INSTITUTES OF THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION
By John Calvin
A New Translation
by
Henry Beveridge, Esq.
The Institution of The Christian Religion, written in Latin, by master John
Calvin, and translated into English according to the authors last
edition.
Seen and allowed according to the order appointed in the Queries maiesties
injunctions.
PREFACE TO THE ELECTRONIC EDITION.
In an attempt to assist you in your efforts, this electronic publication
has been updated to include a new series of footnotes in addition to the notes
from the original Beveridge Translation. These footnotes were written by Robert
J. Dunzweiler, Professor of Systematic Theology, Biblical Theology Seminary,
Hatfield Pennsylvania. In both systems the footnotes are indicated by
superscript numbers. To distinguish the two systems from each other, Professor
Dunzweiler’s notes are all proceeded by a capital D. We hope you like this
new addition and that it will aid you in your studies.
INTRODUCTION
BY THE REV. JOHN MURRAY, M.A., TH.M.
THE publication in English of another edition of the
opus magnum of Christian theology is an event fraught with much
encouragement. Notwithstanding the decadence so patent in our present-day world
and particularly in the realm of Christian thought and life, the publishers have
confidence that there is sufficient interest to warrant such an undertaking. If
this faith is justified we have reason for thanksgiving to God. For what would
be a better harbinger of another Reformation than widespread recourse to the
earnest and sober study of the Word of God which would be evinced by the
readiness carefully to peruse The Institutes of the Christian
Religion.
Dr. B. B. Warfield in his admirable article, “On the Literary History
of the Institutes,” has condensed for us the appraisal accorded
Calvin’s work by the critics who have been most competent to judge. Among
these tributes none expresses more adequately, and none with comparable
terseness, the appraisal which is Calvin’s due than that of the learned
Joseph Scaliger, “Solus inter theologos Calvinus.”
It would be a presumptuous undertaking to try to set forth all the reasons
why Calvin holds that position of eminence in the history of Christian theology.
By the grace and in the overruling providence of God there was the convergence
of multiple factors, and all of these it would be impossible to trace in their
various interrelations and interactions. One of these, however, calls for
special mention. Calvin was an exegete and biblical theologian of the first
rank. No other one factor comparably served to equip Calvin for the successful
prosecution of his greatest work which in 1559 received its definitive
edition.
The attitude to Scripture entertained by Calvin and the principles which
guided him in its exposition are nowhere stated with more simplicity and fervor
than in the Epistle Dedicatory to his first commentary, the commentary on the
epistle to the Romans. “Such veneration,” he says, “we ought
indeed to entertain for the Word of God, that we ought not to pervert it in the
least degree by varying expositions; for its majesty is diminished, I know not
how much, especially when not expounded with great discretion and with great
sobriety. And if it be deemed a great wickedness to contaminate any thing that
is dedicated to God, he surely cannot be endured, who, with impure, or even with
unprepared hands, will handle that very thing, which of all things is the most
sacred on earth. It is therefore an audacity, closely allied to a sacrilege,
rashly to turn Scripture in any way we please, and to indulge our fancies as in
sport; which has been done by many in former times” (English Translation,
Grand Rapids, 1947, p. 27).
It was Calvin preeminently who set the pattern for the exercise of that
sobriety which guards the science of exegesis against those distortions and
perversions to which allegorizing methods are ever prone to subject the
interpretation and application of Scripture. The debt we owe to Calvin in
establishing sound canons of interpretation and in thus directing the future
course of exegetical study is incalculable. It is only to be lamented that too
frequently the preaching of Protestant and even Reformed communions has not been
sufficiently grounded in the hermeneutical principles which Calvin so nobly
exemplified.
One feature of Calvin’s exegetical work is his concern for the
analogy of Scripture. He is always careful to take account of the unity and
harmony of Scripture teaching. His expositions are not therefore afflicted with
the vice of expounding particular passages without respect to the teaching of
Scripture elsewhere and without respect to the system of truth set forth in the
Word of God. His exegesis, in a word, is theologically oriented. It is this
quality that lies close to that which was par excellence his
genius.
However highly we assess Calvin’s exegetical talent and product, his
eminence as an exegete must not be allowed to overshadow what was, after all,
his greatest gift. He was par excellence a theologian. It was his
systematizing genius preeminently that equipped him for the prosecution and
completion of his masterpiece.
When we say that he was par excellence a theologian we must
dissociate from our use of this word every notion that is suggestive of the
purely speculative. No one has ever fulminated with more passion and eloquence
against “vacuous and meteoric speculation” than has Calvin. And no
one has ever been more keenly conscious that the theologian’s task was the
humble and, at the same time, truly noble one of being a disciple of the
Scripture. “No man,” he declares, “can have the least
knowledge of true and sound, doctrine, without having been a disciple of the
Scripture. Hence originates all true wisdom, when we embrace with reverence the
testimony which God hath been pleased therein to deliver concerning himself. For
obedience is the source, not only of an absolutely perfect and complete faith,
but of all right knowledge of God” (Inst. 1, 6, 2). In the words of
William Cunningham: “In theology there is, of course, no room for
originality properly so called, for its whole materials are contained in the
actual statements of God’s word; and he is the greatest and best
theologian who has most accurately apprehended the meaning of the statements of
Scripture-who, by comparing and combining them, has most fully and correctly
brought out the whole mind of God on all the topics on which the Scriptures give
us information-who classifies and digests the truths of Scripture in the way
best fitted to commend them to the apprehension and acceptance of men-and who
can most clearly and forcibly bring out their scriptural evidence, and most
skillfully and effectively defend them against the assaults of adversaries . . .
Calvin was far above the weakness of aiming at the invention of novelties in
theology, or of wishing to be regarded as the discoverer of new opinions”
(The Reformers and the Theology of the Reformation, Edinburgh, 1866, p.
296). As we bring even elementary understanding to bear upon our reading of the
Institutes we shall immediately discover the profound sense of the
majesty of God, veneration for the Word of God, and the jealous care for
faithful exposition and systematization which were marked features of the
author. And because of this we shall find the Institutes to be suffused
with the warmth of godly fear. The Institutes is not only the classic of
Christian theology; it is also a model of Christian devotion. For what Calvin
sought to foster was that “pure and genuine religion” which consists
in “faith united with the serious fear of God, such fear as may embrace
voluntary reverence and draw along with it legitimate worship such as is
prescribed in the law” (Inst. 1, 2, 2).
The present edition is from the translation made by Henry Beveridge in 1845
for the Calvin Translation Society. The reader may be assured that the
translation faithfully reflects the teaching of Calvin but must also bear in
mind that no translation can perfectly convey the thought of the original. It
may also be added that a more adequate translation of Calvin’s
Institutes into English is a real desideratum. In fulfilling this
need the translator or translators would perform the greatest service if the
work of translation were supplemented by footnotes in which at crucial points,
where translation is difficult or most accurate translation impossible, the
Latin text would be reproduced and comment made on its more exact import.
Furthermore, footnotes which would supply the reader with references to other
places in Calvin’s writings where he deals with the same subject would be
an invaluable help to students of Calvin and to the cause of truth. Admittedly
such work requires linguistic skill of the highest order, thorough knowledge of
Calvin’s writings, and deep sympathy with his theology. It would also
involve prodigious labour. We may hope that the seed being sown by the present
venture may bear fruit some day in such a harvest.
JOHN MURRAY,
Professor of Systematic Theology,
Westminster Theological Seminary.
PHILADELPHIA, PENNA.
THE PRINTERS TO THE READERS.
Whereas some men have thought and reported it to be [very great negligence
in us for that we have so long kept back from you this,] being so profitable a
work for you, namely before the master J[ohnne] Dawes had translated it and
delivered it into our hands more than a twelvemonth past: you shall understand
for our excuse in that behalf, that we could not well imprint it sooner. For we
have been by diverse necessary causes constrained with our earnest entreatance
to procure an other frede or oures to translate it whole again. This
translation, we trust, you shall well allow. For it hath not only been
faithfully done by the translator himself, but also hath been wholly perused by
such men, whose ingement and credit all the godly learned in England well know I
estheme. But since it is now come forth, we pray you accept it, and see it. If
any faults have passed us by oversight, we beseech you let us have your
patience, as you have had our diligence.
The Institution of Christian Religion, written in Latin by M. John Calvin,
and translated into English according to the Authors last edition, with sundry
Tables to find the principal matters entreated of in this book, and also the
declaration of places of Scripture therein expounded, by Thomas Norton.
Whereunto there are newly added in the margen of the book, notes containing in
briefs the substance of the matter handled in each Section.
Printed at London by Arnold Hatfield, for Bonham Norton. 1599
THE ORIGINAL TRANSLATOR’S PREFACE.
PREFIXED TO THE FOURTH
EDITION 1581 AND REPRINTED VERBATIM IN ALL THE SUBSEQUENT
EDITIONS.
T[HOMAS] N[ORTON], THE TRANSLATOR TO THE
READER.
Good reader, here is now offered you, the fourth time printed in English,
M. Calvin’s book of the Institution of Christian Religion; a book of great
labour to the author, and of great profit to the Church of God. M. Calvin first
wrote it when he was a young man, a book of small volume, and since that season
he has at sundry times published it with new increases, still protesting at
every edition himself to be one of those qui scribendo proficiunt, et
proficiendo scribunt, which with their writing do grow in profiting, and with
their profiting do proceed in writing. At length having, in many [of] his other
works, traveled about exposition of sundry books of the Scriptures, and in the
same finding occasion to discourse of sundry common-places and matters of
doctrine, which being handled according to the occasions of the text that were
offered him, and not in any other method, were not so ready for the
reader’s use, he therefore entered into this purpose to enlarge this book
of Institutions, and therein to treat of all those titles and commonplaces
largely, with this intent, that whensoever any occasion fell in his other books
to treat of any such cause, he would not newly amplify his books of commentaries
and expositions therewith, but refer his reader wholly to this storehouse and
treasure of that sort of divine learning. As age and weakness grew upon him, so
he hastened his labour; and, according to his petition to God, he in manner
ended his life with his work, for he lived not long after.
So great a jewel was meet to be made most beneficial, that is to say,
applied to most common use. Therefore, in the very beginning of the
Queen’s Majesty’s most blessed reign, I translated it out of Latin
into English for the commodity of the Church of Christ, at the special request
of my dear friends of worthy memory, Reginald Wolfe and Edward Whitchurch, the
one her Majesty’s printer for the Hebrew, Greek, and Latin tongues, the
other her Highness’ printer of the books of Common Prayer. I performed my
work in the house of my said friend, Edward Whitchurch, a man well known of
upright heart and dealing, an ancient zealous gospeller, as plain and true a
friend as ever I knew living, and as desirous to do anything to common good,
especially by the advancement of true religion.
At my said first edition of this book, I considered how the author thereof
had of long time purposely laboured to write the same most exactly, and to pack
great plenty of matter in small room of words; yea, and those so circumspectly
and precisely ordered, to avoid the cavillations of such as for enmity to the
truth therein contained would gladly seek and abuse all advantages which might
be found by any oversight in penning of it, that the sentences were thereby
become so full as nothing might well be added without idle superfluity, and
again so highly pared, that nothing could be diminished without taking away some
necessary substance of matter therein expressed. This manner of writing, beside
the peculiar terms of arts and figures, and the difficulty of the matters
themselves, being throughout interlaced with the school men’s
controversies, made a great hardness in the author’s own book, in that
tongue wherein otherwise he is both plentiful and easy, insomuch that it
sufficeth not to read him once, unless you can be content to read in vain. This
consideration encumbered me with great doubtfulness for the whole order and
frame of my translation. If I should follow the words, I saw that of necessity
the hardness in the translation must needs be greater than was in the tongue
wherein it was originally written. If I should leave the course of words, and
grant myself liberty after the natural manner of my own tongue, to say that in
English which I conceived to be his meaning in Latin, I plainly perceived how
hardly I might escape error, and on the other side, in this matter of faith and
religion, how perilous it was to err. For I durst not presume to warrant myself
to have his meaning without his words. And they that wet what it is to translate
well and faithfully, especially in matters of religion, do know that not the
only grammatical construction of words sufficeth, but the very building and
order to observe all advantages of vehemence or grace, by placing or accent of
words, maketh much to the true setting forth of a writer’s mind.
In the end, I rested upon this determination, to follow the words so near
as the phrase of the English tongue would suffer me. Which purpose I so
performed, that if the English book were printed in such paper and letter as the
Latin is, it should not exceed the Latin in quantity. Whereby, beside all other
commodities that a faithful translation of so good a work may bring, this one
benefit is moreover provided for such as are desirous to attain some knowledge
of the Latin tongue (which is, at this time, to be wished in many of those men
for whose profession this book most fitly serveth), that they shall not find any
more English than shall suffice to construe the Latin withal, except in such few
places where the great difference of the phrases of the languages enforced me:
so that, comparing the one with the other, they shall both profit in good
matter, and furnish themselves with understanding of that speech, wherein the
greatest treasures of knowledge are disclosed.
In the doing hereof, I did not only trust mine own wit or ability, but
examined my whole doing from sentence to sentence throughout the whole book with
conference and overlooking of such learned men, as my translation being allowed
by their Judgment, I did both satisfy mine own conscience that I had done truly,
and their approving of it might be a good warrant to the reader that nothing
should herein be delivered him but sound, unmingled, and uncorrupted doctrine,
even in such sort as the author himself had first framed it. All that I wrote,
the grave, learned, and virtuous man, M. David Whitehead (whom I name with
honourable remembrance), did, among others, compare with the Latin, examining
every sentence throughout the whole book. Beside all this, I privately required
many, and generally all men with whom I ever had any talk of this matter, that
if they found anything either not truly translated, or not plainly Englished,
they would inform me thereof, promising either to satisfy them or to amend it.
Since which time, I have not been advertised by any man of anything which they
would require to be altered. Neither had I myself, by reason of my profession,
being otherwise occupied, any leisure to peruse it. And that is the cause, why
not only at the second and third time, but also at this impression, you have no
change at all in the work, but altogether as it was before.
Indeed, I perceived many men well-minded and studious of this book, to
require a table for their ease and furtherance. Their honest desire I have
fulfilled in the second edition, and have added thereto a plentiful table, which
is also here inserted, which I have translated out of the Latin, wherein the
principal matters discoursed in this book are named by their due titles in order
of alphabet, and under every title is set forth a brief sum of the whole
doctrine taught in this book concerning the matter belonging to that title or
common-place; and therewith is added the book, chapter, and section or division
of the chapter, where the same doctrine is more largely expressed and proved.
And for the readier finding thereof, I have caused the number of the chapters to
be set upon every leaf in the book, and quoted the sections also by their due
numbers with the usual figures of algorism. And now at this last publishing, my
friends, by whose charge it is now newly imprinted in a Roman letter and smaller
volume, with divers other Tables which, since my second edition, were gathered
by M. Marlorate, to be translated and here added for your benefit.
Moreover, whereas in the first edition the evil manner of my scribbling
hand, the interlining of my copy, and some other causes well known among workmen
of that faculty, made very many faults to pass the printer, I have, in the
second impression, caused the book to be composed by the printed copy, and
corrected by the written; whereby it must needs be that it was much more truly
done than the other was, as I myself do know above three hundred faults amended.
And now at this last printing, the composing after a printed copy bringeth some
ease, and the diligence used about the correction having been right faithfully
looked unto, it cannot be but much more truly set forth. This also is performed,
that the volume being smaller, with a letter fair and legible, it is of more
easy price, that it may be of more common use, and so to more large
communicating of so great a treasure to those that desire Christian knowledge
for instruction of their faith, and guiding of their duties. Thus, on the
printer’s behalf and mine, your ease and commodity (good readers) provided
for. Now resteth your own diligence, for your own profit, in studying
it.
To spend many words in commending the work itself were needless; yet thus
much I think, I may both not unruly and not vainly say, that though many great
learned men have written books of common-places of our religion, as Melancthon,
Sarcerius, and others, whose works are very good and profitable to the Church of
God, yet by the consenting Judgment of those that understand the same, there is
none to be compared to this work of Calvin, both for his substantial sufficiency
of doctrine, the sound declaration of truth in articles of our religion, the
large and learned confirmation of the same, and the most deep and strong
confutation of all old and new heresies; so that (the Holy Scriptures excepted)
this is one of the most profitable books for all students of Christian divinity.
Wherein (good readers), as I am glad for the glory of God, and for your benefit,
that you may have this profit of my travel, so I beseech you let me have this
use of your gentleness, that my doings may be construed to such good end as I
have meant them; and that if any thing mislike you by reason of hardness, or any
other cause that may seem to be my default, you will not forthwith condemn the
work, but read it after; in which doing you will find (as many have confessed to
me that they have found by experience) that those things which at the first
reading shall displease you for hardness, shall be found so easy as so hard
matter would suffer, and, for the most part, more easy than some other phrase
which should with greater looseness and smoother sliding away deceive your
understanding. I confess, indeed, it is not finely and pleasantly written, nor
carrieth with it such delightful grace of speech as some great wise men have
bestowed upon some foolisher things, yet it containeth sound truth set forth
with faithful plainness, without wrong done to the author’s meaning; and
so, if you accept and use it, you shall not fail to have great profit thereby,
and I shall think my labour very well employed.
Thomas Norton.
INSTITUTIONS
OF
THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION
PREFATORY ADDRESS
TO
HIS MOST CHRISTIAN MAJESTY,
THE MOST MIGHTY AND ILLUSTRIOUS MONARCH,
FRANCIS, KING OF THE FRENCH,
JOHN CALVIN PRAYS PEACE AND SALVATION IN
CHRIST.[2]
SIRE,-When I first engaged in this work, nothing was farther from my
thoughts than to write what should afterwards be presented to your Majesty. My
intention was only to furnish a kind of rudiments, by which those who feel some
interest in religion might be trained to true godliness. And I toiled at the
task chiefly for the sake of my countrymen the French, multitudes of whom I
perceived to be hungering and thirsting after Christ, while very few seemed to
have been duly imbued with even a slender knowledge of him. That this was the
object which I had in view is apparent from the work itself, which is written in
a simple and elementary form adapted for instruction.
But when I perceived that the fury of certain bad men had risen to such a
height in your realm, that there was no place in it for sound doctrine, I
thought it might be of service if I were in the same work both to give
instruction to my countrymen, and also lay before your Majesty a Confession,
from which you may learn what the doctrine is that so inflames the rage of those
madmen who are this day, with fire and sword, troubling your kingdom. For I fear
not to declare, that what I have here given may be regarded as a summary of the
very doctrine which, they vociferate, ought to be punished with confiscation,
exile, imprisonment, and flames, as well as exterminated by land and
sea.
I am aware, indeed, how, in order to render our cause as hateful to your
Majesty as possible, they have filled your ears and mind with atrocious
insinuations; but you will be pleased, of your clemency, to reflect, that
neither in word nor deed could there be any innocence, were it sufficient merely
to accuse. When any one, with the view of exciting prejudice, observes that this
doctrine, of which I am endeavouring to give your Majesty an account, has been
condemned by the suffrages of all the estates, and was long ago stabbed again
and again by partial sentences of courts of law, he undoubtedly says nothing
more than that it has sometimes been violently oppressed by the power and
faction of adversaries, and sometimes fraudulently and insidiously overwhelmed
by lies, cavils, and calumny. While a cause is unheard, it is violence to pass
sanguinary sentences against it; it is fraud to charge it, contrary to its
deserts, with sedition and mischief.
That no one may suppose we are unjust in thus complaining, you yourself,
most illustrious Sovereign, can bear us witness with what lying calumnies it is
daily traduced in your presence, as aiming at nothing else than to wrest the
sceptres of kings out of their hands, to overturn all tribunals and seats of
justice, to subvert all order and government, to disturb the peace and quiet of
society, to abolish all laws, destroy the distinctions of rank and property,
and, in short, turn all things upside down. And yet, that which yon hear is but
the smallest portion of what is said; for among the common people are
disseminated certain horrible insinuations-insinuations which, if well founded,
would justify the whole world in condemning the doctrine with its authors to a
thousand fires and gibbets. Who can wonder that the popular hatred is inflamed
against it, when credit is given to those most iniquitous accusations? See, why
all ranks unite with one accord in condemning our persons and our
doctrine!
Carried away by this feeling, those who sit in judgment merely give
utterance to the prejudices which they have imbibed at home, and think they have
duly performed their part if they do not order punishment to be inflicted on any
one until convicted, either on his own confession, or on legal evidence. But of
what crime convicted? “Of that condemned doctrine,” is the answer.
But with what justice condemned? The very essence of the defence was, not to
abjure the doctrine itself, but to maintain its truth. On this subject, however,
not a whisper is allowed!
Justice, then, most invincible Sovereign, entitles me to demand that you
will undertake a thorough investigation of this cause, which has hitherto been
tossed about in any kind of way, and handled in the most irregular manner,
without any order of law, and with passionate heat rather than judicial
gravity.
Let it not be imagined that I am here framing my own private defence, with
the view of obtaining a safe return to my native land. Though I cherish towards
it the feelings which become me as a man, still, as matters now are, I can be
absent from it without regret. The cause which I plead is the common cause of
all the godly, and therefore the very cause of Christ-a cause which, throughout
your realm, now lies, as it were, in despair, torn and trampled upon in all
kinds of ways, and that more through the tyranny of certain Pharisees than any
sanction from yourself. But it matters not to inquire how the thing is done; the
fact that it is done cannot be denied. For so far have the wicked prevailed,
that the truth of Christ, if not utterly routed and dispersed, lurks as if it
were ignobly buried; while the poor Church, either wasted by cruel slaughter or
driven into exile, or intimidated and terror-struck, scarcely ventures to
breathe. Still her enemies press on with their wonted rage and fury over the
ruins which they have made, strenuously assaulting the wall, which is already
giving way. Meanwhile, no man comes forth to offer his protection against such
furies. Any who would be thought most favourable to the truth, merely talk of
pardoning the error and imprudence of ignorant men For so those modest
personages
[3] speak; giving the name
of
error and imprudence to that which they know to
be
[4] the infallible truth of God, and
of
ignorant men to those whose intellect they see that Christ has not
despised, seeing he has deigned to intrust them with the mysteries of his
heavenly wisdom.
[5] Thus all are
ashamed of the Gospel.
Your duty, most serene Prince, is, not to shut either your ears or mind
against a cause involving such mighty interests as these: how the glory of God
is to be maintained on the earth inviolate, how the truth of God is to preserve
its dignity, how the kingdom of Christ is to continue amongst us compact and
secure. The cause is worthy of your ear, worthy of your investigation, worthy of
your throne.
The characteristic of a true sovereign is, to acknowledge that, in the
administration of his kingdom, he is a minister of God. He who does not make his
reign subservient to the divine glory, acts the part not of a king, but a
robber. He, moreover, deceives himself who anticipates long prosperity to any
kingdom which is not ruled by the sceptre of God, that is, by his divine word.
For the heavenly oracle is infallible which has declared, that “where
there is no vision the people perish” (Prov. 29:18).
Let not a contemptuous idea of our insignificance dissuade you from the
investigation of this cause. We, indeed, are perfectly conscious how poor and
abject we are: in the presence of God we are miserable sinners, and in the sight
of men most despised-we are (if you will) the mere dregs and off-scoutings of
the world, or worse, if worse can be named: so that before God there remains
nothing of which we can glory save only his mercy, by which, without any merit
of our own, we are admitted to the hope of eternal
salvation:
[6] and before men not even
this much remains,
[7] since we can
glory only in our infirmity, a thing which, in the estimation of men, it is the
greatest ignominy even tacitly
[8] to
confess. But our doctrine must stand sublime above all the glory of the world,
and invincible by all its power, because it is not ours, but that of the living
God and his Anointed, whom the Father has appointed King, that he may rule from
sea to sea, and from the rivers even to the ends of the earth; and so rule as to
smite the whole earth and its strength of iron and brass, its splendour of gold
and silver, with the mere rod of his mouth, and break them in pieces like a
potter’s vessel; according to the magnificent predictions of the prophets
respecting his kingdom (Dan. 2:34; Isaiah 11:4; Psalm 2:9).
Our adversaries, indeed, clamorously maintain that our appeal to the word
of God is a mere pretext,-that we are, in fact, its worst corrupters. How far
this is not only malicious calumny, but also shameless effrontery, you will be
able to decide, of your own knowledge, by reading our Confession. Here, however,
it may be necessary to make some observations which may dispose, or at least
assist, you to read and study it with attention.
When Paul declared that all prophecy ought to be according to the analogy
of faith (Rom. 12:6), he laid down the surest rule for determining the meaning
of Scripture. Let our doctrine be tested by this rule and our victory is secure.
For what accords better and more aptly with faith than to acknowledge ourselves
divested of all virtue that we may be clothed by God, devoid of all goodness
that we may be filled by Him, the slaves of sin that he may give us freedom,
blind that he may enlighten, lame that he may cure, and feeble that he may
sustain us; to strip ourselves of all ground of glorying that he alone may shine
forth glorious, and we be glorified in him? When these things, and others to the
same effect, are said by us, they interpose, and querulously complain, that in
this way we overturn some blind light of nature, fancied preparatives, free
will, and works meritorious of eternal salvation, with their own supererogations
also;
[9] because they cannot bear that
the entire praise and glory of all goodness, virtue, justice, and wisdom, should
remain with God. But we read not of any having been blamed for drinking too much
of the fountain of living water; on the contrary, those are severely reprimanded
who “have hewed them out cisterns, broken cisterns, that can hold no
water” (Jer. 2:13). Again, what more agreeable to faith than to feel
assured that God is a propitious Father when Christ is acknowledged as a brother
and propitiator, than confidently to expect all prosperity and gladness from
Him, whose ineffable love towards us was such that He “spared not his own
Son, but delivered him up for us all” (Rom. 8:32), than to rest in the
sure hope of salvation and eternal life whenever Christ, in whom such treasures
are hid, is conceived to have been given by the Father? Here they attack us, and
loudly maintain that this sure confidence is not free from arrogance and
presumption. But as nothing is to be presumed of ourselves, so all things are to
be presumed of God; nor are we stript of vain-glory for any other reason than
that we may learn to glory in the Lord. Why go farther? Take but a cursory view,
most valiant King, of all the parts of our cause, and count us of all wicked men
the most iniquitous, if you do not discover plainly, that “therefore we
both labour and suffer reproach because we trust in the living God” (1
Tim. 4:10); because we believe it to be “life eternal” to know
“the only true God, and Jesus Christ,” whom he has sent (John 17:3).
For this hope some of us are in bonds, some beaten with rods, some made a
gazing-stock, some proscribed, some most cruelly tortured, some obliged to flee;
we are all pressed with straits, loaded with dire execrations, lacerated by
slanders, and treated with the greatest indignity.
Look now to our adversaries (I mean the priesthood, at whose beck and
pleasure others ply their enmity against us), and consider with me for a little
by what zeal they are actuated. The true religion which is delivered in the
Scriptures, and which all ought to hold, they readily permit both themselves and
others to be ignorant of, to neglect and despise; and they deem it of little
moment what each man believes concerning God and Christ, or disbelieves,
provided he submits to the judgment of the Church with what they
call
1[0] implicit faith; nor are
they greatly concerned though they should see the glow of God dishonoured by
open blasphemies, provided not a finger is raised against the primacy of the
Apostolic See and the authority of holy mother
Church.
1[1] Why, then, do they war
for the mass, purgatory, pilgrimage, and similar follies, with such fierceness
and acerbity, that though they cannot prove one of them from the word of God,
they deny godliness can be safe without faith in these things-faith drawn out,
if I may so express it, to its utmost stretch? Why? just because their belly is
their God, and their kitchen their religion; and they believe, that if these
were away they would not only not be Christians, but not even men. For although
some wallow in luxury, and others feed on slender crusts, still they all live by
the same pot, which without that fuel might not only cool, but altogether
freeze. He, accordingly, who is most anxious about his stomach, proves the
fiercest champion of his faith. In short, the object on which all to a man are
bent, is to keep their kingdom safe or their belly filled; not one gives even
the smallest sign of sincere zeal.
Nevertheless, they cease not to assail our doctrine, and to accuse and
defame it in what terms they may, in order to render it either hated or
suspected. They call it new, and of recent birth; they carp at it as doubtful
and uncertain; they bid us tell by what miracles it has been confirmed; they ask
if it be fair to receive it against the consent of so many holy Fathers and the
most ancient custom; they urge us to confess either that it is schismatical in
giving battle to the Church, or that the Church must have been without life
during the many centuries in which nothing of the kind was heard. Lastly, they
say there is little need of argument, for its quality may be known by its
fruits, namely, the large number of sects, the many seditious disturbances, and
the great licentiousness which it has produced. No doubt, it is a very easy
matter for them, in presence of an ignorant and credulous multitude, to insult
over an undefended cause; but were an opportunity of mutual discussion afforded,
that acrimony which they now pour out upon us in frothy torrents, with as much
license as impunity,
1[2] would
assuredly boil dry.
1. First, in calling it new, they are exceedingly injurious to God, whose
sacred word deserved not to be charged with novelty. To them, indeed, I very
little doubt it is new, as Christ is new, and the Gospel new; but those who are
acquainted with the old saying of Paul, that Christ Jesus “died for our
sins, and rose again for our justification” (Rom. 4:25), will not detect
any novelty in us. That it long lay buried and unknown is the guilty consequence
of man’s impiety; but now when, by the kindness of God, it is restored to
us, it ought to resume its antiquity just as the returning citizen resumes his
rights.
2. It is owing to the same ignorance that they hold it to be doubtful and
uncertain; for this is the very thing of which the Lord complains by his
prophet, “The ox knoweth his owner, and the ass his master’s crib;
but Israel doth not know, my people doth not consider” (Isaiah 1:3). But
however they may sport with its uncertainty, had they to seal their own doctrine
with their blood, and at the expense of life, it would be seen what value they
put upon it. Very different is our confidence-a confidence which is not appalled
by the terrors of death, and therefore not even by the judgment-seat of
God.
3. In demanding miracles from us, they act dishonestly; for we have not
coined some new gospel, but retain the very one the truth of which is confirmed
by all the miracles which Christ and the apostles ever wrought. But they have a
peculiarity which we have not-they can confirm their faith by constant miracles
down to the present day! Way rather, they allege miracles which might produce
wavering in minds otherwise well disposed; they are so frivolous and ridiculous,
so vain and false. But were they even exceedingly wonderful, they could have no
effect against the truth of God, whose name ought to be hallowed always, and
everywhere, whether by miracles, or by the natural course of events. The
deception would perhaps be more specious if Scripture did not admonish us of the
legitimate end and use of miracles. Mark tells us (Mark 16:20) that the signs
which followed the preaching of the apostles were wrought in confirmation of it;
so Luke also relates that the Lord “gave testimony to the word of his
grace, and granted signs and wonders to be done” by the hands of the
apostles (Acts 14:3). Very much to the same effect are those words of the
apostle, that salvation by a preached gospel was confirmed, “The Lord
bearing witness with signs and wonders, and with divers miracles” (Heb.
2:4). Those things which we are told are seals of the gospel, shall we pervert
to the subversion of the gospel? What was destined only to confirm the truth,
shall we misapply to the confirmation of lies? The proper course, therefore, is,
in the first instance, to ascertain and examine the doctrine which is said by
the Evangelist to precede; then after it has been proved, but not till then, it
may receive confirmation from miracles. But the mark of sound doctrine given by
our Saviour himself is its tendency to promote the glory not of men, but of God
(John 7:18; 8:50). Our Saviour having declared this to be test of doctrine, we
are in error if we regard as miraculous, works which are used for any other
purpose than to magnify the name of
God.
1[3] And it becomes us to
remember that Satan has his miracles, which, although they are tricks rather
than true wonders, are still such as to delude the ignorant and unwary.
Magicians and enchanters have always been famous for miracles, and miracles of
an astonishing description have given support to idolatry: these, however, do
not make us converts to the superstitions either of magicians or idolaters. In
old times, too, the Donatists used their power of working miracles as a
battering-ram, with which they shook the simplicity of the common people. We now
give to our opponents the answer which Augustine then gave to the Donatists (in
Joan. Tract. 23), “The Lord put us on our guard against those
wonder-workers, when he foretold that false prophets would arise, who, by lying
signs and divers wonders, would, if it were possible, deceive the very
elect” (Mt. 24:24). Paul, too, gave warning that the reign of antichrist
would be “withall power, and signs, and lying wonders” (2 Thess.
2:9).
But our opponents tell us that their miracles are wrought not by idols, not
by sorcerers, not by false prophets, but by saints: as if we did not know it to
be one of Satan’s wiles to transform himself “into an angel of
light” (2 Cor. 11:14). The Egyptians, in whose neighbourhood Jeremiah was
buried, anciently sacrificed and paid other divine honours to him (Hieron. in
Praef. Jerem). Did they not make an idolatrous abuse of the holy prophet of God?
and yet, in recompense for so venerating his tomb, they
thought
1[4] that they were cured of
the bite of serpents. What, then, shall we say but that it has been, and always
will be, a most just punishment of God, to send on those who do not receive the
truth in the love of it, “strong delusion, that they should believe a
lie”? (2 Thess. 2:11). We, then, have no lack of miracles, sure miracles,
that cannot be gainsaid; but those to which our opponents lay claim are mere
delusions of Satan, inasmuch as they draw off the people from the true worship
of God to vanity.
4. It is a calumny to represent us as opposed to the Fathers (I mean the
ancient writers of a purer age), as if the Fathers were supporters of their
impiety. Were the contest to be decided by such authority (to speak in the most
moderate terms), the better part of the victory would be
ours.
1[5] While there is much that
is admirable and wise in the writings of those Fathers, and while in some things
it has fared with them as with ordinary men; these pious sons, forsooth, with
the peculiar acuteness of intellect, and judgment, and soul, which belongs to
them, adore only their slips and errors, while those things which are well said
they either overlook, or disguise, or corrupt; so that it may be truly said
their only care has been to gather dross among gold. Then, with dishonest
clamour, they assail us as enemies and despisers of the Fathers. So far are we
from despising them, that if this were the proper place, it would give us no
trouble to support the greater part of the doctrines which we now hold by their
suffrages. Still, in studying their writings, we have endeavoured to remember (1
Cor. 3:21-23; see also Augustin. Ep. 28), that all things are ours, to serve,
not lord it over us, but that we axe Christ’s only, and must obey him in
all things without exception. He who does not draw this distinction will not
have any fixed principles in religion; for those holy men were ignorant of many
things, are often opposed to each other, and are sometimes at variance with
themselves.
It is not without cause (remark our opponents) we are thus warned by
Solomon, “Remove not the ancient landmarks which thy fathers have
set” (Prov. 22:28). But the same rule applies not to the measuring of
fields and the obedience of faith. The rule applicable to the latter is,
“Forget also thine own people, and thy father’s house” (Ps.
45:10). But if they are so fond of allegory, why do they not understand the
apostles, rather than any other class of Fathers, to be meant by those whose
landmarks it is unlawful to remove? This is the interpretation of Jerome, whose
words they have quoted in their canons. But as regards those to whom they apply
the passage, if they wish the landmarks to be fixed, why do they, whenever it
suits their purpose, so freely overleap them?
Among the Fathers there were two, the one of whom
said,
1[6] “Our God neither
eats nor drinks, and therefore has no need of chalices and salvers;” and
the other,
1[7] “Sacred rites
do not require gold, and things which are not bought with gold, please not by
gold.” They step beyond the boundary, therefore, when in sacred matters
they are so much delighted with gold, driver, ivory, marble, gems, and silks,
that unless everything is overlaid with costly show, or rather insane
luxury
1[8], they think God is not
duly worshipped.
It was a Father who said,
1[9]
“He ate flesh freely on the day on which others abstained from it, because
he was a Christian.” They overleap the boundaries, therefore, when they
doom to perdition every soul that, during Lent, shall have tasted
flesh.
There were two Fathers, the one of whom
said,
2[0] “A monk not
labouring with his own hands is no better than a violent man and a
robber;” and the other,
2[1]
“Monks, however assiduous they may be in study, meditation, and prayer,
must not live by others.” This boundary, too, they transgressed, when they
placed lazy gormandising monks in dens and stews, to gorge themselves on other
men’s substance.
It was a Father who said,
2[2]
“It is a horrid abomination to see in Christian temples a painted image
either of Christ or of any saint.” Nor was this pronounced by the voice
era single individual; but an Ecclesiastical Council also
decreed,
2[3] “Let nought that
is worshipped be depicted on
walls.”
2[4] Very far are they
from keeping within these boundaries when they leave not a corner without
images.
Another Father counselled,
2[5]
“That after performing the office of humanity to the dead in their burial,
we should leave them at rest.” These limits they burst through when they
keep up a perpetual anxiety about the dead.
It is a Father who
testifies,
2[6] “That the
substance of bread and wine in the Eucharist does not cease but remains, just as
the nature and substance of man remains united to the Godhead in the Lord Jesus
Christ.” This boundary they pass in pretending that, as soon as the words
of our Lord are pronounced, the substance of bread and wine ceases, and is
transubstantiated into body and blood.
They were Fathers, who, as they exhibited only one Eucharist to the whole
Church,
2[7] and kept back from it
the profane and flagitious; so they, in the severest terms, censured all
those
2[8] who, being present, did
not communicate How far have they removed these landmarks, in filling not
churches only, but also private houses, with their masses, admitting all and
sundry to be present, each the more willingly the more largely he pays, however
wicked and impure he may be,-not inviting any one to faith in Christ and
faithful communion in the sacraments, but rather vending their own work for the
grace and merits of
Christ!
2[9]
There were two Fathers, the one of whom decided that those were to be
excluded altogether from partaking of Christ’s sacred
supper,
3[0] who, contented with
communion in one kind, abstained from the other; while the other Father strongly
contends
3[1] that the blood of the
Lord ought not to be denied to the Christian people, who, in confessing him, are
enjoined to shed their own blood. These landmarks, also, they removed, when, by
an unalterable law, they ordered the very thing which the former Father punished
with excommunication, and the latter condemned for a valid reason.
It was a Father who pronounced it
rashness,
3[2] in an obscure
question, to decide in either way without clear and evident authority from
Scripture. They forgot this landmark when they enacted so many constitutions, so
many canons, and so many dogmatical decisions, without sanction from the word of
God.
It was a Father who reproved Montanus, among other
heresies,
3[3] for being the first
who imposed laws of fasting. They have gone far beyond this landmark also in
enjoining fasting under the strictest laws.
It was a Father who denie that the ministers of the Church should be
interdicted from marrying, and pronounced married life to be a state of
chastity; and there were other Fathers who assented to his decision. These
boundaries they overstepped in rigidly binding their priests to
celibacy.
It was a Father who thought
3[5]
that Christ only should be listened to, from its being said, “hear
him;” and that regard is due not to what others before us have said or
done, but only to what Christ, the head of all, has commanded. This landmark
they neither observe themselves nor allow to be observed by others, while they
subject themselves and others to any master whatever, rather than
Christ.
There is a Father who
contends
3[6] that the Church ought
not to prefer herself to Christ, who always judges truly, whereas ecclesiastical
judges, who are but men, are generally deceived. Having burst through this
barrier also, they hesitate not to suspend the whole authority of Scripture on
the judgment of the
Church.
3[7]
All the Fathers with one heart execrated, and with one mouth protested
against, contaminating the word of God with the subtleties sophists, and
involving it in the brawls of dialecticians. Do they keep within these limits
when the sole occupation of their lives is to entwine and entangle the
simplicity of Scripture with endless disputes, and worse than sophistical
jargon? So much so, that were the Fathers to rise from their graves, and listen
to the brawling art which bears the name of speculative theology, there is
nothing they would suppose it less to be than a discussion of a religious
nature.
But my discourse would far exceed its just limits were I to show, in
detail, how petulantly those men shake off the yoke of the Fathers, while they
wish to be thought their most obedient sons. Months, nay, years would fail me;
and yet so deplorable and desperate is their effrontery, that they presume to
chastise us for overstepping the ancient landmarks!
5. Then, again, it is to no purpose they call us to the bar of custom. To
make everything yield to custom would be to do the greatest injustice. Were the
judgments of mankind correct, custom would be regulated by the good. But it is
often far otherwise in point of fact; for, whatever the many are seen to do,
forthwith obtains the force of custom. But human affairs have scarcely ever been
so happily constituted as that the better course pleased the greater number.
Hence the private vices of the multitude have generally resulted in public
error, or rather that common consent in vice which these worthy men would have
to be law. Any one with eyes may perceive that it is not one flood of evils
which has deluged us; that many fatal plagues have invaded the globe; that all
things rush headlong; so that either the affairs of men must be altogether
despaired of, or we must not only resist, but boldly attack prevailing evils.
The cure is prevented by no other cause than the length of time during which we
have been accustomed to the disease. But be it so that public error must have a
place in human society, still, in the kingdom of God, we must look and listen
only to his eternal truth, against which no series of years, no custom, no
conspiracy, can plead prescription. Thus Isaiah formerly taught the people of
God, “Say ye not, A confederacy, to all to whom this people shall say, A
confederacy;” i.e. do not unite with the people in an impious consent;
“neither fear ye their fear, nor be afraid. Sanctify the Lord of hosts
himself; and let him be your fear, and let him be your dread” (Is. 8:12).
Now, therefore, let them, if they will, object to us both past ages and present
examples; if we sanctify the Lord of hosts, we shall not be greatly afraid.
Though many ages should have consented to like ungodliness, He is strong who
taketh vengeance to the third and fourth generation; or the whole world should
league together in the same iniquity. He taught experimentally what the end is
of those who sin with the multitude, when He destroyed the whole human race with
a flood, saving Noah with his little family, who, by putting his faith in Him
alone, “condemned the world” (Heb. 11:7). In short, depraved custom
is just a kind of general pestilence in which men perish not the less that they
fall in a crowd. It were well, moreover, to ponder the observation of
Cyprian,
3[9] that those who sin in
ignorance, though they cannot be entirely exculpated, seem, however, to be, in
some sense, excusable; whereas those who obstinately reject the truth, when
presented to them by the kindness of God, have no defence to
offer.
4[0]
6. Their dilemma does not push us so violently as to oblige us to confess,
either that the Church was a considerable time without life, or that we have now
a quarrel with the Church. The Church of Christ assuredly has lived, and will
live, as long as Christ shall reign at the right hand of the Father. By his hand
it is sustained, by his protection defended, by his mighty power preserved in
safety. For what he once undertook he will undoubtedly perform, he will be with
iris people always, “even to the end of the world” (Mt. 28:20). With
the Church we wage no war, since, with one consent, in common with the whole
body of the faithful, we worship and adore one God, and Christ Jesus the Lord,
as all the pious have always adored him. But they themselves err not a little
from the truth in not recognising any church but that which they behold with the
bodily eye, and in endeavouring to circumscribe it by limits, within which it
cannot be confined.
The hinges on which the controversy turns are these: first, in their
contending that the form of the Church is always visible and apparent; and,
secondly, in their placing this form in the see of the Church of Rome and its
hierarchy. We, on the contrary, maintain, both that the Church may exist without
any apparent form, and, moreover, that the form is not ascertained by that
external splendour which they foolishly admire, but by a very different mark,
namely, by the pure preaching of the word of God, and the due administration of
the sacraments. They make an outcry whenever the Church cannot be pointed to
with the finger. But how oft was it the fate of the Church among the Jews to be
so defaced that no comeliness appeared? What do we suppose to have been the
splendid form when Elijah complained that he was left alone? (1 Kings 19:14).
How long after the advent of Christ did it lie hid without form? How often since
has it been so oppressed by wars, seditions, and heresies, that it was nowhere
seen in splendour? Had they lived at that time, would they have believed there
was any Church? But Elijah learned that there remained seven thousand men who
had not bowed the knee to Baal; nor ought we to doubt that Christ has always
reigned on earth ever since he ascended to heaven. Had the faithful at that time
required some discernible form, must they not have forthwith given way to
despondency? And, indeed, Hilary accounted it a very great fault in his day,
that men were so possessed with a foolish admiration of Episcopal dignity as not
to perceive the deadly hydra lurking under that mask. His words are (Cont.
Auxentium), “One advice I give: Beware of Antichrist; for, unhappily, a
love of walls has seized you; unhappily, the Church of God which you venerate
exists in houses and buildings; unhappily, under these you find the name of
peace. Is it doubtful that in these Antichrist will have his seat? Safer to me
are mountains, and woods, and lakes, and dungeons, and whirlpools; since in
these prophets, dwelling or immersed, did prophesy.”
And what is it at the present day that the world venerates in its horned
bishops, unless that it imagines those who are seen presiding over celebrated
cities to be holy prelates of religion? Away, then, with this absurd mode of
judging!
4[1] Let us rather
reverently admit, that as God alone knows who are his, so he may sometimes
withdraw the external manifestation of his Church from the view of men. This, I
allow, is a fearful punishment which God sends on the earth; but if the
wickedness of men so deserves, why do we strive to oppose the just vengeance of
God?
4[2] It was thus that God, in
past ages, punished the ingratitude of men; for after they had refused to obey
his truth, and had extinguished his light, he allowed them, when blinded by
sense, both to be deluded by lying vanities and plunged in thick darkness, so
that no face of a true Church appeared. Meanwhile, however, though his own
people were dispersed and concealed amidst errors and darkness, he saved them
from destruction. No wonder; for he knew how to preserve them even in the
confusion of Babylon and the flame of the fiery furnace.
But as to the wish that the form of the Church should be ascertained by
some kind of vain pomp, how perilous it is I will briefly indicate, rather than
explain, that I may not exceed all bounds. What they say is, that the
Pontiff,
4[3] who holds the apostolic
see, and the priests who are anointed and consecrated by
him,
4[4] provided they have the
insignia of fillets and mitres, represent the Church, and ought to be considered
as in the place of the Church, and therefore cannot err. Why so? because they
are pastors of the Church, and consecrated to the Lord. And were not Aaron and
other prefects of Israel pastors? But Aaron and his sons, though already set
apart to the priesthood, erred notwithstanding when they made the calf (Exod.
32:4). Why, according to this view, should not the four hundred prophets who
lied to Ahab represent the Church? (1 Kings 22:11, &c.). The Church,
however, stood on the side of Micaiah. He was alone, indeed, and despised, but
from his mouth the truth proceeded. Did not the prophets also exhibit both the
name and face of the Church, when, with one accord, they rose up against
Jeremiah, and with menaces boasted of it as a thing impossible that the law
should perish from the priest, or counsel from the wise, or the word from the
prophet? (Jer. 18:18). In opposition to the whole body of the prophets, Jeremiah
is sent alone to declare from the Lord (Jer. 4:9), that a time would come when
the law would perish from the priest, counsel from the wise, and the word from
the prophet. Was not like splendour displayed in that council when the chief
priests, scribes, and Pharisees assembled to consult how they might put Jesus to
death? Let them go, then, and cling to the external mask, while they make Christ
and all the prophets of God schismatics, and, on the other hand, make
Satan’s ministers the organs of the Holy Spirit!
But if they are sincere, let them answer me in good faith,-in what place,
and among whom, do they think the Church resided, after the Council of Basle
degraded and deposed Eugenius from the popedom, and substituted Amadeus in his
place? Do their utmost, they cannot deny that that Council was legitimate as far
as regards external forms, and was summoned not only by one Pontiff, but by two.
Eugenius, with the whole herd of cardinals and bishops who had joined him in
plotting the dissolution of the Council, was there condemned of contumacy,
rebellion, and schism. Afterwards, however, aided by the favour of princes, he
got back his popedom safe. The election of Amadeus, duly made by the authority
of a general holy synod, went to smoke; only he himself was appeased with a
cardinal’s cap, like a piece of offal thrown to a barking dog. Out of the
lap of these rebellious and contumacious schismatics proceeded all future popes,
cardinals, bishops, abbots, and presbyters. Here they are caught, and cannot
escape. For, on which party will they bestow the name of Church? Will they deny
it to have been a general Council, though it lacked nothing as regards external
majesty, having been solemnly called by two bulls, consecrated by the legate of
the Roman See as its president, constituted regularly in all respects, and
continuing in possession of all its honours to the last? Will they admit that
Eugenius, and his whole train, through whom they have all been consecrated, were
schismatical? Let them, then, either define the form of the Church differently,
or, however numerous they are, we will hold them all to be schismatics in having
knowingly and willingly received ordination from heretics. But had it never been
discovered before that the Church is not tied to external pomp, we are furnished
with a lengthened proof in their own conduct, in proudly vending themselves to
the world under the specious title of Church, notwithstanding that they are the
deadly pests of the Church. I speak not of their manners and of those tragical
atrocities with which their whole life teems, since it is said that they are
Pharisees who should be heard, not imitated. By devoting some portion of your
leisure to our writings, you will see, not obscurely, that their doctrine-the
very doctrine to which they say it is owing that they are the Church-is a deadly
murderer of souls, the firebrand, ruin, and destruction of the Church.
7. Lastly, they are far from candid when they invidiously number up the
disturbances, tumults, and disputes, which the preaching of our doctrine has
brought in its train, and the fruits which, in many instances, it now produces;
for the doctrine itself is undeservedly charged with evils which ought to be
ascribed to the malice of Satan. It is one of the characteristics of the divine
word, that whenever it appears, Satan ceases to slumber and sleep. This is the
surest and most unerring test for distinguishing it from false doctrines which
readily betray themselves, while they are received by all with willing ears, and
welcomed by an applauding world. Accordingly, for several ages, during which all
things were immersed in profound darkness, almost all mankin were mere jest and
sport to the god of this world, who, like any Sardanapalus, idled and luxuriated
undisturbed. For what else could he do but laugh and sport while in tranquil and
undisputed possession of his kingdom? But when light beaming from above somewhat
dissipated the darkness-when the strong man arose and aimed a blow at his
kingdom-then, indeed, he began to shake off his wonted torpor, and rush to arms.
And first he stirred up the hands of men, that by them he might violently
suppress the dawning truth; but when this availed him not, he turned to snares,
exciting dissensions and disputes about doctrine by means of his Catabaptists,
and other portentous miscreants, that he might thus obscure, and, at length,
extinguish the truth. And now be persists in assailing it with both engines,
endeavouring to pluck up the true seed by the violent hand of man, and striving,
as much as in him lies, to choke it with his tares, that it may not grow and
bear knit. But it will be in vain, if we listen to the admonition of the Lord,
who long ago disclosed his wiles, that we might not be taken unawares, and armed
us with full protection against all his machinations. But how malignant to throw
upon the word of God itself the blame either of the seditions which wicked men
and rebels, or of the sects which impostors stir up against it! The example,
however, is not new. Elijah was interrogated whether it were not he that
troubled Israel. Christ was seditious, according to the Jews; and the apostles
were charged with the crime of popular commotion. What else do those who, in the
present day, impute to us all the disturbances, tumults, and contentions which
break out against us? Elijah, however, has taught us our answer (1 Kings 18:17,
18). It is not we who disseminate errors or stir up tumults, but they who resist
the mighty power of God.
But while this single answer is sufficient to rebut the rash charges of
these men, it is necessary, on the other hand, to consult for the weakness of
those who take the alarm at such scandals, and not unfrequently waver in
perplexity. But that they may not fall away in this perplexity, and forfeit
their good degree, let them know that the apostles in their day experienced the
very things which now befall us. There were then unlearned and unstable men who,
as Peter tells us (2 Pet. 3:16), wrested the inspired writings of Paul to their
own destruction. There were despisers of God, who, when they heard that sin
abounded in order that grace might more abound, immediately inferred, “We
will continue in sin that grace may abound” (Rom. 6:1); when they heard
that believers were not under the law, but under grace, forthwith sung out,
“We will sin because we are not under the law, but under grace”
(Rom. 6:15). There were some who charged the apostle with being the minister of
sin. Many false prophets entered in privily to pull down the churches which he
had reared. Some preached the gospel through envy and strife, not sincerely
(Phil. 1:15)-maliciously even-thinking to add affliction to his bonds. Elsewhere
the gospel made little progress. All sought their own, not the things which were
Jesus Christ’s. Others went back like the dog to his vomit, or the sow
that was washed to her wallowing in the mire. Great numbers perverted their
spiritual freedom to carnal licentiousness. False brethren crept in to the
imminent danger of the faithful. Among the brethren themselves various quarrels
arose. What, then, were the apostles to do? Were they either to dissemble for
the time, or rather lay aside and abandon that gospel which they saw to be the
seed-bed of so many strifes, the source of so many perils, the occasion of so
many scandals? In straits of this kind, they remembered that “Christ was a
stone of stumbling, and a rock of offence,” “set up for the fall and
rising again of many,” and “for a sign to be spoken against”
(Luke 2:34); and, armed with this assurance, they proceeded boldly through all
perils from tumults and scandals. It becomes us to be supported by the same
consideration, since Paul declares that it is a neverfailing characteristic of
the gospel to be a “savour of death unto death in them that perish”
(2 Cor. 2:16), although rather destined to us for the purpose of being a savour
of life unto life, and the power of God for the salvation of believers. This we
should certainly experience it to be, did we not by our ingratitude corrupt this
unspeakable gift of God, and turn to our destruction what ought to be our only
saving defence.
4[6]
But to return, Sire.
4[7] Be not
moved by the absurd insinuations with which our adversaries are striving to
frighten you into the belief that nothing else is wished and aimed at by this
new gospel (for so they term it), than opportunity for sedition and impunity for
all kinds of vice. Our Go is not the author of division, but of peace; and the
Son of God, who came to destroy the works of the devil, is not the minister of
sin. We, too, are undeservedly charged with desires of a kind for which we have
never given even the smallest suspicion. We, forsooth, meditate the subversion
of kingdoms; we, whose voice was never heard in faction, and whose life, while
passed under you, is known to have been always quiet and simple; even now, when
exiled from our home, we nevertheless cease not to pray for all prosperity to
your person and your kingdom. We, forsooth, are aiming after an unchecked
indulgence in vice, in whose manners, though there is much to be blamed, there
is nothing which deserves such an imputation; nor (thank God) have we profited
so little in the gospel that our life may not be to these slanderers an example
of chastity, kindness, pity, temperance, patience, moderation, or any other
virtue. It is plain, indeed, that we fear God sincerely, and worship him in
truth, since, whether by life or by death, we desire his name to be hallowed;
and hatred herself has been forced to bear testimony to the innocence and civil
integrity of some of our people on whom death was inflicted for the very thing
which deserved the highest praise. But if any, under pretext of the gospel,
excite tumults (none such have as yet been detected in your realm), if any use
the liberty of the grace of God as a cloak for licentiousness (I know of numbers
who do), there are laws and legal punishments by which they may be punished up
to the measure of their deserts-only, in the mean time, let not the gospel of
God be evil spoken of because of the iniquities of evil men.
Sire,
4[9] That you may not lend
too credulous an ear to the accusations of our enemies, their virulent injustice
has been set before you at sufficient length; I fear even more than sufficient,
since this preface has grown almost to the bulk of a full apology. My object,
however, was not to frame a defence, but only with a view to the hearing of our
cause, to mollify your mind, now indeed turned away and estranged from us-I add,
even inflamed against us-but whose good will, we are confident, we should
regain, would you but once, with calmness and composure, read this our
Confession, which we desire your Majesty to accept instead of a defence. But if
the whispers of the malevolent so possess your ear, that the accused are to have
no opportunity of pleading their cause; if those vindictive furies, with your
connivance, are always to rage with bonds, scourgings, tortures, maimings, and
burnings, we, indeed, like sheep doomed to slaughter, shall be reduced to every
extremity; yet so that, in our patience, we will possess our souls, and wait for
the strong hand of the Lord, which, doubtless, will appear in its own time, and
show itself armed, both to rescue the poor from affliction, and also take
vengeance on the despisers, who are now exulting so
securely.
5[0]
Most illustrious King, may the Lord, the King of kings, establish your
throne in righteousness, and your sceptre in equity.
BASLE, 1st August 1536.
THE EPISTLE TO THE READER
[PREFIXED TO THE SECOND EDITION, PUBLISHED AT STRASBURG IN 1539.]
_________
In the First Edition of this work, having no expectation of the success
which God has, in his goodness, been pleased to give it, I had, for the greater
part, performed my office perfunctorily, as is usual in trivial undertakings.
