Testing and Purity
Olympia Fulvia Morata (1526–1555), the brilliant Italian scholar raised among nobility and intellectuals, lived a life far harsher than her privileged beginnings suggested. After a cultured youth, she and her husband, Andrew Grunthler, were trapped for nine horrific months in the siege of Schweinfurt, where plague killed half the population, Andrew nearly died, and the city was burned and plundered, leaving them destitute and fleeing for their lives. Even after reaching Heidelberg in 1554, their health broken by famine, fear, and disease collapsed; Olympia died within two years, and her husband and brother soon after. Yet this remarkable Christian woman insisted, “The prize of life comes not from learning, but from conflict and trial,” believing her severe sufferings had shaped her character. In contrast, our age shuns hardship; we try to shield ourselves and our children from all difficulties, even complaining that academic tests are oppressive. Scripture, however, teaches that true “purity” means tested and refined by fire, not untouched innocence. Olympia embraced her trials as God’s refining work, and while we may pray to be spared her extremes, we cannot pray to escape testing itself, for “the fire shall try every man’s work of what sort it is” (1 Cor. 3:13).