I think Dennis has a point. I think Zwingli would be very much "at home" in some of the more "politically aware" congregations in our own time. This is not to take away from his part in the Reformation era; but all things considered, he really is he godfather of the American Evangelical in more ways than one.
I say this with a sense of self-caution as well. Not because I am "politically aware" (except in a profoundly negative sense--I'm
aware that we live in neo-Rome). But Zwingli was motivated from early on in his ministry by a deep sense of patriotism. He
loved his people, and his places, and some of his seeking after their best led him to oppose Roman vassalage, which led him to preaching the text
lectio continua, and the rest is history (as they say).
Zwingli was a long-time opponent of the Mercenary profession. He was extremely distressed by seeing Rome's recruiters constantly passing through his district (and other Swiss cantons) and annually watching hundreds of poor, young men--with limited prospects, lured by promises of money and glory--enlist in the pope's armies. {If you ever wondered why the
modern Vatican's soldiery is known as
The Swiss Guard, now you know.} If they came back home ever, it was usually scarred, maimed, or drained--or all three.
And yet, there were always enough proud veterans, stories of martial glory passed around the local VFW pub, and next year a new crop of recruits--many of them leaving forever, many to die for a pope's territorial ambitions. A soldier's life has always been fraught with perils, frequently of the combat sort, more frequently of the spiritual sort. It would be an almost comical juxtaposition to set Cromwell's Roundhead army over against virtually any fighting force in history, in order to compare their "moral virtue." And without question, various degenerate popes' cohorts were not going to be known for their saintly discipline.
I guess, what I'm saying is: I think I understand Zwingli, and better now than even a few years ago. When there are SO MANY THINGS going wrong in your society, and you see the promise of the future throwing their lives away for the lies of people in power who don't care for them personally--just for what their flesh and blood can give them (for the least price)--for many ministers (who can see to the root issue) the temptation is to take on directly the political sources of the problems. To hurl invectives, or seek to get a new avenue of influence on the situation from the secular side.
Principially, I am dead set against this. But I can see and feel the attraction. Just like the "religious right's" crusades--starting in the 1970s, now entering its final stage of a generation of conflict--an epic blunder in my opinion, so also "contrarian grandstanding" is the same sort of misstep. The words of Paul were never more apt--"make it your
Ambition...to mind your own (Christ's) business." (1 Thes 4:11).
Preachers, Christ's ministers, take heed.