Zusammenfassung der Ressource
CALVIN-THE THEOLOGIAN
- SKILLS
- Appreciated/ expressed cogently
insights of magisterial reformers, mixing in his own
Anmerkungen:
- Nearly 800 sermons printed during his lifetime
- Stylist in both French and Latin
Anmerkungen:
- Blessed with a 'golden pen', and a superior ability to express complex theological issues in an easily understandable manner
- Post-1557
- Gave thrice-weekly lessons on the Bible
- Commentaries on OT and NT
Anmerkungen:
- Published from 1540 onwards
- RESPONSES
Anmerkungen:
- To doctrinal challenges, magor events, and the need to offer believers edification about specific issues prompted him to write MORE
- Treatises of
advise to France,
Low Countries
and Poland
- Attacks on opponents
Anmerkungen:
- Opponents and targets - Council of Trent, Anabaptists, anti-Trinitarians, astrologers, Lutheran ubiquitarians, and those favouring compromise with Rome
- Influences
- Modelling of 1536 Institutes on
Luther's Catechism - debt
- Defending Luther's fundamental theology
- Humanist
- Melanchthon's 'Commonplaces'
- Bucer in Strasbourg - influenced
ecclesiology and predestination
- Critical of Zwingli's symbolic
interpretation of Eucharist
- Bullinger and a Lasco also
exhorted believers to shun
papal abhominations
- THEOLOGY
- Emphasis on God's
absolute control of
everything on earth
-mans's obligation to
serve God
- God the
everlasting
Governor and
Preserver, "sustains
and cares for
everything, even to
the least sparrow"
- God the 'fount
of all good' -
gratitude
obliges
humans to
servitude
- Human
sinfulness and
divine
omnipotence
Anmerkungen:
- Calvin in McGrath "God tamed his heart and reduced it to obedience". Impotence of humanity emphasised
- EUCHARIST; Benedict; a
middle ground between
Oecolampadius' symbolic
understanding and Lutheran
real presence
- Lutheran 'real'
presence as
crass and carnal
conception of
God
- Christ's spirit came to believers
Anmerkungen:
- Multiple benefits - confirmed and refreshed faith, inspired them to greater thanksgiving for God and bound them together as a community in concord and affection
- Sacrament to be celebrated weekly due to benefits
- Keeping eucharistic community free
Anmerkungen:
- Pollution-free sentiment led to a concern with church discipline
- Those outwardly professing the true faith, didn't live scandalously, and believed themselves worthy of admission to communion after personal self-examination should be admitted to the sacrament.
- Substance of the Eucharist
Anmerkungen:
- Confirms reception of the body of Christ - God's communication
- Virtue
Anmerkungen:
- 'Beneficia Christi' - benefits won for the believer by Christ through his obedience
- REDEMPTION, RIGHTEOUSNESS, ETERNAL LIFE
- Value the Creation
- Material elements
Anmerkungen:
- Signify the grace, generosity and goodness of God
- New motivation for ENJOYING nature
- Calvin - "Nature would surely be satisfied with water to drink! The addition of wine is thus due to God's overflowing generosity" in McGrath
- Calvin's three
aspects of spiritual
truth presented in
the visible bread
and wine - McGrath
- Signification of meaning
Anmerkungen:
- divine promises, enclosed with the sign itself
- Believers are reassured
Anmerkungen:
- through the words of insititution; body and blood of JC shed for them
- Confirms the promise
Anmerkungen:
- in which JC declares that his flesh is food indeed, and his blood drink indeed, and that they feed us with eternal life
- PREDESTINATION
- Popularly seen as rigorous -McGrath revises this
Anmerkungen:
- His successors in the later C16th needing to impose method on his thought, recasted Calvin's theology with rigorously logical structures of Aristotelian methodology favoured by the later Italian Renaissance.
