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  • John Calvin was an influential French theologian and pastor during the Protestant Reformation.

  • He was a principal figure in the development of the system of Christian theology later

  • called Calvinism. Originally trained as a humanist lawyer, he broke from the Roman Catholic

  • Church around 1530. After religious tensions provoked a violent uprising against Protestants

  • in France, Calvin fled to Basel, Switzerland, where he published the first edition of his

  • seminal work Institutes of the Christian Religion in 1536.

  • In that year, Calvin was recruited by William Farel to help reform the church in Geneva.

  • The city council resisted the implementation of Calvin's and Farel's ideas, and both men

  • were expelled. At the invitation of Martin Bucer, Calvin proceeded to Strasbourg, where

  • he became the minister of a church of French refugees. He continued to support the reform

  • movement in Geneva, and was eventually invited back to lead its church.

  • Following his return, Calvin introduced new forms of church government and liturgy, despite

  • the opposition of several powerful families in the city who tried to curb his authority.

  • During this period, Michael Servetus, a Spaniard regarded by both Catholics and Protestants

  • as having heretical views, arrived in Geneva. He was denounced by Calvin and executed by

  • the city council. Following an influx of supportive refugees and new elections to the city council,

  • Calvin's opponents were forced out. Calvin spent his final years promoting the Reformation

  • both in Geneva and throughout Europe. Calvin was a tireless polemic and apologetic

  • writer who generated much controversy. He also exchanged cordial and supportive letters

  • with many reformers, including Philipp Melanchthon and Heinrich Bullinger. In addition to the

  • Institutes, he wrote commentaries on most books of the Bible, as well as theological

  • treatises and confessional documents. He regularly preached sermons throughout the week in Geneva.

  • Calvin was influenced by the Augustinian tradition, which led him to expound the doctrine of predestination

  • and the absolute sovereignty of God in salvation of the human soul from death and eternal damnation.

  • Calvin's writing and preachings provided the seeds for the branch of theology that bears

  • his name. The Reformed, Congregational, and Presbyterian churches, which look to Calvin

  • as the chief expositor of their beliefs, have spread throughout the world.

  • Early life

  • John Calvin was born as Jehan Cauvin on 10 July 1509, in the town of Noyon in the Picardy

  • region of France. He was the first of four sons who survived infancy. His father, Gérard

  • Cauvin, had a prosperous career as the cathedral notary and registrar to the ecclesiastical

  • court. He died in his later years, after suffering two years with testicular cancer. His mother,

  • Jeanne le Franc, was the daughter of an innkeeper from Cambrai. She died a few years after Calvin's

  • birth from an unknown cause. Gérard intended his three sonsCharles, Jean, and Antoinefor

  • the priesthood. Jean was particularly precocious; by age 12,

  • he was employed by the bishop as a clerk and received the tonsure, cutting his hair to

  • symbolise his dedication to the Church. He also won the patronage of an influential family,

  • the Montmors. Through their assistance, Calvin was able to attend the Collège de la Marche,

  • in Paris, where he learned Latin from one of its greatest teachers, Mathurin Cordier.

  • Once he completed the course, he entered the Collège de Montaigu as a philosophy student.

  • In 1525 or 1526, Gérard withdrew his son from the Collège de Montaigu and enrolled

  • him in the University of Orléans to study law. According to contemporary biographers

  • Theodore Beza and Nicolas Colladon, Gérard believed his son would earn more money as

  • a lawyer than as a priest. After a few years of quiet study, Calvin entered the University

  • of Bourges in 1529. He was intrigued by Andreas Alciati, a humanist lawyer. Humanism was a

  • European intellectual movement which stressed classical studies. During his 18-month stay

  • in Bourges, Calvin learned Koine Greek, a necessity for studying the New Testament.

  • During the autumn of 1533 Calvin experienced a religious conversion. In later life, John

  • Calvin wrote two accounts of his conversion that differ in significant ways. In the first

  • account he portrays his conversion as a sudden change of mind, brought about by God. This

  • account can be found in his Commentary on the Book of Psalms:

  • In his second account he speaks of a long process of inner turmoil, followed by spiritual

  • and psychological anguish. "Being exceedingly alarmed at the misery into

  • which I had fallen, and much more at that which threatened me in view of eternal death,

  • I, duty bound, made it my first business to betake myself to your way, condemning my past

  • life, not without groans and tears. And now, O Lord, what remains to a wretch like me,

  • but instead of defence, earnestly to supplicate you not to judge that fearful abandonment

  • of your Word according to its deserts, from which in your wondrous goodness you have at

  • last delivered me." Scholars have argued about the precise interpretation

  • of these accounts, but it is agreed that his conversion corresponded with his break from

  • the Roman Catholic Church. The Calvin biographer, Bruce Gordon, has stressed that "the two accounts

  • are not antithetical, revealing some inconsistency in Calvin's memory, but rather [are] two different

  • ways of expressing the same reality." By 1532, Calvin received his licentiate in

  • law and published his first book, a commentary on Seneca's De Clementia. After uneventful

  • trips to Orléans and his hometown of Noyon, Calvin returned to Paris in October 1533.

  • During this time, tensions rose at the Collège Royal between the humanists/reformers and

  • the conservative senior faculty members. One of the reformers, Nicolas Cop, was rector

  • of the university. On 1 November 1533 he devoted his inaugural address to the need for reform

  • and renewal in the Catholic Church. The address provoked a strong reaction from

  • the faculty, who denounced it as heretical, forcing Cop to flee to Basel. Calvin, a close

  • friend of Cop, was implicated in the offence, and for the next year he was forced into hiding.

  • He remained on the move, sheltering with his friend Louis du Tillet in Angoulême and taking

  • refuge in Noyon and Orléans. He was finally forced to flee France during the Affair of

  • the Placards in mid-October 1534. In that incident, unknown reformers had posted placards

  • in various cities attacking the Catholic mass, which provoked a violent backlash against

  • Protestants. In January 1535, Calvin joined Cop in Basel, a city under the influence of

  • the reformer Johannes Oecolampadius. Reform work commences

  • In March 1536, Calvin published the first edition of his Institutio Christianae Religionis

  • or Institutes of the Christian Religion. The work was an apologia or defense of his faith

  • and a statement of the doctrinal position of the reformers. He also intended it to serve

  • as an elementary instruction book for anyone interested in the Christian religion. The

  • book was the first expression of his theology. Calvin updated the work and published new

  • editions throughout his life. Shortly after its publication, he left Basel for Ferrara,

  • Italy, where he briefly served as secretary to Princess Renée of France. By June he was

  • back in Paris with his brother Antoine, who was resolving their father's affairs. Following

  • the Edict of Coucy, which gave a limited six-month period for heretics to reconcile with the

  • Catholic faith, Calvin decided that there was no future for him in France. In August

  • he set off for Strasbourg, a free imperial city of the Holy Roman Empire and a refuge

  • for reformers. Due to military manoeuvres of imperial and French forces, he was forced

  • to make a detour to the south, bringing him to Geneva.

