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John Calvin Day

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William Crawley | 10:52 UK time, Friday, 10 July 2009

15calvindesc.jpgWell, it's not an official holiday, but it is the birthday of the 16th century French Reformer and founder of Presbyterianism. Calvin was born on this date in 1509. I marked the 500th anniversary of his birth with a report from Geneva on last weekend's Radio 4 Sunday programme. Last month, Radio Ulster broadcast a full documentary, Calvin at 500, which examined the Reformer's life and work.

Calvin continues to divide people. Some say he was an austere man of ideas, others that he was an engaged man of the people. Some say he was an early democrat, others say he was a theocrat to the core. Some say he was a defender of liberty of conscience, others say he defended the liberty of others to agree with him. Then there's Calvin's influence on economics. He challenged the church's traditional opposition to usury and developed ideas that changed economic life in Reformed countries, but was he really, as some say, a key figure in the development of modern capitalism?

Move to and you encounter even more controversy. Many have become exercised, in this anniversary year, by Calvin's "big idea". What was that? It depends who you ask, but most think it was the idea of divine sovereignty. Hardly original, I hear you say. Well, Calvin never claimed to be original. In fact, he claimed only to be Augustinian in theology. Someone has calculated that Calvin's major work, , contains more than 1500 references to Augustine of Hippo, the theologian's greatest influence. Augustine taught the doctrine of predestination, and Calvin taught it too. This is the claim -- and it seems outrageous to many modern minds -- that God, before the foundation of the world, chose to save those who would eventually be saved and also -- this is "double predestination" -- he chose to damn those who would eventually be damned. In other words, if you are saved, it is not because of anything you have done in this life; it is because God chose to save you even before you breathed your first breath.

Some later theologians in the Reformed tradition developed the idea of choice (or "election") in other directions. Karl Barth, widely regarded as the greatest theologian of the 20th century, spoke of God electing Jesus Christ to be the saviour of the world. Followers of Christ are, then, saved not because they were elected to salvation before the foundation of the world, but because Christ was elected to be their saviour before the foundation of the world. That idea leaves open another possibility, which Barth resisted to some extent -- since Christ was elected "to save the world", everyone is saved.

Contemporary evangelical thinkers, such as Elaine Storkey, regard the idea of double predestination as morally and theologically questionable. Storkey claims that Calvin taught predestination but not "double" predestination. Though within the Calvinist tradition (or, perhaps, the term "Calvinian" is a more accurate), Storkey says she would think less of the Reformer if he believed in double predestination.

While people pick over these and other controversies on this anniversary, I hope they also do justice to the european humanist context of Calvin's writings. Calvin was not only open to the riches of classical philosophy, he was also convinced that we approach those and all ideas from our human perspective. In the opening sentence of his Institutes, he signals his commitment to anthropology as much as theology: "Nearly all the wisdom we possess, that is to say, true and sound wisdom, consists of two parts: the knowledge of God and of ourselves. But while joined by many bonds, which one precedes and brings forth the other is not easy to discern."

This sentence deserves some examination and its implications are rarely considered in today's debates about Calvin. Human beings when doing theology are unavoidably still human, and that means our ideas about God reflect also our ideas about ourselves.

I'll add a final comment, in response to the claim that John Calvin was a "murderer" This allegation is sometimes made in respect of the . Servetus was, in many ways, an extraordinary person: a doctor, a philosopher-theologian, an inventor, a polymath. He was executed by the Geneva Council after being tried for denying the doctrine of the Trinity.

Servetus has been expelled from many Reformed and Catholic cities. In fact, he was already facing a Catholic death sentence when, for reasons no-one can explain, he turned up in Calvin's church while Calvin was preaching on August 13, 1553. Some historians think Servetus had a death-wish: already a fugitive, why would he challenge the Geneva authorities by entering their jurisdiction? Geneva was a young republic and nervous about its reputation in both the Reformed world and in the minds of Catholic authorities. Not to act in such a notorious case would bring condemnation from Protestant and Catholic jurisdictions alike.

It is clear that Calvin's role in the case was morally questionable by our modern lights. But by the standards of his own day, his role was to report the presence of a known lawbreaker. We would not consider heresy a crime; but it was in the 16th century, and not only in Geneva. The city council held a trial and Calvin played no part in the trial; he gave no evidence, and -- contrary to a common myth -- he did not act as the judge. When the council found Servetus guilty and condemned him to death by burning, Calvin intervened to request that Servetus be executed by a more humane method. The Council ignored the request. It is difficult to claim that Calvin is a "murderer" on the basis of this involvement. That said, no-one today (except in some religious theocracies) would defend the kind of "justice" meted out to Michael Servetus. His treatment under the law of Geneva was a disgrace by our standards today, and Calvin's participation in Genevan civic society implicates him in that judgement. The Servetus affair undoubtedly presents the dark side of John Calvin. Servetus has mocked Calvin's ideas both publicly and in private correspondence, and Calvin passionately resented it. He hated Servetus and vowed, in advance of Servetus's arrival in Geneva, that the Spaniard would regret ever falling into his hands. These are not words one associates with the tender mercies of Christ. They reveal a theologian and pastor who was willing to act out of vindictiveness in defence of his own ideas.

