Zusammenfassung der Ressource
THE INSTITUTES
- 1536
- Benedict - convincing
Francis I that the
evangelical faith not threat
to order, yet cast dangers
of false worship
- Catholic
practices
'frightful
abhominations'
- Excommunication
Anmerkungen:
- Instituted to bar the evidently unbelieving and unworthy
- Relation
between Church
and State
Anmerkungen:
- RESPONSIVE NATURE
Anmerkungen:
- Official condemnation of the Affair of the Placards of 1534
- Protest against the attitude of the French Crown with regard to the
Reform
- Calvin's utter focus
on French affairs
- Keen to clear French
Reformed from the
accusation of rebellion
- Indebted to Lutheran thought
- Its planning
- Exposition on the Decalogue
and the first article of the Creed
- Jesus in
Matthew
18:15-17
Anmerkungen:
- Blueprint for shunning sinners who refused to amend their ways after first private, then collective admonitions failed to move them.
- DISCIPLINE
- Benedict - Formed the sinews of a rightly
ordered church and encompassed the
power of excommunication
Anmerkungen:
- The Consistory served a different need to state's suppression of criminal behaviour
- Preferred aristocratic
governance - least likely to
fall to tyranny
- BIBLE
Anmerkungen:
- clear model for church discipline
- Scripture
Anmerkungen:
- Spelled out the basic offices found in any properly ordered Christian church.
- Inspired by Bucer
Anmerkungen:
- 'On True Pastoral Care' of 1538 on the NT - "pastors and preachers as the servants who meet the needs of the poor on behalf of the common church".
- Bucer - 'Holy Spirit's ordinance...each church have a number of elders who are all pastors and bishops; overseers who provide pastoral care and carry out the pastoral office
- 1543 revision incorporated
Bucer's claim (Benedict)
Anmerkungen:
- Various forms of ministry had a clear biblical sanction and gave greater precision to the lists on ministers in Bucer's work.
- Revisions created a work
that was comprehensive
and compact -
appropriate for theological
instruction and laymen -
(Benedict)
- McGrath - "Calvin points to how we
are able to appreciate and enjoy the
good things of life
Anmerkungen:
- Celebrate and acknowledge their author, giving him thanks - Calvin's sentiment
- FOURFOLD MINISTRY
Anmerkungen:
- Calvin strengthened ministerial authority by claiming divine ordination for it, and gave those recognising the need to escape pollutive Rome a positive alternative model of a true Christian church
- Pastors
Anmerkungen:
- Proclaiming the Gospel and administering the sacraments BIBLE - 'bishops', 'presbyters', 'pastors', 'ministers',
- Like Bucer, Calvin (Benedict) deduced that the Roman Catholic hierarchy that distinguished bishops from parish ministers was illegitimate
- Some ministers could have an oversight role, but all should preach and minister to a congregation at the same time
- Ministers of the Word
- Teachers
Anmerkungen:
- Experts in scriptural interpretation, but LACKED authority to apply Scripture
- Elders
Anmerkungen:
- Deacons; Two types
Anmerkungen:
- Responsible for the relief of the poor
- Collecting and distributing alms
- Devoted to physical
care of the poor and
sick
Anmerkungen:
- Included widows - deaconesses as well as deacons. Inspired by Paul in Timothy 5:9-10
- DOUBLE PREDESTINATION
Anmerkungen:
- Humanity as humble and cast down, to learn to tremble at his judgment and esteem his mercy - ELECTION
- Addressed in 1539 Institutes - reaction
against Melanchthon
- Influenced by the modern Augustinian
school (McGrath)
Anmerkungen:
- Taught a doctrine of absolute double predestination - God allocates some to eternal life and others to eternal condemnation, without any reference to merits or demerits. Fate rests upon the will of God
- Salvation lies outside the
control of the individual
Anmerkungen:
- Calvin; forced to reckon with the mystery of the inexplicable
- God not subject to any law
Anmerkungen:
- God is outside the law, and that his will is the foundation of existing conceptions of morality
- Predestination rests in the inscrutable judgements of God
- Ancillary doctrine; explaining a puzzling aspect of the consequences of the proclamation of the gospel of grace - McGrath
- 1559
- Predestination
follows the exposition
of the doctrine of faith
Anmerkungen:
- Predestination in its proper context - mystery of divine revelation - yet revealed in a specific context and specific manner
- Jesus the 'mirror' of election- an object lesson for the upright in faith
- Scripture, Calvin feels able to
deny any weakness on God's part
-OMNIPOTENCE (McGrath)
- Biblical exposition and
systematic theology
virtually identical to Calvin
(McGrath)
- Culminating work of
Calvin's lifetime
- Translated into
French in 1560
- Four Books of
the Institutes
- Monumental
work
Anmerkungen:
- Its success was immense and it was never discredited afterwards.
- Theological Summa of
Reformed
Protestantism
- WENDEL
- Whole of
Calvinism is in
the Institutes
- All other
works
related to it
- Synthesis
of Calvin's
thought
- 1539
- Contained 3x as
much matter as
the 1539 edition
- REACTIVE
- Servetus' writings and the
Anabaptists - increased
exposition on the Trinity
- Influenced by Bucer's work
- More coherent
and systematic -
better mastery of
material
- French version translated 1541
- Elegant and
personal
style
- Abundant
circulation in
France
Anmerkungen:
- established itself at once as the basic manual of dogmatic in the
reformed churches.
- 1550
- Translated
into French
1551
- Subdivided into paragraphs -
helping the reader find their
way
- SOURCES
- Hist. - Calvin more
constructive than
imaginative
- Interested more in
humanist erudition
than original
discoveries
- Hist. debate
on role of
Luther
- Calvin his most
faithful disciple
- Comparisons are confirmed and
legitimised by the homage that Calvin
never ceased to render to Luther and his
work.
- Renegade
from Lutheran
thought
- Calvin had too strong a personality to profess
himself of Luther’s school without criticism or
reservations
- Derived thought
from Augustine or
Bucer
- Idea of the Church
points of comparison
with Bucer palpable
Anmerkungen:
- Unified in two aspects (visible and invisible)
- Though taken
as much from
Augustine
doctrine
- Church
organisation
Anmerkungen:
- Wendel - Bucer's most important contribution
- Ecclesiastical organisations are of Divine right because they are dictated by the Holy Spirit
- Wendel -
Greater
knowledge of OT
than any other
reformer
- Influenced by scholastic
authors, medieval
scholars, Church Fathers
and Roman Law
- Melanchthon
Anmerkungen:
- His expositions on tables of the Law, upon faith, hope
and charity influenced Calvin's thought
- Little
respect for
Zwingli
Anmerkungen:
- Saw him as a second-rate theologian - didn't understand Zurcich's support-base for him
- Wendel - PURPOSE
- Initially -
exposition on
Christian
doctrine as a
whole
Anmerkungen:
- Sort of Catechism - an elementary manual
- Calvin; the Holy Spirit
calls upon men to
imbue themselves with
Divine revelation
Anmerkungen:
- By the reading of Holy Scripture
- Institutes a
means to
fulfil this
- Manual so as not to
commit errors by
misinterpreting
Scripture
- Purpose for translating it
into French - dissemination
of correct reading of
Scripture
- 1560 edition -
Latin preface
for students
and the
learned
Anmerkungen:
- Fundamental aim of work made apparent
- Underlining, for the benefit of all
readers, the function that had to
be fulfilled by dogmatics