  • Calvin had only intended to stay a single night, but William Farel, a fellow French

  • reformer residing in the city, implored a most reluctant Calvin to stay and assist him

  • in his work of reforming the church there – it was his duty before God, Farel insisted.

  • Yet Calvin, for his part, desired only peace and privacy. But it was not to be; Farel's

  • entreaties prevailed, but not before his having had recourse to the sternest imprecations.

  • Calvin recalls the rather intense encounter:

  • Then Farel, who was working with incredible zeal to promote the gospel, bent all his efforts

  • to keep me in the city. And when he realized that I was determined to study in privacy

  • in some obscure place, and saw that he gained nothing by entreaty, he descended to cursing,

  • and said that God would surely curse my peace if I held back from giving help at a time

  • of such great need. Terrified by his words, and conscious of my own timidity and cowardice,

  • I gave up my journey and attempted to apply whatever gift I had in defense of my faith.

  • Calvin accepted his new role without any preconditions on his tasks or duties. The office to which

  • he was initially assigned is unknown. He was eventually given the title of "reader", which

  • most likely meant that he could give expository lectures on the Bible. Sometime in 1537 he

  • was selected to be a "pastor" although he never received any pastoral consecration.

  • For the first time, the lawyer-theologian took up pastoral duties such as baptisms,

  • weddings, and church services. During the fall of 1536, Farel drafted a confession

  • of faith while Calvin wrote separate articles on reorganizing the church in Geneva. On 16

  • January 1537, Farel and Calvin presented their Articles concernant l'organisation de l'église

  • et du culte à Genève to the city council. The document described the manner and frequency

  • of their celebrations of the eucharist, the reason for, and the method of, excommunication,

  • the requirement to subscribe to the confession of faith, the use of congregational singing

  • in the liturgy, and the revision of marriage laws. The council accepted the document on

  • the same day. As the year progressed, however, Calvin and

  • Farel's reputation with the council began to suffer. The council was reluctant to enforce

  • the subscription requirement, as only a few citizens had subscribed to their confession

  • of faith. On 26 November, the two ministers heatedly debated the council over the issue.

  • Furthermore, France was taking an interest in forming an alliance with Geneva and as

  • the two ministers were Frenchmen, councillors began to question their loyalty. Finally,

  • a major ecclesiastical-political quarrel developed when Bern, Geneva's ally in the reformation

  • of the Swiss churches, proposed to introduce uniformity in the church ceremonies. One proposal

  • required the use of unleavened bread for the eucharist. The two ministers were unwilling

  • to follow Bern's lead and delayed the use of such bread until a synod in Zurich could

  • be convened to make the final decision. The council ordered Calvin and Farel to use unleavened

  • bread for the Easter eucharist; in protest, the ministers did not administer communion

  • during the Easter service. This caused a riot during the service and the next day, the council

  • told the ministers to leave Geneva. Farel and Calvin went to Bern and Zurich to

  • plead their case. The synod in Zurich placed most of the blame on Calvin for not being

  • sympathetic enough toward the people of Geneva. However, it asked Bern to mediate with the

  • aim of restoring the ministers. The Geneva council refused to readmit the two men, who

  • took refuge in Basel. Subsequently, Farel received an invitation to lead the church

  • in Neuchâtel. Calvin was invited to lead a church of French refugees in Strasbourg

  • by that city's leading reformers, Martin Bucer and Wolfgang Capito. Initially, Calvin refused

  • because Farel was not included in the invitation, but relented when Bucer appealed to him. By

  • September 1538 Calvin had taken up his new position in Strasbourg, fully expecting that

  • this time it would be permanent; a few months later, he applied for and was granted citizenship

  • of the city. Minister in Strasbourg

  • During his time in Strasbourg, Calvin was not attached to one particular church, but

  • held his office successively in the Saint-Nicolas Church, the Sainte-Madeleine Church and the

  • former Dominican Church, renamed the Temple Neuf. Calvin ministered to 400–500 members

  • in his church. He preached or lectured every day, with two sermons on Sunday. Communion

  • was celebrated monthly and congregational singing of the psalms was encouraged. He also

  • worked on the second edition of the Institutes. Although the first edition sold out within

  • a year, Calvin was dissatisfied with its structure as a catechism, a primer for young Christians.

  • For the second edition, published in 1539, Calvin dropped this format in favour of systematically

  • presenting the main doctrines from scripture. In the process, the book was enlarged from

  • six chapters to seventeen. He concurrently worked on another book, the Commentary on

  • Romans, which was published in March 1540. The book was a model for his later commentaries:

  • it included his own Latin translation from the Greek rather than the Latin Vulgate, an

  • exegesis, and an exposition. In the dedicatory letter, Calvin praised the work of his predecessors

  • Philipp Melanchthon, Heinrich Bullinger, and Martin Bucer, but he also took care to distinguish

  • his own work from theirs and to criticise some of their shortcomings.

  • Calvin's friends urged him to marry. Calvin took a prosaic view, writing to one correspondent:

  • "I, who have the air of being so hostile to celibacy, I am still not married and do not

  • know whether I will ever be. If I take a wife it will be because, being better freed from

  • numerous worries, I can devote myself to the Lord."

  • Several candidates were presented to him including one young woman from a noble family. Reluctantly,

  • Calvin agreed to the marriage, on the condition that she would learn French. Although a wedding

  • date was planned for March 1540, he remained reluctant and the wedding never took place.

  • He later wrote that he would never think of marrying her, "unless the Lord had entirely

  • bereft me of my wits". Instead, in August of that year, he married Idelette de Bure,

  • a widow who had two children from her first marriage.

  • Geneva reconsidered its expulsion of Calvin. Church attendance had dwindled and the political

  • climate had changed; as Bern and Geneva quarrelled over land, their alliance frayed. When Cardinal

  • Jacopo Sadoleto wrote a letter to the city council inviting Geneva to return to the Catholic

  • faith, the council searched for an ecclesiastical authority to respond to him. At first Pierre

  • Viret was consulted, but when he refused, the council asked Calvin. He agreed and his

  • Responsio ad Sadoletum strongly defended Geneva's position concerning reforms in the church.

