Calvin on Life's Perils and God's Providence
Calvin apparently lived with a profound awareness of the
potential for death that constantly accompanies us as human beings. In 1.17.10
of his Institutes of the Christian
Religion, the Reformer provided a rather sobering catalog of the
"innumerable ... deaths that threaten" us in our day to day existence. It's
intriguing, and perhaps profitable, to explore that catalog and reflect upon
the ways in which our modern (sense of) vulnerability to death measures up to
at least one man's (sense of) the same five hundred years ago.
"We need not," Calvin begins, "go beyond ourselves [to
discern danger of death]. Since our body is the receptacle of a thousand
diseases ... a man cannot go about unburdened by many forms of his own
destruction and without [living] a life enveloped, as it were, with death." No
doubt the bubonic plague, which by some accounts destroyed nearly half of
Europe's population in the 14th century, figured among the "thousand
diseases" Calvin has in mind, even if in his day the plague appeared only in
regional outbreaks. Of course, vaccines and antibiotics have recently given
humankind the edge over this and many other diseases, but fatal diseases (for
example, various forms of cancer) persist, as most of us know only too well.
"For what else would you call it [but 'life enveloped, as it
were, with death']," Calvin continues, "when [man] neither freezes nor sweats
without danger?" It's easy to forget,
living in our climate controlled environments, how susceptible we actually are
as human beings to cold and heat. Apparently humans must retain a body
temperature between 70 and 108 degrees Fahrenheit to stay alive, and this
requires avoiding any protracted exposure to external temperatures below 40
degrees or above 95, a rather alarming truth given temperatures nearly
everywhere on earth that regularly transgress those boundaries. However
talented we've become, at least in developed portions of the world, at
shielding ourselves from fatal temperatures, we've not discovered ways of
making our bodies per se less
vulnerable to heat or cold. Extreme temperatures still take lives.
"Now, wherever you turn, all things around you not only are
hardly to be trusted but almost openly menace, and seem to threaten immediate
death. Embark upon a ship, you are one step away from death. Mount a horse, if
one foot slips, your life is imperiled. Go through the city streets, you are
subject to as many dangers as there are tiles on the roofs." Calvin perceived
every mode of early modern transport to pose at least some danger of death. I suspect that we as modern folk are more vulnerable to transport-related
death than our early modern counterparts. For one thing, we're much more
mobile. For another, we've employed our God-given intelligence to develop modes
of transport that are surely expedient but only relatively safe, especially
when compared with the slow but steady art of walking to one's destination. We
insist, for example, in hurtling past one another at insane speeds in small
metal boxes, trusting in a pair of thin yellow lines and one another's eyesight
and sanity to keep us from fatal collision. Or in launching ourselves 30,000
plus feet in the air, trusting not only in the skill of engineers and pilots
(whom we've never met) but also in the ability of mechanics to slow the
inevitable progress of the larger metal boxes we fly in towards mechanical
failure and (mid-flight) breakdown. And so on. Travel is fatally dangerous, as
-- again -- many of us know only too well.
"If there is a weapon in your hand or a friend's, harm
awaits." It's intriguing that Calvin anticipates harm -- and especially death --
from a weapon in "your hand" or "a friend's" to the exclusion of other
potential weapon-bearers. The danger posed by a weapon in the hand of an enemy
is ostensibly so obvious it doesn't even merit mention. Calvin clearly can't be
marshalled in defense of that opinion expressed by so many that more guns equals
greater safety for everyone. I'm sure many modern Americans will wish to take
exception -- whether on the basis of political persuasion, a particular
interpretation of the second amendment, or sheer enthusiasm for weapons -- to
Calvin's claim that arming one's self equals greater danger than safety, but
the reality that legalized, private weapons in America (at least) are much more
commonly employed in suicides and accidental deaths than self-defense lends
some support to his perspective.
"All the fierce animals you see are armed for your
destruction. But if you try to shut yourself up in a walled garden, seemingly
delightful, there a serpent sometimes lies hidden." I appreciate Calvin's
singling out of snakes as particularly dangerous to human beings. It makes me
think he might have shared something of my own admittedly neurotic fear of even
the most harmless of snakes (just ask my wife). Nothing baffles me more than
the choice some people make to keep snakes as pets within their homes. Surely that
kind of insanity must be wholly modern in origin.
"Your house, continually in danger of fire, threatens in the
daytime to impoverish you, at night even to collapse upon you." What home owner
hasn't experienced this sentiment? Perhaps our modern homes are more
structurally sound than early modern buildings were. And, best case scenario,
fire alarms alert us to the danger that flames pose to us in our places of
residence. But even the most solid of our homes are susceptible to destruction
from a number of elements and/or natural disasters. And, thus, so too are we
within them.
"I pass over poisonings, ambushes, robberies, open violence,
which in part besiege us at home, in part dog us abroad." Actually, Calvin,
you've not passed over these things. You've just mentioned them. And rightly
so. Few realities pose as much danger to us in this fallen world as one
another. Historical research into crime and murder in pre-modern times is a
fairly recent academic phenomenon, and the initial results may surprise some.
The medieval and early modern periods were apparently much more violent than
our own modern age. In fact, the western world's overall homicide rate declined
rather significantly in the seventeenth-century, and (thankfully) hasn't
rebounded. The jury is still out on exactly why, but most
scholars believe it was a product of stronger, more centralized states
possessing the machinery to deal more effectively with perpetrators of violent
crime. On the other hand, aggravated assault and robbery rates did climb significantly
during the last several decades of the last century in America (even if the homicide
rate remained more or less constant). Whatever the numbers ultimately mean,
we're still rather obviously a threat to one another.
"Amid these tribulations must not man be most miserable,
since, but half alive in life, he weakly draws his anxious and languid breath,
as if he had a sword perpetually hanging over his neck?" Calvin rarely receives
criticism for being too cheery. But his real point in highlighting the dangers
that folk in his day (and ours) face is not to induce despair. It is, rather,
to make us grateful for God's providential care that keeps us from any number
of disasters, and permits those (and only those) to reach us which are
ultimately for our good. Herein lays great comfort and joy. When "a godly man" comes to understand God's providence, "he is then relieved
and set free not only from the extreme anxiety and fear that were pressing him
before, but from every care. [...] His solace, I say, is to know that his
Heavenly Father so holds all things in his power, so rules by his authority and
will, so governs by his wisdom, that nothing can befall except he determine
it."
Perhaps, then, regular and sober estimation of the dangers
of death surrounding us is in order. Such should finally lead us to grateful
and confident reliance upon our Father, who has, after all, wisely determined the
boundaries of our existence. And God's providence in our lives, we must remember, is wholly informed by his tender love for us, love evidenced by the fact that he gave us his very
Son to suffer true death, alienation
from Him, in our stead, and on the basis of the same extends to us the ultimate gift
of eternal safety in his own presence.