Comments

  • Comment number 1.


    I don't see the distinction in outcome between predestination and double predestination.

    PREDESTINATION: God chose who to save.

    DOUBLE PREDESTINATION: God chose who to save and who to damn.

    So in the first instance God choosing who to save does not mean that those he didn't save were damned? Isn't that what traditional Calvinists believe? If you're not saved, you're damned, right? So what the hell? Predestination is just as 'bad' as double predestination. In both cases God 'knows' what the hell he's doing. Let's be honest about the difference here:

    DOUBLE PREDESTINATION: God walks along a line of people going, 'Heaven, Heaven, Hell, Heaven, Hell, Heaven'. Congratulations the saved! Hell for the damned!

    PREDESTINATION: God walks along a line of people going, 'Heaven, Heaven,' *pause* 'Heaven' *pause* 'Heaven'. Congratulations the saved!

    Much more consistent with the character of a loving God, isn't it? And not only that, but neither of these concepts make any sense whatsoever within Christian theology. What's the point of evangelism if nobody can choose salvation, it's all preordained from the beginning of time? What's the point of choosing anything? Free will is eradicated. Thought you knew what John 3:16 was about?

    "For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life." -John 3:16

    If Calvin was right, this should read:

    For God so loved the elect that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever is pre-ordained to believe in him shall not perish like all the unelected but have eternal life like those who won God's lottery.


  • Comment number 2.


    Also, they say God demonstrates his love by choosing to save some, and demonstrates his justice by choosing to damn others. This action would demonstrate neither love nor justice, since it's individuals we're dealing with. If the purpose is to reward good and punish bad, every individual is a mixture of the two. Perhaps heaven and hell are consequences which can be mixed like an eternal cocktail? To the degree you're good, you'll have heaven, to the degree you're bad you'll have hell?

    Personally, I don't believe in a God who sends people to eternal torment and micromanages human existence and 'sends' them to a 'where' when they die and preordains everything in just such a way as to make it seem so random.

    I'm not sure Calvin was all that smart.


  • Comment number 3.

    Here's my take on the five points of Calvinism (TULIP):

    T = Total illogicality
    U = Unutterable callousness
    L = Limited intelligence
    I = Immoral concept of justice
    P = Perversion of the saints

    I regret that that might upset some fans of old Johnny Calvin, but I find it hard to feel warm thoughts towards a murderer ("oh, but he wasn't a murderer, because you have to take into account the historical context." So say those who are forever preaching against moral relativism and situational ethics!!!!!)

    To paraphrase Bertrand Russell: that is why "I am not a Calvinist".

  • Comment number 4.


    From The Time 'Faith Central' blog:

    "Are you a closet Clavinist?"





    According to the little survey, I "have been tried and tested in Calvinism", and, am "a genuine Calvinist."

    However, it also says, "You were not born to be a Calvinist. Catholicism suits you better slightly hedonistic, loose and emotional."

    Now here's the thing, how can a Clavinist not be born to be a Calvinist? And as for the "slightly hedonistic, loose and emotional", is that Catholicism, or is that me?

    RJB? Is Catholicism slightly hedonistic, loose and emotional?

  • Comment number 5.

    I got

    'You are somewhat of a Calvinist' C-factor of 47%

    Some of your points of view make you look like a Calvinist. However, you live your life in a lighter way than Calvinists do, which allows you to enjoy it more.

  • Comment number 6.

    Drat - 53% - Peter, you beat me in uncalvinity!

  • Comment number 7.

    Coverage given by Sunday Sequence to assessing the life and legacy of John Calvin has been very interesting and informative, even to those who are not Calvinist in theology. The difficulties raised by his teaching however, both theologically and biblically, remain to this day, dividing Evangelicals into two schools - Calvinist and Arminian. It was the latter group, known then as "the Remonstrants" who originally formulated the "Five Points" - not of Calvinism - but of disagreement with Reformed teaching.

    While 2009 marks the 500th anniversary of Calvin's birth, on October 19th it will also be the 400th anniversary of the premature death of the Dutch theologian and professor Jacob Arminius, whose teachings were adopted and are still held by the many of those who do not subscribe to those of John Calvin. For the sake of balance, in the ongoing Calvinist/Arminian debate, would it not be right therefore that Arminius' place in shaping Evangelical thinking should also be given some coverage?

  • Comment number 8.

    I'm 64% Calvinist. Woo-hoo!

  • Comment number 9.


    50% Calvinist - more than PK but less than Helio.

    Most of it comes from my work ethic though.

    0% in relationships 'In your relationships you are not very reserved. One might say: uncalvinistic. You let yourself go too easily to be a Calvinist'. Wheeeeeeeeeh Heeeaaeeeh!!

  • Comment number 10.


    Graham

    There's a name for 64% Calvinists... Arminians!

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