hear much more about in ing days. But in the meantime, I did continue to take note of things that might be of interest to PowerBlog readers, and one of these things was a recent NBER working paper, “Discontinuous Behavioral Responses to Recycling Laws and Plastic Water Bottle Deposits.” I noted it in part...
Review: The Battle
At the start of Washington’s unprecedented federal interventionism into the private sector and on the heels of a Newsweek cover heralding that “We Are All Socialists Now,” there was considerable angst that free market defenders had forever lost the public. Not so, says American Enterprise Institute President and author Arthur Brooks. Brooks says “America is a 70 – 30 percent nation in favor of free enterprise,” but the forces of statism have capitalized on the financial crisis and have an...
Eritrea: Remember the Prisoners
HT: InChainsForChrist.org From OBL News (5/19/10): Abba Seraphim will join a protest vigil to “Stand in Solidarity with Eritrean Christians” outside the Eritrean Embassy between 3-4 pm on Thursday, 3 June. The vigil has been organised by a number of Christian Human Rights’ organisations: Christian Solidarity Worldwide, Release Eritrea, Church in Chains, Release International and Open Doors. At a similar gathering in May 2008 Abba Seraphim handed in a petition at the Embassy calling for the resoration of His Holiness...
Debt, Welfare and the Road to Serfdom
Simon Johnson and Peter Boone wrote an interesting article the UK Telegraph Saturday called “The New Feudal Overlords of Europe will be the bankers of the ECB.” Johnson is also the co-author along with James Kwak of a thoughtful and provocative book 13 Bankers as well as a blog on economics. Also on the ECB see my colleague Sam Gregg’s Piece at Public Discourse Using Hayek’s famous phrase “The Road to Serfdom” Johnson and Boone argue the demise of Europe...
Missing the Boat on the Tea Parties
I had been scheduled to appear opposite Ray Nothstine at the most recent Acton on Tap last month to discuss the question: Are Tea Parties good for America? I had to miss that event, unfortunately, but this week’s Acton Commentary represents my belated engagement on these matters. Check out, “Missing the Boat on the Tea Parties,” and leave ments here. While you’re over there, be sure to read mentary, “Will Tea Parties Awaken America’s Moral Culture?” And speaking of Acton...
Europe’s Monetary Sins
Over at Public Discourse, a new article by Acton’s research director Samuel Gregg examines the deeper reasons behind the problems of the euro. In “Europe’s Monetary Sins,” Gregg points out that many of the euro’s present difficulties reflect a basic refusal of Europe’s political class to acknowledge some of the unpleasant economic realities associated with the EU’s social model, as well as a tendency to say one thing while really doing another. In short, Gregg argues that many of Europe’s...
Radosh Responds to Berlinski
I mended a Claire Berlinski article last Thursday. Ron Radosh forcefully calls into question several elements of the Berlinski piece, though her central claim seems to me to remain intact: While the Nazis are widely and duly vilified, far too many in the West continue to excuse, minimize or ignore the activities of the munists. At any rate, mentary has sparked a lively discussion in ments section under his post. ...
Sinning Against the Union
“Catholic scholars say those who thwart labor mit mortal sin,” says the headline from Catholic News Service. It’s an accurate characterization of a statement released by a group called Catholic Scholars for Worker Justice. (You can read the statement in full at the organization’s web site.) It’s certainly attention-grabbing, but is it sound moral analysis? The answer is no. I’m not trained as a moral theologian, but I do know something about Catholic social teaching and I can apply elementary...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved