Geneva |
The spirit of Zwinglianism reached its
fullest development in the theology, political theories, and
ecclesiastic thought of John Calvin (1509-1564).
Perhaps even more so than Martin Luther, Calvin created the
patterns and thought that would dominate Western culture
throughout the modern period. American culture, in
particular, is thoroughly Calvinist in some form or another;
at the heart of the way Americans think and act, you'll find
this fierce and imposing reformer. |
Calvin's Thought |
Since Calvin literally transformed the
philosophical, political, religious, and social landscape of
Europe, what was the substance of his radical reform?
The most important theological position that Calvin took was his formulation of the doctrine of predestination. The early church had struggled with this issue. Since God knew the future, did that mean that salvation was predestined? That is, do human beings have any choice in the matter, or did God make the salvation decision for each of us at the beginning of time? The early church, and the moderate Protestant churches, had decided that God had not predestined salvation for individuals. Salvation was in part the product of human choice. Calvin, on the other hand, built his reformed church on the concept that salvation was not a choice, but was rather pre-decided by God from the beginning of time. This mean that individuals were "elected" for salvation by God; this "elect" would form the population of the Calvinist church. |
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This view of human salvation is called either the "doctrine of the elect" or "the doctrine of living saints" (in Catholic theology, a "saint" is a human being that the church is certain has gained salvation; in Calvinist theology, a "saint" or "living saint" is a living, breathing human being who is guaranteed to gain salvation no matter what he or she does here on earth, although the elect obviously don't engage in flagrant sin; not all good people were among the elect, but people with bad behavior were certainly not among the elect). It was incumbent on churches filled with living saints to only admit other living saints; this organizational principle was called voluntary associations. Voluntary associations are predicated on the idea that a community or association chooses its own members and those members, of their own free will, choose to be a member of that community or association. In time, the concept of voluntary associations would become the basis of civil society and later political society in Europe. Richard Hooker |
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