Category Blogging The Institutes

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Blog 244: 4.20.27 – 4.20.32

Calvin’s sensitivity to the different circumstances in which people live lead him to flip-flop, or at least to be somewhat ambivalent in his attitude to the magistrate. Citing the case of Nebuchadnezzar (Jer. 27), Scripture requires obedience to bad kings, and…

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Blog 243: 4.20.10 – 4.20.26

No doubt having the Anabaptists in mind,  and having already defended the right to litigate, Calvin proceeds to defend the entire judicial process. He discourages using the law for the taking of revenge, but upholds the use of due process,…

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Blog 242: 4.20.12 – 4.20.18

Calvin borrows the idea of a just war from Augustine. Everything is to be tried in order to preserve the peace before war is declared, though waging war obviously means that reparations must be made, if necessary. A consideration of…

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Blog 241: 4.20.8 – 4.20.11

Calvin here shows two things – his concern about the dangers of tyrannical government, and also his apparently relaxed attitude regarding forms of political government. You may say that he derives the possible forms from the ancient world, but in fact…

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Blog 240: 4.20.2 – 4.20.7

Calvin has already established his understanding of “a twofold government” to which human beings are subject: an inward government in which God rules over the individual human soul for eternal life and an outward government in which God through human…

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Blog 237: 4.19.20 – 4.19.25

Calvin continues his diatribe against false sacraments of the Roman Catholic Church, wrapping up his denial of the sacrament of final unction.  In paragraphs 19-21, he levels two criticisms: the proof text (James 5:14) does not pertain to the church…

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Blog 236: 4.19.14 – 4.19.19

Calvin continues his critique of Catholicism by applying a biblical definition of “sacrament” to the Roman rite of penance.  He begins with a clear and careful distinction between public repentance, as it was practiced in the early church, and the…

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Blog 235: 4.19.7- 4.19.13

Confirmation, a sacrament in Roman Catholic theology, was an offence to Calvin because it sapped the meaning of baptism. In scholastic terms, baptism only washed away original sin and those sins committed before baptism. Confirmation was viewed as a sacrament…

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Blog 234: 4.19.1 – 4.19.6

More on sacraments – additional ones invented by men. Using the formula that sacraments are “visible signs of an invisible grace” Calvin notes that there is no limit to the inventions that can pass this test. Reverting again to the…