  • On 21 September 1540 the council commissioned one of its members, Ami Perrin, to find a

  • way to recall Calvin. An embassy reached Calvin while he was at a colloquy, a conference to

  • settle religious disputes, in Worms. His reaction to the suggestion was one of horror in which

  • he wrote, "Rather would I submit to death a hundred times than to that cross on which

  • I had to perish daily a thousand times over." Calvin also wrote that he was prepared to

  • follow the Lord's calling. A plan was drawn up in which Viret would be appointed to take

  • temporary charge in Geneva for six months while Bucer and Calvin would visit the city

  • to determine the next steps. However, the city council pressed for the immediate appointment

  • of Calvin in Geneva. By summer 1541, Strasbourg decided to loan Calvin to Geneva for six months.

  • Calvin returned on 13 September 1541 with an official escort and a wagon for his family.

  • Reform in Geneva In supporting Calvin's proposals for reforms,

  • the council of Geneva passed the Ordonnances ecclésiastiques on 20 November 1541. The

  • ordinances defined four orders of ministerial function: pastors to preach and to administer

  • the sacraments; doctors to instruct believers in the faith; elders to provide discipline;

  • and deacons to care for the poor and needy. They also called for the creation of the Consistoire,

  • an ecclesiastical court composed of the lay elders and the ministers. The city government

  • retained the power to summon persons before the court, and the Consistory could judge

  • only ecclesiastical matters having no civil jurisdiction. Originally, the court had the

  • power to mete out sentences, with excommunication as its most severe penalty. However, the government

  • contested this power and on 19 March 1543 the council decided that all sentencing would

  • be carried out by the government.

  • In 1542, Calvin adapted a service book used in Strasbourg, publishing La Forme des Prières

  • et Chants Ecclésiastiques. Calvin recognised the power of music and he intended that it

  • be used to support scripture readings. The original Strasbourg psalter contained twelve

  • psalms by Clément Marot and Calvin added several more hymns of his own composition

  • in the Geneva version. At the end of 1542, Marot became a refugee in Geneva and contributed

  • nineteen more psalms. Louis Bourgeois, also a refugee, lived and taught music in Geneva

  • for sixteen years and Calvin took the opportunity to add his hymns, the most famous being the

  • Old Hundredth. In the same year of 1542, Calvin published

  • Catéchisme de l'Eglise de Genève, which was inspired by Bucer's Kurze Schrifftliche

  • Erklärung of 1534. Calvin had written an earlier catechism during his first stay in

  • Geneva which was largely based on Martin Luther's Large Catechism. The first version was arranged

  • pedagogically, describing Law, Faith, and Prayer. The 1542 version was rearranged for

  • theological reasons, covering Faith first, then Law and Prayer.

  • During his ministry in Geneva, Calvin preached over two thousand sermons. Initially he preached

  • twice on Sunday and three times during the week. This proved to be too heavy a burden

  • and late in 1542 the council allowed him to preach only once on Sunday. However, in October

  • 1549, he was again required to preach twice on Sundays and, in addition, every weekday

  • of alternate weeks. His sermons lasted more than an hour and he did not use notes. An

  • occasional secretary tried to record his sermons, but very little of his preaching was preserved

  • before 1549. In that year, professional scribe Denis Raguenier, who had learned or developed

  • a system of shorthand, was assigned to record all of Calvin's sermons. An analysis of his

  • sermons by T.H.L. Parker suggests that Calvin was a consistent preacher and his style changed

  • very little over the years. Very little is known about Calvin's personal

  • life in Geneva. His house and furniture were owned by the council. The house was big enough

  • to accommodate his family as well as Antoine's family and some servants. On 28 July 1542,

  • Idelette gave birth to a son, Jacques, but he was born prematurely and survived only

  • briefly. Idelette fell ill in 1545 and died on 29 March 1549. Calvin never married again.

  • He expressed his sorrow in a letter to Viret:

  • I have been bereaved of the best friend of my life, of one who, if it has been so ordained,

  • would willingly have shared not only my poverty but also my death. During her life she was

  • the faithful helper of my ministry. From her I never experienced the slightest hindrance.

  • Throughout the rest of his life in Geneva, he maintained several friendships from his

  • early years including Montmor, Cordier, Cop, Farel, Melanchthon and Bullinger.

  • Discipline and opposition

  • Calvin encountered bitter opposition to his work in Geneva. Around 1546, the uncoordinated

  • forces coalesced into an identifiable group whom he referred to as the libertines, but

  • who preferred to be called either Spirituels or Patriots. According to Calvin, these were

  • people who felt that after being liberated through grace, they were exempted from both

  • ecclesiastical and civil law. The group consisted of wealthy, politically powerful, and interrelated

  • families of Geneva. At the end of January 1546, Pierre Ameaux, a maker of playing cards

  • who had already been in conflict with the Consistory, attacked Calvin by calling him

  • a "Picard", an epithet denoting anti-French sentiment, and accused him of false doctrine.

  • Ameaux was punished by the council and forced to make expiation by parading through the

  • city and begging God for forgiveness. A few months later Ami Perrin, the man who had brought

  • Calvin to Geneva, moved into open opposition. Perrin had married Françoise Favre, daughter

  • of François Favre, a well-established Genevan merchant. Both Perrin's wife and father-in-law

  • had previous conflicts with the Consistory. The court noted that many of Geneva's notables,

  • including Perrin, had breached a law against dancing. Initially, Perrin ignored the court

  • when he was summoned, but after receiving a letter from Calvin, he appeared before the

  • Consistory. By 1547, opposition to Calvin and other French

  • refugee ministers had grown to constitute the majority of the syndics, the civil magistrates

  • of Geneva. On 27 June an unsigned threatening letter in Genevan dialect was found at the

  • pulpit of St. Pierre Cathedral where Calvin preached. Suspecting a plot against both the

  • church and the state, the council appointed a commission to investigate. Jacques Gruet,

  • a Genevan member of Favre's group, was arrested and incriminating evidence was found when

  • his house was searched. Under torture, he confessed to several crimes including writing

  • the letter left in the pulpit which threatened the church leaders. A civil court condemned

  • Gruet to death and he was beheaded on 26 July. Calvin was not opposed to the civil court's

  • decision. The Spirituels and Patriots continued organizing

  • opposition, insulting the appointed ministers, and challenging the authority of the Consistory.

  • The council straddled both sides of the conflict, alternately admonishing and upholding Calvin.

  • When Perrin was elected first syndic in February 1552, Calvin's authority appeared to be at

  • its lowest point. After some losses before the council, Calvin believed he was defeated;

  • on 24 July 1553 he asked the council to allow him to resign. Although the libertines controlled

  • the council, his request was refused. The opposition realised that they could curb Calvin's

  • authority, but they did not have enough power to banish him.

  • Michael Servetus

  • The turning point in Calvin's fortunes occurred when Michael Servetus, a fugitive from ecclesiastical

  • authorities, appeared in Geneva on 13 August 1553. Servetus was a Spanish physician and

  • Protestant theologian who boldly criticised the doctrine of the Trinity and paedobaptism.

  • In July 1530 he disputed with Johannes Oecolampadius in Basel and was eventually expelled. He went

  • to Strasbourg where he published a pamphlet against the Trinity. Bucer publicly refuted

  • it and asked Servetus to leave. After returning to Basel, Servetus published Two Books of

  • Dialogues on the Trinity which caused a sensation among Reformers and Catholics alike. The Inquisition

  • in Spain ordered his arrest. Calvin and Servetus were first brought into

  • contact in 1546 through a common acquaintance, Jean Frellon of Lyon; they exchanged letters

  • debating doctrine; Calvin used a pseudonym as Charles d' Espeville, while Servetus left

  • his unsigned. Eventually, Calvin lost patience and refused to respond; by this time Servetus

  • had written around thirty letters to Calvin. Calvin was particularly outraged when Servetus

  • sent him a copy of the Institutes of the Christian Religion heavily annotated with arguments

  • pointing to errors in the book. When Servetus mentioned that he would come to Geneva, "Espeville"

  • wrote a letter to Farel on 13 February 1546 noting that if Servetus were to come, he would

  • not assure him safe conduct: "for if he came, as far as my authority goes, I would not let

  • him leave alive." In 1553, Calvin's front man, Guillaume de

  • Trie, sent letters trying to address the French Inquisition to Servetus. Calling him a "Spanish-Portuguese",

  • suspecting and accusing him of his recently proved Jewish converso origin. De Trie wrote

  • down that "his proper name is Michael Servetus, but he currently calls himself Villeneufve,

  • practising medicine. He stayed for some time in Lyon, and now he is living in Vienne."

  • When the inquisitor-general of France learned that Servetus was hiding in Vienne, according

  • to Calvin under an assumed name, he contacted Cardinal François de Tournon, the secretary

  • of the archbishop of Lyon, to take up the matter. Servetus was arrested and taken in

  • for questioning. His letters to Calvin were presented as evidence of heresy, but he denied

  • having written them, and later said he was not sure it was his handwriting. He said,

  • after swearing before the holy gospel, that "he was Michel De Villeneuve Doctor in Medicine

  • about 42 years old, native of Tudela of the kingdom of Navarre, a city under the obedience

  • to the Emperor". The following day he said: "..although he was not Servetus he assumed

  • the person of Servet for debating with Calvin". He managed to escape from prison, and the

  • Catholic authorities sentenced him in absentia to death by slow burning.

  • On his way to Italy, Servetus stopped in Geneva to visit "d'Espeville", where he was recognized

  • and arrested. Calvin's secretary Nicholas de la Fontaine composed a list of accusations

  • that was submitted before the court. The prosecutor was Philibert Berthelier, a member of a libertine

  • family and son of a famous Geneva patriot, and the sessions were led by Pierre Tissot,

  • Perrin's brother-in-law. The libertines allowed the trial to drag on in an attempt to harass

  • Calvin. The difficulty in using Servetus as a weapon against Calvin was that the heretical

  • reputation of Servetus was widespread and most of the cities in Europe were observing

  • and awaiting the outcome of the trial. This posed a dilemma for the libertines, so on

  • 21 August the council decided to write to other Swiss cities for their opinions, thus

  • mitigating their own responsibility for the final decision. While waiting for the responses,

  • the council also asked Servetus if he preferred to be judged in Vienne or in Geneva. He begged

  • to stay in Geneva. On 20 October the replies from Zurich, Basel, Bern, and Schaffhausen

  • were read and the council condemned Servetus as a heretic. The following day he was sentenced

  • to burning at the stake, the same sentence as in Vienne. Calvin and other ministers,

  • in an attempt to appear compassionate, asked that he be beheaded instead of burnt, knowing

  • that burning at the stake was the only legal recourse. This plea was refused and on 27

  • October, Servetus was burnt aliveatop a pyre of his own booksat the Plateau of

  • Champel at the edge of Geneva. Securing the Reformation

  • After the death of Servetus, Calvin was acclaimed a defender of Christianity, but his ultimate

  • triumph over the libertines was still two years away. He had always insisted that the

  • Consistory retain the power of excommunication, despite the council's past decision to take

  • it away. During Servetus's trial, Philibert Berthelier asked the council for permission

  • to take communion, as he had been excommunicated the previous year for insulting a minister.

  • Calvin protested that the council did not have the legal authority to overturn Berthelier's

  • excommunication. Unsure of how the council would rule, he hinted in a sermon on 3 September

  • 1553 that he might be dismissed by the authorities. The council decided to re-examine the Ordonnances

  • and on 18 September it voted in support of Calvinexcommunication was within the jurisdiction

  • of the Consistory. Berthelier applied for reinstatement to another Genevan administrative

  • assembly, the Deux Cents, in November. This body reversed the council's decision and stated

  • that the final arbiter concerning excommunication should be the council. However, the ministers

  • continued to protest, and as in the case of Servetus, the opinions of the Swiss churches

  • were sought. The affair dragged on through 1554. Finally, on 22 January 1555, the council

  • announced the decision of the Swiss churches: the original Ordonnances were to be kept and

  • the Consistory was to regain its official powers.

  • The libertines' downfall began with the February 1555 elections. By then, many of the French

  • refugees had been granted citizenship and with their support, Calvin's partisans elected

  • the majority of the syndics and the councillors. On 16 May the libertines took to the streets

  • in a drunken protest and attempted to burn down a house that was supposedly full of Frenchmen.

  • The syndic Henri Aulbert tried to intervene, carrying with him the baton of office that

  • symbolised his power. Perrin seized the baton and waved it over the crowd, which gave the

  • appearance that he was taking power and initiating a coup d'état. The insurrection was soon

  • over when another syndic appeared and ordered Perrin to go with him to the town hall. Perrin

  • and other leaders were forced to flee the city. With the approval of Calvin, the other

  • plotters who remained in the city were found and executed. The opposition to Calvin's church

  • polity came to an end. Final years

  • Calvin's authority was practically uncontested during his final years, and he enjoyed an

  • international reputation as a reformer distinct from Martin Luther. Initially, Luther and

  • Calvin had mutual respect for each other. However, a doctrinal conflict had developed

  • between Luther and Zurich reformer Huldrych Zwingli on the interpretation of the eucharist.