- Aristotle on predestination - God
giving grace to some, and
passes over everyone else
- Calvin's logical rigour
Anmerkungen:
- God actively chooses to redeem or to save
- Predestination the eternal decree of God, by which he determined what he wished to make of every individual
- Emphasising the graciousness of God; decision to redeem individuals irrespective of their merits - mystery of God
- Luther
Anmerkungen:
- God's graciousness reflected in the fact that he justifies sinners, saving sinners DESPITE their demerits
- Theology
centred on
and derived
from JC
Anmerkungen:
- Witnessed by Scripture
- Specific historical phenomenon of Jesus Christ, moving out to explore its implications
- Language analytic and inductive, whereas Beza began from GENERAL principles and proceeded to deduce their consequences for Christian theology (approach was deductive and synthetic)
- BAPTISM
Anmerkungen:
- Calvin - authentic tradition of the early church, NOT a later medieval development
- Influenced by Zwingli
Anmerkungen:
- Calvin - baptism is a public demonstration of allegience to God - 'society of the church'. Declaratory role of the sacrament of baptism
- Influenced by Luther
Anmerkungen:
- Baptism as a remission of sins and the new life of believers in JC
- Calvin's justification of infant
baptism in the face of
Anabaptist rejection
- PROVIDENCE
- God created the world,
remaining its absolute
master
- Taking interest in it,
intervening in it at every
moment and
abandoning none of his
power to the blindness
of natural law
- Every creature
subject to God
and his will
Anmerkungen:
- "Down to the least sparrow"
- Calvin
affirms this
is true of
man both in
isolation and
in society
- History and
revolutions
regarded by
Calvin as
eloquent
testimonies of
God's power
Anmerkungen:
- 'Indicate that human things are directed by him’
- Over the
elect
AND
reprobate
- SIN
- Profoundest
source of sin
Anmerkungen:
- Adam's original sin - Calvin views it as pride
- Pride and
faithlessness
of Adam
Anmerkungen:
- Compared to Augustine's perception of self-love
- Characterised by a
disobedience
inspired by pride
- Weakness and
powerlessness of
Man
Anmerkungen:
- Place him in utter dependence upon the power and mercy of God - core of Calvinist thought
- Since the
Fall, man
deprived of
'healthy will'
Anmerkungen:
- Care must be taken to distinguish between the will in itself, and a good or a bad will.
- We sin
voluntarily, by
the force of
our perverted
and evil will
- SACRAMENTS
- Calvin saw them as
identity-giving
(McGrath)
- "Wherever we find the Word of God
preached purely and listened to, we cannot
doubt that a church exists"
Anmerkungen:
- Presence of the authorised means of grace, which constitutes a true church - McGrath
- Calvin's Two definitions
- 'External Symbol'
Anmerkungen:
- By which the Lord seals on our consciences his promises of good will towards us, in order to sustain the weakness of our faith
- Calvin-promise and command of the Lord
- "Our faith is weak unless it is supported on every side and sustained by every means. Here our merciful Lord, according to his infinite kindness, he condescend to lead us to himself by just earthly things, and to set before us in the flesh a mirror of spiritual blessings" - CALVIN
- Visible Sign
Anmerkungen:
- of a sacred thing. or a visible form of an invisible grace - FROM AUGUSTINE
- Middle ground between
Zwingli and Luther of relation
between sacramental sign and
spiritual gift it signified
Anmerkungen:
- Calvin - such a close connection between the symbol and the gift which it symbolises that we 'can easily pass from the one to the other'.
- Calvin-sign is visible and physical, whereas the thing signified is invisible and spiritual - the thing that is signified is effected by its sign
- Calvin - "Believers....whenever they see the symbols appointed by the Lord, to think and be convinced that the truth of the thing is surely present there."
- McGrath - not
ecclesiasticical
diplomacy, but
reflecting his own
understanding
Anmerkungen:
- Calvin's single model - incarnation speaks of the union of divinity and humanity in the person of JC, but not fusion
- Calvin - theology centred on 'knowledge of God and knowledge of ourselves' - McGrath
- OT Prophets
- Ganoczy
- emphasised the
prophetic awarenss
at the heart of
Calvin's pastoral and
reforming vocation
- Legimitised his work as
a reformer by an appeal
to the model of the OT
prophets
- Stauffer
- Calvin's use of the first
person in his sermons
- Calvin's prophetic
consciousness
- Millet
- Rhetoric had prophetic image
- Prophetic fervour
legitimised and structured
his preaching
- BOUWSMA
- Anxiety central to his
theology - that
surrounding death and
judgment
- Constant preoccupation
with order and impending
reversion to chaos
- Keeping human
behaviour within
boundaries
- The need ot avoid
pollution made
excommunication an
important element in
Calvinist policy
- Calvin's insistence on the simplicity of worship