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Theodore Beza

Theodore Beza (June 24, 1519–October 13, 1605) was a French Calvinist preacher, theologian, and scholar, a pivotal figure in the Protestant Reformation and John Calvin’s successor as the spiritual leader of Geneva. Born in Vézelay, Burgundy, France, to Pierre de Bèze, a royal bailiff, and Marie Bourdelot, known for her generosity, Beza hailed from a noble family. At age nine, his uncle Nicolas, a Paris parlement member, took him to study under the German humanist Melchior Wolmar in Orléans, where he mastered Latin and Greek. After Wolmar’s move to Bourges, Beza followed, then studied law in Orléans (1535–1539), earning a licentiate. In Paris, he gained fame with his 1548 Latin poetry collection, Juvenilia, but a severe illness that year—possibly the plague—sparked a conversion to Reformed faith, leading him to flee to Geneva with his fiancée, Claudine Denosse, whom he married upon arrival. Beza’s preaching career began in earnest in Geneva, where Calvin welcomed him. In 1549, he became a Greek professor at Lausanne’s academy, defending the execution of heretic Michael Servetus in writings. Returning to Geneva in 1558, he helped Calvin found the Geneva Academy in 1559, becoming its first rector and a pastor. After Calvin’s death in 1564, Beza led the city’s church, preaching with clarity and pastoral warmth despite his scholarly depth. His sermons, avoiding overly technical theology, connected with congregants, while his global ministry supported French Huguenots during persecution, notably after the 1572 St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre. He authored key works like Abraham Sacrifiant (1550), the first French biblical drama, and De jure magistratum (1574), justifying resistance to tyranny, alongside Greek New Testament editions that influenced the Geneva Bible and King James Version. Married twice—Claudine died in 1588, followed by Catherine del Piano in 1589—he had no children. Beza died in Geneva in 1605, leaving a legacy as a preacher who bridged Calvin’s theology with practical faith, shaping Reformed Protestantism across Europe.