  • Calvin's opinion on the issue forced Luther to place him in Zwingli's camp. Calvin actively

  • participated in the polemics that were exchanged between the Lutheran and Reformed branches

  • of the Reformation movement. At the same time, Calvin was dismayed by the lack of unity among

  • the reformers. He took steps toward rapprochement with Bullinger by signing the Consensus Tigurinus,

  • a concordat between the Zurich and Geneva churches. He reached out to England when Archbishop

  • of Canterbury Thomas Cranmer called for an ecumenical synod of all the evangelical churches.

  • Calvin praised the idea, but ultimately Cranmer was unable to bring it to fruition.

  • Calvin sheltered Marian exiles in Geneva starting in 1555. Under the city's protection, they

  • were able to form their own reformed church under John Knox and William Whittingham and

  • eventually carried Calvin's ideas on doctrine and polity back to England and Scotland. However,

  • Calvin was most interested in reforming his homeland, France. He supported the building

  • of churches by distributing literature and sending ministers. Between 1555 and 1562,

  • more than 100 ministers were sent to France. These efforts were funded by the church in

  • Geneva, as the city council had refused to become involved in missionary activities at

  • the time. Henry II severely persecuted Protestants under the Edict of Chateaubriand and when

  • the French authorities complained about the missionary activities, Geneva was able to

  • disclaim responsibility.

  • Within Geneva, Calvin's main concern was the creation of a collège, an institute for the

  • education of children. A site for the school was selected on 25 March 1558 and it opened

  • the following year on 5 June 1559. Although the school was a single institution, it was

  • divided into two parts: a grammar school called the collège or schola privata and an advanced

  • school called the académie or schola publica. Calvin tried to recruit two professors for

  • the institute, Mathurin Cordier, his old friend and Latin scholar who was now based in Lausanne,

  • and Emmanuel Tremellius, the Regius professor of Hebrew in Cambridge. Neither was available,

  • but he succeeded in obtaining Theodore Beza as rector. Within five years there were 1,200

  • students in the grammar school and 300 in the advanced school. The collège eventually

  • became the Collège Calvin, one of the college preparatory schools of Geneva, while the académie

  • became the University of Geneva.

  • In the autumn of 1558, Calvin became ill with a fever. Since he was afraid that he might

  • die before completing the final revision of the Institutes, he forced himself to work.

  • The final edition was greatly expanded to the extent that Calvin referred to it as a

  • new work. The expansion from the 21 chapters of the previous edition to 80 was due to the

  • extended treatment of existing material rather than the addition of new topics. Shortly after

  • he recovered, he strained his voice while preaching, which brought on a violent fit

  • of coughing. He burst a blood-vessel in his lungs, and his health steadily declined. He

  • preached his final sermon in St. Pierre onFebruary 1564. On 25 April, he made his

  • will, in which he left small sums to his family and to the collège. A few days later, the

  • ministers of the church came to visit him, and he bade his final farewell, which was

  • recorded in Discours d'adieu aux ministres. He recounted his life in Geneva, sometimes

  • recalling bitterly some of the hardships he had suffered. Calvin died on 27 May 1564

  • aged 54. At first his body was laid in state, but since so many people came to see it, the

  • reformers were afraid that they would be accused of fostering a new saint's cult. On the following

  • day, he was buried in an unmarked grave in the Cimetière des Rois. While the exact location

  • of the grave is unknown, a stone was added in the 19th century to mark a grave traditionally

  • thought to be Calvin's. Theology

  • Calvin developed his theology in his biblical commentaries as well as his sermons and treatises,

  • but the most concise expression of his views is found in his magnum opus, the Institutes

  • of the Christian Religion. He intended that the book be used as a summary of his views

  • on Christian theology and that it be read in conjunction with his commentaries. The

  • various editions of that work span nearly his entire career as a reformer, and the successive

  • revisions of the book show that his theology changed very little from his youth to his

  • death. The first edition from 1536 consisted of only six chapters. The second edition,

  • published in 1539, was three times as long because he added chapters on subjects that

  • appear in Melanchthon's Loci Communes. In 1543, he again added new material and expanded

  • a chapter on the Apostles' Creed. The final edition of the Institutes appeared in 1559.

  • By then, the work consisted of four books of eighty chapters, and each book was named

  • after statements from the creed: Book 1 on God the Creator, Book 2 on the Redeemer in

  • Christ, Book 3 on receiving the Grace of Christ through the Holy Spirit, and Book 4 on the

  • Society of Christ or the Church.

  • The first statement in the Institutes acknowledges its central theme. It states that the sum

  • of human wisdom consists of two parts: the knowledge of God and of ourselves. Calvin

  • argues that the knowledge of God is not inherent in humanity nor can it be discovered by observing

  • this world. The only way to obtain it is to study scripture. Calvin writes, "For anyone

  • to arrive at God the Creator he needs Scripture as his Guide and Teacher." He does not try

  • to prove the authority of scripture but rather describes it as autopiston or self-authenticating.

  • He defends the trinitarian view of God and, in a strong polemical stand against the Catholic

  • Church, argues that images of God lead to idolatry. At the end of the first book, he

  • offers his views on providence, writing, "By his Power God cherishes and guards the World

  • which he made and by his Providence rules its individual Parts." Humans are unable to

  • fully comprehend why God performs any particular action, but whatever good or evil people may

  • practise, their efforts always result in the execution of God's will and judgments.

  • The second book includes several essays on the original sin and the fall of man, which

  • directly refer to Augustine, who developed these doctrines. He often cited the Church

  • Fathers in order to defend the reformed cause against the charge that the reformers were

  • creating new theology. In Calvin's view, sin began with the fall of Adam and propagated

  • to all of humanity. The domination of sin is complete to the point that people are driven

  • to evil. Thus fallen humanity is in need of the redemption that can be found in Christ.

  • But before Calvin expounded on this doctrine, he described the special situation of the

  • Jews who lived during the time of the Old Testament. God made a covenant with Abraham,

  • promising the coming of Christ. Hence, the Old Covenant was not in opposition to Christ,

  • but was rather a continuation of God's promise. Calvin then describes the New Covenant using

  • the passage from the Apostles' Creed that describes Christ's suffering under Pontius

  • Pilate and his return to judge the living and the dead. For Calvin, the whole course

  • of Christ's obedience to the Father removed the discord between humanity and God.