But when I perceived that almost all the godly had received it with a favour
which I had never dared to wish, far less to hope for, being sincerely conscious
that I had received much more than I deserved, I thought I should be very
ungrateful if I did not endeavour, at least according to my humble ability, to
respond to the great kindness which had been expressed towards me, and which
spontaneously urged me to diligence. I therefore ask no other favour from the
studious for my new work than that which they have already bestowed upon me
beyond my merits. I feel so much obliged, that I shall be satisfied if I am
thought not to have made a bad return for the gratitude I owe. This return I
would have made much earlier, had not the Lord, for almost two whole years,
exercised me in an extraordinary manner. But it is soon enough if well enough. I
shall think it has appeared in good season when I perceive that it produces some
fruit to the Church of God. I may add, that my object in this work was to
prepare and train students of theology for the study of the Sacred Volume, so
that they might both have an easy introduction to it, and be able to proceed in
it, with unfaltering step, seeing I have endeavoured to give such a summary of
religion in all its parts, and have digested it into such an order as may make
it not difficult for any one, who is rightly acquainted with it, to ascertain
both what he ought principally to look for in Scripture, and also to what head
he ought to refer whatever is contained in it. Having thus, as it were, paved
the way, I shall not feel it necessary, in any Commentaries on Scripture which I
may afterwards publish, to enter into long discussions of doctrines or dilate on
common places, and will, therefore, always compress them. In this way the pious
reader will be saved much trouble and weariness, provided he comes furnished
with a knowledge of the present work as an essential prerequisite. As my
Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans will give a specimen of this plan, I
would much rather let it speak for itself than declare it in words. Farewell,
dear reader, and if you derive any fruit from my labours, give me the benefit of
your prayers to the Lord.
STRASBOURG, 1st August 1539.
SUBJECT OF THE PRESENT WORK
[PREFIXED TO THE FRENCH EDITION, PUBLISHED AT GENEVA IN 1545.]
_________
In order that my Readers may be the better able to profit by the present
work, I am desirous briefly to point out the advantage which they may derive
from it. For by so doing I will show them the end at which they ought to aim,
and to which they ought to give their attention in reading it.
Although the Holy Scriptures contain a perfect doctrine, to which nothing
can be added-our Lord having been pleased therein to unfold the infinite
treasures of his wisdom-still every person, not intimately acquainted with them,
stands in need of some guidance and direction, as to what he ought to look for
in them, that he may not wander up and down, but pursue a certain path, and so
attain the end to which the Holy Spirit invites him.
Hence it is the duty of those who have received from God more light than
others to assist the simple in this matter, and, as it were, lend them their
hand to guide and assist them in finding the sum of what God has been pleased to
teach us in his word. Now, this cannot be better done in writing than by
treating in succession of the principal matters which are comprised in Christian
philosophy. For he who understands these will be prepared to make more progress
in the school of God in one day than any other person in three months, inasmuch
as he, in a great measure, knows to what he should refer each sentence, and has
a rule by which to test whatever is presented to him.
Seeing, then, how necessary it was in this manner to aid those who desire
to be instructed in the doctrine of salvation, I have endeavoured, according to
the ability which God has given me, to employ myself in so doing, and with this
view have composed the present book. And first I wrote it in Latin, that it
might be serviceable to all studious persons, of what nation soever they might
be; afterwards, desiring to communicate any fruit which might be in it to my
French countrymen, I translated it into our own tongue. I dare not bear too
strong a testimony in its favour, and declare how profitable the reading of it
will be, lest I should seem to prize my own work too highly. However I may
promise this much, that it will be a kind of key opening up to all the children
of God a right and ready access to the understanding of the sacred volume.
Wherefore, should our Lord give me henceforth means and opportunity of composing
some Commentaries, I will use the greatest possible brevity, as there will be no
occasion to make long digressions, seeing that I have in a manner deduced at
length all the articles which pertain to Christianity.
And since we are bound to acknowledge that all truth and sound doctrine
proceed from God, I will venture boldly to declare what I think of this work,
acknowledging it to be God’s work rather than mine. To him, indeed, the
praise due to it must be ascribed. My opinion of the work then is this: I exhort
all, who reverence the word of the Lord, to read it, and diligently imprint it
on their memory, if they would, in the first place, have a summary of Christian
doctrine, and, in the second place, an introduction to the profitable reading
both of the Old and New Testament. When they shall have done so, they will know
by experience that I have not wished to impose upon them with words. Should any
one be unable to comprehend all that is contained in it, he must not, however,
give it up in despair; but continue always to read on, hoping that one passage
will give him a more familiar exposition of another. Above all things, I would
recommend that recourse be had to Scripture in considering the proofs which I
adduce from it.
EPISTLE TO THE READER.
[PREFIXED TO THE LAST EDITION, REVISED BY THE AUTHOR.]
_________
In the First Edition of this work, having not the least expectation of the
success which God, in his boundless goodness, has been pleased to give it, I
had, for the greater part, performed my task in a perfunctory manner (as is
usual in trivial undertakings); but when I understood that it had been received,
by almost all the pious with a favour which I had never dared to ask, far less
to hope for, the more I was sincerely conscious that the reception was beyond my
deserts, the greater I thought my ingratitude would be, if, to the very kind
wishes which had been expressed towards me, and which seemed of their own accord
to invite me to diligence, I did not endeavour to respond, at least according to
my humble ability. This I attempted not only in the Second Edition, but in every
subsequent one the work has received some improvement. But though I do not
regret the labour previously expended, I never felt satisfied until the work was
arranged in the order in which it now appears. Now I trust it will approve
itself to the Judgment of all my readers. As a clear proof of the diligence with
which I have laboured to perform this service to the Church of God, I may be
permitted to mention, that last winter, when I thought I was dying of quartan
ague, the more the disorder increased, the less I spared myself, in order that I
might leave this book behind me, and thus make some return to the pious for
their kind urgency. I could have wished to give it sooner, but it is soon enough
if good enough. I shall think it has appeared in good time when I see it more
productive of benefit than formerly to the Church of God. This is my only
wish.
And truly it would fare ill with me if, not contented with the approbation
of God alone, I were unable to despise the foolish and perverse censures of
ignorant as well as the malicious and unjust censures of ungodly men. For
although, by the blessing of God, my most ardent desire has been to advance his
kingdoms and promote the public good,-although I feel perfectly conscious, and
take God and his angels to witness, that ever since I began to discharge the
office of teacher in the Church, my only object has been to do good to the
Church, by maintaining the pure doctrine of godliness, yet I believe there never
was a man more assailed, stung, and torn by calumny [as well by the declared
enemies of the truth of God, as by many worthless persons who have crept into
his Church-as well by monks who have brought forth their frocks from their
cloisters to spread infection wherever they come, as by other miscreants not
better than they
5[1]]. After this
letter to the reader was in the press, I had undoubted information that, at
Augsburg, where the Imperial Diet was held, a rumour of my defection to the
papacy was circulated, and entertained in the courts of the princes more readily
than might have been expected.
5[2]
This, forsooth, is the return made me by those who certainly are not unaware of
numerous proofs of my constancy-proofs which, while they rebut the foul charge,
ought to have defended me against it, with all humane and impartial judges. But
the devil, with all his crew, is mistaken if he imagines that, by assailing me
with vile falsehoods, he can either cool my zeal, or diminish my exertions. I
trust that God, in his infinite goodness, will enable me to persevere with
unruffled patience in the course of his holy vocation. Of this I give the pious
reader a new proof in the present edition.
I may further observe, that my object in this work has been, so to prepare
and train candidates for the sacred office, for the study of the sacred volume,
that they may both have an easy introduction to it, and be able to prosecute it
with unfaltering step; for, if I mistake not, I have given a summary of religion
in all its parts, and digested it in an order which will make it easy for any
one, who rightly comprehends it, to ascertain both what he ought chiefly to look
for in Scripture, and also to what head he ought to refer whatever is contained
in it. Having thus, as it were, paved the way, as it will be unnecessary, in any
Commentaries on Scripture which I may afterwards publish, to enter into long
discussions of doctrinal points, and enlarge on commonplaces, I will compress
them into narrow compass. In this way much trouble and fatigue will be spared to
the pious reader, provided he comes prepared with a knowledge of the present
work as an indispensable prerequisite. The system here followed being set forth
as in a mirror in all my Commentaries, I think it better to let it speak for
itself than to give any verbal explanation of it.
Farewell, kind reader: if you derive any benefit from my labours, aid me
with your prayers to our heavenly Father.
GENEVA, 1st August 1559.
The zeal of those whose cause I undertook,
Has swelled a short defence into a book.
“I profess to be one of those who, by profiting, write, and by
writing profit.”-Augustine, Epist. 7.
METHOD AND
ARRANGEMENT,OR SUBJECT OF THE WHOLE
WORK.
[FROM AN EPITOME OF THE INSTITUTIONS, BY GASPAR OLEVIAN.]
_________
The subject handled by the author of these Christian Institutes is twofold:
the former, the knowledge of God, which leads to a blessed immortality; and the
latter (which is subordinate to the former), the knowledge of ourselves. With
this view the author simply adopts the arrangement of the Apostles’ Creed,
as that with which all Christians are most familiar. For as the Creed consists
of four parts, the first relating to God the Father, the second to the Son, the
third to the Holy Spirit, and the fourth to the Church, so the author, in
fulfilment of his task, divides his Institutes into four parts, corresponding to
those of the Creed. Each of these parts it will now be proper to explain
separately.