  • In the third book, Calvin describes how the spiritual union of Christ and humanity is

  • achieved. He first defines faith as the firm and certain knowledge of God in Christ. The

  • immediate effects of faith are repentance and the remission of sin. This is followed

  • by spiritual regeneration, which returns the believer to the state of holiness before Adam's

  • transgression. However, complete perfection is unattainable in this life, and the believer

  • should expect a continual struggle against sin. Several chapters are then devoted to

  • the subject of justification by faith alone. He defined justification as "the acceptance

  • by which God regards us as righteous whom he has received into grace." In this definition,

  • it is clear that it is God who initiates and carries through the action and that people

  • play no role; God is completely sovereign in salvation. Near the end of the book, Calvin

  • describes and defends the doctrine of predestination, a doctrine advanced by Augustine in opposition

  • to the teachings of Pelagius. Fellow theologians who followed the Augustinian tradition on

  • this point included Thomas Aquinas and Martin Luther, though Calvin's formulation of the

  • doctrine went further than the tradition that went before him. The principle, in Calvin's

  • words, is that "All are not created on equal terms, but some are preordained to eternal

  • life, others to eternal damnation; and, accordingly, as each has been created for one or other

  • of these ends, we say that he has been predestinated to life or to death."

  • The final book describes what he considers to be the true Church and its ministry, authority,

  • and sacraments. He denied the papal claim to primacy and the accusation that the reformers

  • were schismatic. For Calvin, the Church was defined as the body of believers who placed

  • Christ at its head. By definition, there was only one "catholic" or "universal" Church.

  • Hence, he argued that the reformers "had to leave them in order that we might come to

  • Christ." The ministers of the Church are described from a passage from Ephesians, and they consisted

  • of apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors, and doctors. Calvin regarded the first three

  • offices as temporary, limited in their existence to the time of the New Testament. The latter

  • two offices were established in the church in Geneva. Although Calvin respected the work

  • of the ecumenical councils, he considered them to be subject to God's Word found in

  • scripture. He also believed that the civil and church authorities were separate and should

  • not interfere with each other. Calvin defined a sacrament as an earthly sign

  • associated with a promise from God. He accepted only two sacraments as valid under the new

  • covenant: baptism and the Lord's Supper. He completely rejected the Catholic doctrine

  • of transubstantiation and the treatment of the Supper as a sacrifice. He also could not

  • accept the Lutheran doctrine of sacramental union in which Christ was "in, with and under"

  • the elements. His own view was close to Zwingli's symbolic view, but it was not identical. Rather

  • than holding a purely symbolic view, Calvin noted that with the participation of the Holy

  • Spirit, faith was nourished and strengthened by the sacrament. In his words, the eucharistic

  • rite was "a secret too sublime for my mind to understand or words to express. I experience

  • it rather than understand it." Controversies

  • Calvin's theology was not without controversy. Pierre Caroli, a Protestant minister in Lausanne

  • accused Calvin as well as Viret and Farel of Arianism in 1536. Calvin defended his beliefs

  • on the Trinity in Confessio de Trinitate propter calumnias P. Caroli. In 1551 Jérôme-Hermès

  • Bolsec, a physician in Geneva, attacked Calvin's doctrine of predestination and accused him

  • of making God the author of sin. Bolsec was banished from the city, and after Calvin's

  • death, he wrote a biography which severely maligned Calvin's character. In the following

  • year, Joachim Westphal, a Gnesio-Lutheran pastor in Hamburg, condemned Calvin and Zwingli

  • as heretics in denying the eucharistic doctrine of the union of Christ's body with the elements.

  • Calvin's Defensio sanae et orthodoxae doctrinae de sacramentis was his response in 1555. In

  • 1556 Justus Velsius, a Dutch dissident, held a public disputation with Calvin during his

  • visit to Frankfurt, in which Velsius defended free will against Calvin's doctrine of predestination.

  • Following the execution of Servetus, a close associate of Calvin, Sebastian Castellio,

  • broke with him on the issue of the treatment of heretics. In Castellio's Treatise on Heretics,

  • he argued for a focus on Christ's moral teachings in place of the vanity of theology, and he

  • afterward developed a theory of tolerance based on biblical principles.

  • Calvin and the Jews Scholars have debated Calvin's view of the

  • Jews and Judaism. Some have argued that Calvin was the least anti-semitic among all the major

  • reformers of his time, especially in comparison to Martin Luther. Others have argued that

  • Calvin was firmly within the anti-semitic camp. Scholars agree, however, that it is

  • important to distinguish between Calvin's views toward the biblical Jews and his attitude

  • toward contemporary Jews. In his theology, Calvin does not differentiate between God's

  • covenant with Israel and the New Covenant. He stated, "all the children of the promise,

  • reborn of God, who have obeyed the commands by faith working through love, have belonged

  • to the New Covenant since the world began." Still he was a supersessionist and argued

  • that the Jews are a rejected people who must embrace Jesus to re-enter the covenant.

  • Most of Calvin's statements on the Jewry of his era were polemical. For example, Calvin

  • once wrote, "I have had much conversation with many Jews: I have never seen either a

  • drop of piety or a grain of truth or ingenuousnessnay, I have never found common sense in

  • any Jew." In this respect, he differed little from other Protestant and Catholic theologians

  • of his day. Among his extant writings, Calvin only dealt explicitly with issues of contemporary

  • Jews and Judaism in one treatise, Response to Questions and Objections of a Certain Jew.

  • In it, he argued that Jews misread their own scriptures because they miss the unity of

  • the Old and New Testaments. Political thought

  • The aim of Calvin's political theory was to safeguard the rights and freedoms of ordinary

  • people. Although he was convinced that the Bible contained no blueprint for a certain

  • form of government, Calvin favored a combination of democracy and aristocracy. He appreciated

  • the advantages of democracy. To further minimize the misuse of political power, Calvin proposed

  • to divide it among several political institutions like the aristocracy, lower estates, or magistrates

  • in a system of checks and balances. Finally, Calvin taught that if rulers rise up against

  • God they lose their divine right and must be put down. State and church are separate,

  • though they have to cooperate to the benefit of the people. Christian magistrates have

  • to make sure that the church can fulfill its duties in freedom. In extreme cases the magistrates

  • have to expel or execute dangerous heretics. But nobody can be forced to become a Protestant.

  • Calvin thought that agriculture and the traditional crafts were normal human activities. With

  • regard to trade and the financial world he was more liberal than Luther, but both were

  • strictly opposed to usury. However, Calvin allowed the charging of modest interest rates

  • on loans. Like the other Reformers Calvin understood work as a means through which the

  • believers expressed their gratitude to God for their redemption in Christ and as a service

  • to their neighbors. Everybody was obliged to work; loafing and begging were rejected.

  • The idea that economic success was a visible sign of God's grace played only a minor role

  • in Calvin's thinking. It became more important in later, partly secularized forms of Calvinism

  • and became the starting-point of Max Weber's theory about the rise of capitalism.

  • Selected works

  • Calvin's first published work was a commentary of Seneca the Younger's De Clementia. Published

  • at his own expense in 1532, it showed that he was a humanist in the tradition of Erasmus

  • with a thorough understanding of classical scholarship. His first theological work, the

  • Psychopannychia, attempted to refute the doctrine of soul sleep as promulgated by the Anabaptists.

  • Calvin probably wrote it during the period following Cop's speech, but it was not published

  • until 1542 in Strasbourg.

  • Calvin produced commentaries on most of the books of the Bible. His first commentary on

  • Romans was published in 1540, and he planned to write commentaries on the entire New Testament.

  • Six years passed before he wrote his second, a commentary on I Corinthians, but after that

  • he devoted more attention to reaching his goal. Within four years he had published commentaries

  • on all the Pauline epistles, and he also revised the commentary on Romans. He then turned his

  • attention to the general epistles, dedicating them to Edward VI of England. By 1555 he had

  • completed his work on the New Testament, finishing with the Acts and the Gospels. For the Old

  • Testament, he wrote commentaries on Isaiah, the books of the Pentateuch, the Psalms, and

  • Joshua. The material for the commentaries often originated from lectures to students

  • and ministers that he reworked for publication. However, from 1557 onwards, he could not find

  • the time to continue this method, and he gave permission for his lectures to be published

  • from stenographers' notes. These Praelectiones covered the minor prophets, Daniel, Jeremiah,

  • Lamentations, and part of Ezekiel. Calvin also wrote many letters and treatises.

  • Following the Responsio ad Sadoletum, Calvin wrote an open letter at the request of Bucer

  • to Charles V in 1543, Supplex exhortatio ad Caesarem, defending the reformed faith. This

  • was followed by an open letter to the pope in 1544, in which Calvin admonished Paul III

  • for depriving the reformers of any prospect of rapprochement. The pope proceeded to open

  • the Council of Trent, which resulted in decrees against the reformers. Calvin refuted the

  • decrees by producing the Acta synodi Tridentinae cum Antidoto in 1547. When Charles tried to

  • find a compromise solution with the Augsburg Interim, Bucer and Bullinger urged Calvin

  • to respond. He wrote the treatise, Vera Christianae pacificationis et Ecclesiae reformandae ratio

  • in 1549, in which he described the doctrines that should be upheld, including justification

  • by faith. Calvin provided many of the foundational documents

  • for reformed churches, including documents on the catechism, the liturgy, and church

  • governance. He also produced several confessions of faith in order to unite the churches. In

  • 1559, he drafted the French confession of faith, the Gallic Confession, and the synod

  • in Paris accepted it with few changes. The Belgic Confession of 1561, a Dutch confession

  • of faith, was partly based on the Gallic Confession. Legacy

  • After the deaths of Calvin and his successor, Beza, the Geneva city council gradually gained

  • control over areas of life that were previously in the ecclesiastical domain. Increasing secularisation

  • was accompanied by the decline of the church. Even the Geneva académie was eclipsed by

  • universities in Leiden and Heidelberg, which became the new strongholds of Calvin's ideas,

  • first identified as "Calvinism" by Joachim Westphal in 1552. By 1585, Geneva, once the

  • wellspring of the reform movement, had become merely its symbol. However, Calvin had always

  • warned against describing him as an "idol" and Geneva as a new "Jerusalem". He encouraged

  • people to adapt to the environments in which they found themselves. Even during his polemical

  • exchange with Westphal, he advised a group of French-speaking refugees, who had settled

  • in Wesel, Germany, to integrate with the local Lutheran churches. Despite his differences

  • with the Lutherans, he did not deny that they were members of the true Church. Calvin's

  • recognition of the need to adapt to local conditions became an important characteristic

  • of the reformation movement as it spread across Europe.

  • Due to Calvin's missionary work in France, his programme of reform eventually reached

  • the French-speaking provinces of the Netherlands. Calvinism was adopted in the Electorate of

  • the Palatinate under Frederick III, which led to the formulation of the Heidelberg Catechism

  • in 1563. This and the Belgic Confession were adopted as confessional standards in the first

  • synod of the Dutch Reformed Church in 1571. Several leading divines, either Calvinist

  • or those sympathetic to Calvinism, settled in England and Scotland. During the English

  • Civil War, the Calvinistic Puritans produced the Westminster Confession, which became the

  • confessional standard for Presbyterians in the English-speaking world. As the Ottoman

  • Empire did not force Muslim conversion on its conquered western territories, reformed

  • ideas were quickly adopted in the two-thirds of Hungary they occupied. A Reformed Constitutional

  • Synod was held in 1567 in Debrecen, the main hub of Hungarian Calvinism, where the Second

  • Helvetic Confession was adopted as the official confession of Hungarian Calvinists. Having

  • established itself in Europe, the movement continued to spread to other parts of the

  • world including North America, South Africa, and Korea.

  • Calvin did not live to see the foundation of his work grow into an international movement;

  • but his death allowed his ideas to break out of their city of origin, to succeed far beyond

  • their borders, and to establish their own distinct character.

  • Calvin is recognized as a Renewer of the Church in Lutheran churches, and as a saint in the

  • Church of England, commemorated on 26 May, and on 28 May by the Episcopal Church.

  • See also

  • Notes

  • References

  • Baron, Salo, "John Calvin and the Jews", in Feldman, Leon A., Ancient and Medieval Jewish

  • History, New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press, OCLC 463285878 .

  • Berg, Machiel A. van den, Friends of Calvin, Grand Rapids, Mi.: Wm.B.Eerdmans Publishing

  • Co., ISBN 9780802862273  Bouwsma, William James, John Calvin: A Sixteenth-Century

  • Portrait, New York: Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-504394-4 .

  • Calvin, John [1564], Institutio Christianae religionis [Institutes of the Christian Religion],

  • Translated by Henry Beveridge, Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company 

  • Cottret, Bernard [1995], Calvin: Biographie [Calvin: A Biography], Translated by M. Wallace

  • McDonald, Grand Rapids, Michigan: Wm. B. Eerdmans, ISBN 0-8028-3159-1 

  • De Greef, Wulfert, "Calvin's writings", in McKim, Donald K., The Cambridge Companion

  • to John Calvin, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-01672-8 

  • ————————, The Writings of John Calvin: An Introductory Guide, Louisville,

  • Kentucky: Westminster John Knox Press, ISBN 0-664-23230-2  Detmers, Achim, "Calvin, the Jews, and Judaism",

  • in Bell, Dean Phillip; Burnett, Stephen G., Jews, Judaism, and the Reformation in Sixteenth-Century

  • Germany, Leiden: Brill, ISBN 978-90-04-14947-2 . DeVries, Dawn, "Calvin's preaching", in McKim,

  • Donald K., The Cambridge Companion to John Calvin, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,

  • ISBN 978-0-521-01672-8  Dyer, Thomas Henry, The Life of John Calvin,

  • London: John Murray  Gamble, Richard C., "Calvin's controversies",

  • in McKim, Donald K., The Cambridge Companion to John Calvin, Cambridge: Cambridge University

  • Press, ISBN 978-0-521-01672-8  Ganoczy, Alexandre, "Calvin's life", in McKim,

  • Donald K., The Cambridge Companion to John Calvin, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,

  • ISBN 978-0-521-01672-8  Gerrish, R. A., "The place of Calvin in Christian

  • theology", in McKim, Donald K., The Cambridge Companion to John Calvin, Cambridge: Cambridge

  • University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-01672-8  Graham, W. Fred, The Constructive Revolutionary:

  • John Calvin and His Socio-Economic Impact, Richmond, Virginia: John Knox Press, ISBN 0-8042-0880-8 .

  • Helm, Paul, John Calvin's Ideas, Oxford: Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-925569-5 .

  • Heron, Alasdair, "John Calvin", in Lacoste, Jean-Yves, Encyclopedia of Christian Theology .

  • Hesselink, I. John, "Calvin's theology", in McKim, Donald K., The Cambridge Companion

  • to John Calvin, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-01672-8 

  • Holder, R. Ward, "Calvin's heritage", in McKim, Donald K., The Cambridge Companion to John

  • Calvin, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-01672-8 

  • Lane, Anthony N.S., "Calvin's Institutes", A Reader's Guide, Grand Rapids: Baker Publishing

  • Group, ISBN 978-0-8010-3731-3  Lange van Ravenswaay, J. Marius J. [2008],

  • "Calvin and the Jews", in Selderhuis, Herman J., Calvijn Handboek [The Calvin Handbook],

  • Translated by Kampen Kok, Grand Rapids, Michigan: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., ISBN 978-0-8028-6230-3 

  • Manetsch, Scott M., Calvin’s Company of Pastors: Pastoral Care and the Emerging Reformed

  • Church, 1536–1609, Oxford Studies in Historical Theology, New York: Oxford University Press 

  • McDonnell, Kilian, John Calvin, the Church, and the Eucharist, Princeton: Princeton University

  • Press, OCLC 318418 . McGrath, Alister E., A Life of John Calvin,

  • Oxford: Basil Blackwell, ISBN 0-631-16398-0 . McNeil, John Thomas, The History and Character

  • of Calvinism, Oxford: Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-500743-3 .

  • Niesel, Wilhelm, The Theology of Calvin, Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Book House, ISBN 0-8010-6694-8 .

  • Olsen, Jeannine E., "Calvin and social-ethical issues", in McKim, Donald K., The Cambridge

  • Companion to John Calvin, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-01672-8 

  • Pak, G. Sujin, The Judaizing Calvin, Oxford: Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-537192-5 .

  • Parker, T. H. L., Calvin: An Introduction to His Thought, London: Geoffrey Chapman,

  • ISBN 0-225-66575-1 . ———————, John Calvin, Tring,

  • Hertfordshire, England: Lion Publishing plc, ISBN 0-7459-1219-2 .

  • ———————, John Calvin: A Biography, Oxford: Lion Hudson plc, ISBN 978-0-7459-5228-4 .

  • Pater, Calvin Augustus, "Calvin, the Jews, and the Judaic Legacy", in Furcha, E. J.,

  • In Honor of John Calvin: Papers from the 1986 International Calvin Symposium, Montreal:

  • McGill University Press, ISBN 978-0-7717-0171-9 . Pettegree, Andrew, "The spread of Calvin's

  • thought", in McKim, Donald K., The Cambridge Companion to John Calvin, Cambridge: Cambridge

  • University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-01672-8  Potter, G. R.; Greengrass, M., John Calvin,

  • London: Edward Arnold Ltd., ISBN 0-7131-6381-X . Steinmetz, David C., Calvin in Context, Oxford:

  • Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-509164-7 . —————————, "Calvin as Biblical

  • Interpreter Among the Ancient Philosophers", Interpretation 63: 142–153, doi:10.1177/002096430906300204 

  • Further reading Balserak, Jon, John Calvin as Sixteenth-Century

  • Prophet, Oxford: Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-198-70325-9 .

  • Backus, Irena; Benedict, Philip, eds.. Calvin and His Influence, 1509–2009. Oxford University

  • PressGordon, Bruce, Calvin, London/New Haven: Yale

  • University Press, ISBN 978-0-300-17084-9 . Muller, Richard A.. The Unaccommodated Calvin:

  • Studies in the Foundation of a Theological Tradition. Oxford University Press, USA. ISBN 978-0-19-515168-8. 

  • Sewell, Alida Leni. Calvin, the Body and Sexuality: An Inquiry into His Anthropology. Amsterdam:

  • VU University Press. ISBN 978-90-8659-587-7.  Tamburello, Dennis E., Union with Christ:

  • John Calvin and the Mysticism of St. Bernard, Louisville, Kentucky: Westminster John Knox

  • Press, ISBN 0-664-22054-1 ISBN 978-0-664-22054-9 External links

  • John Calvin on In Our Time at the BBC. John Calvin entry in the Internet Encyclopedia

  • of Philosophy Works by John Calvin at Project Gutenberg

  • Works by John Calvin at Post-Reformation Digital Library

  • The John Calvin Bibliography of the H. Henry Meeter Center for Calvin Studies

  • Calvinism Resources Database Writings of Calvin at the Christian Classics

  • Ethereal Library Writings and lectures by and about John Calvin

  • at the SWRB Sermons by Calvin

  • Psychopannychia The Life of John Calvin by Theodore Beza

  • Catholic Encyclopedia

John Calvin was an influential French theologian and pastor during the Protestant Reformation.

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