I. The first article of the Apostles’ Creed is concerning God the
Father, the creation, preservation, and government of the universe, as
implied in his omnipotence. Accordingly, the First Book of the Institutes treats
of the knowledge of God, considered as the Creator, Preserver, and Governor of
the world, and of every thing contained in it. It shows both wherein the true
knowledge of the Creator consists, and what the end of this knowledge is, chap.
1 and 2; that it is not learned at school, but that every one is self-taught it
from the womb, chap. 3. Such, however, is man’s depravity, that he stifles
and corrupts this knowledge, partly by ignorance, partly by wicked design; and
hence does not by means of it either glorify God as he ought, or attain to
happiness, chap. 4. This inward knowledge is aided from without, namely by the
creatures in which, as in a mirror, the perfections of God may be contemplated.
But man does not properly avail himself of this assistance, and hence to those
to whom God is pleased to make himself more intimately known for salvation, he
communicates his written word. This leads to a consideration of the Holy
Scriptures, in which God has revealed that not the Father only, but along with
the Father, the Son, and Holy Spirit, is that Creator of heaven and earth, whom,
in consequence of our innate depravity we were unable, either from innate
natural knowledge, or the beautiful mirror of the world, to know so as to
glorify. Here the author treats of the manifestation of God in Scripture; and in
connection with it, of the one divine essence in three persons. But, lest man
should lay the blame of his voluntary blindness on God, the author shows in what
state man was created at first, introducing dissertations on the image of God,
free will, and original righteousness. The subject of Creation being thus
disposed of, the preservation and government of the world is considered in the
three last chapters, which contain a very full discussion of the doctrine of
Divine Providence.
II. As man, by sinning, forfeited the privileges conferred on him at his
creation, recourse must be had to Christ. Accordingly, the next article in the
Creed is, And in Jesus Christ his only Son, &c. In like manner, the
Second Book of the Institutes treats of the knowledge of God considered as a
Redeemer in Christ, And showing man his falls conducts him to Christ the
Mediator. Here the subject of original sin is considered, and it is shown that
man has no means within himself, by which he can escape from guilt, and the
impending curse: that, on the contrary, until he is reconciled and renewed,
every thing that proceeds from him is of the nature of sin. This subject is
considered as far as the 6th chapter. Man being thus utterly undone in himself,
and incapable of working out his own cure by thinking a good thought, or doing
what is acceptable to God, must seek redemption without himself-viz. in Christ.
The end for which the Law was given, was not to secure worshipers for itself,
but to conduct them unto Christ. This leads to an exposition of the Moral Law.
Christ was known to the Jews under the Law as the author of salvation, but is
more fully revealed under the Gospel in which he was manifested to the world.
Hence arises the doctrine concerning the similarity and difference of the two
Testaments, the Old and the New, the Law and the Gospel. These topics occupy as
far as the 12th chapter. It is next shown that, in order to secure a complete
salvation, it was necessary that the eternal Son of God should become man, and
assume a true human nature. It is also shown in what way these two natures
constitute one person. In order to purchase a full salvation by his own merits,
and effectually apply it, Christ was appointed to the offices of Prophet,
Priest, and King. The mode in which Christ performs these offices is considered,
and also whether in point of fact he did accomplish the work of redemption. Here
an exposition is given of the articles relating to Christ’s death,
resurrection, and ascension into heaven. In conclusion, it is proved that Christ
is rightly and properly said to have merited divine grace and salvation for
us.
III. So long as Christ is separated from us we have no benefit from him. We
must be ingrafted in him like branches in the vine. Hence the Creed, after
treating of Christ, proceeds in its third article, I believe in the Holy
Spirit,-the Holy Spirit being the bond of union between us and Christ. In
like manner, the Third Book of the Institutes treats of the Holy Spirit which
unites us to Christ, and, in connection with it, of faith, by which we embrace
Christ with a double benefit-viz. that of gratuitous righteousness which he
imputes to us, and regeneration, which he begins in us by giving us repentance.
In order to show the worthlessness of a faith which is not accompanied with a
desire of repentance, the author, before proceeding to a full discussion of
justification, treats at length from chapter 3-10 of repentance, and the
constant study of it-repentance, which Christ, when apprehended by faith, begets
in us by his Spirit. Chapter 11 treats of the primary and peculiar benefit of
Christ when united to us by the Holy Spirit-viz. justification. This subject is
continued to the 20th chapter, which treats of prayer, the hand, as it were, to
receive the blessings which faith knows to be treasured up for it with God,
according to the word of promise. But, as the Holy Spirit, who creates and
preserves our faith, does not unite all men to Christ, who is the sole author of
salvation, chapter 21 treats of the eternal election of God, to which it is
owing that we, in whom he foresaw no good which he had not previously bestowed,
are given to Christ, and united to him by the effectual calling of the Gospel.
This subject is continued to the 25th chapter, which treats of complete
regeneration and felicity, namely, the final resurrection to which we must raise
our eyes, seeing that, in regard to fruition, the happiness of the godly is only
begun in this world.
IV. Since the Holy Spirit does not ingraft all men into Christ, or endue
them with faith, and those whom he does so endue he does not ordinarily endue
without means, but uses for that purpose the preaching of the Gospel and the
dispensation of the Sacraments, together with the administration of all kinds of
discipline, the Creed contains the following article, I believe in the Holy
Catholic Church, namely, that Church which, when lying in eternal death, the
Father, by gratuitous election, freely reconciled to himself in Christ, and
endued with the Holy Spirit, that, being ingrafted into Christ, it might have
communion with him as its proper head; whence flow perpetual remission of sins,
and full restoration to eternal life. Accordingly the Church is treated of in
the first fourteen chapters of the Fourth Book, which thereafter treats of the
means which the Holy Spirit employs in calling us effectually from spiritual
death, and preserving the Church, in other words, Baptism and the Lord’s
Supper. These means are, as it were, the royal sceptre of Christ, by which,
through the efficacy of his Spirit, he commences his spiritual reign in the
Church, advances it from day to day, and after this life, without the use of
means, finally perfects it. This subject is continued to the 20th
chapter.
And because civil governments are, in this life, the hospitable
entertainers (hospitia) of the Church (though civil government is
distinct from the spiritual kingdom of Christ), the author shows how great
blessings they are, blessings which the Church is bound gratefully to
acknowledge, until we are called away from this tabernacle to the heavenly
inheritance, where God will be all in all.
Such is the arrangement of the Institutes which may be thus summed up: Man
being at first created upright, but afterwards being not partially but totally
ruined, finds his entire salvation out of himself in Christ, to whom being
united by the Holy Spirit freely given without any foresight of future works, he
thereby obtains a double blessing-viz. full imputation of righteousness, which
goes along with us even to the grave, and the commencement of sanctification,
which daily advances till at length it is perfected in the day of regeneration
or resurrection of the body, and this, in order that the great mercy of God may
be celebrated in the heavenly mansions, throughout eternity.
GENERAL INDEX OF CHAPTERS.
_________
BOOK FIRST.
OF THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD THE CREATOR.
Eighteen Chapters
1. Connection between the Knowledge of God and the Knowledge of Ourselves.
Nature of the connection.
2. What it is to Know God. Tendency of this Knowledge.
3. The Human Mind naturally imbued with the Knowledge of God.
4. This Knowledge stifled or corrupted, ignorantly or
maliciously.
5. The Knowledge of God displayed in the fabric and constant Government of
the Universe.
6. The need of Scripture as a Guide and Teacher in coming to God as a
Creator.
7. The Testimony of the Spirit necessary to give full authority to
Scripture. The impiety of pretending that the Credibility of Scripture depends
on the Judgment of the Church.
8. The Credibility of Scripture sufficiently proved, in so far as Natural
Reason admits.
9. All the principles of piety subverted by fanatics who substitute
revelations for Scripture.
10. In Scripture, the true God opposed, exclusively, to all the gods of
the Heathen.
11. Impiety of attributing a visible form to God. The setting up of Idols
a revolt against the True God.
12. God distinguished from Idols, that He may be the exclusive object of
Worship.
13. The Unity of the Divine Essence in Three Persons taught in Scripture,
from the foundation of the World.
14. In the Creation of the World, and all things in it, the True God
distinguished by certain marks from fictitious gods.
15. State in which man was created. The Faculties of the Soul-The Image of
God-Free Will-Original Righteousness.
16. The World, created by God, still cherished and protected by Him. Each
and all of its parts governed by His Providence.
17. Use to be made of this Doctrine.
18. The instrumentality of the wicked employed by God, while He continues
free from every taint.
BOOK SECOND
OF THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD THE REDEEMER, IN
CHRIST,
AS FIRST MANIFESTED TO THE FATHERS UNDER THE
LAW,
AND THEREAFTER TO US UNDER THE GOSPEL
Seventeen Chapters
1. Through the Fall and revolt of Adam the whole Human race made accursed
and degenerate. Of Original Sin.
2. Man now deprived of Freedom of Will, and miserably enslaved.
3. Every thing proceeding from the corrupt Nature of Man
damnable.
4. How God works in the hearts of men.
5. The Arguments usually alleged in support of Free Will
refuted.
6. Redemption for lost man to be sought in Christ.
7. The Law given, not to retain a people for itself, but to keep alive the
Hope of Salvation in Christ until his Advent.
8. Exposition of the Moral Law.
9. Christ, though known to the Jews under the Law, yet only manifested
under the Gospel.
10. The resemblance between the Old Testament and the New.
11. The difference between the two Testaments.
12. Christ, to perform the Office of Mediator, behoved to become
man.
13. Christ clothed with the true substance of Human Nature.
14. How two natures constitute the Person of the Mediator.
15. Three things chiefly to be regarded in Christ-viz. his Offices of
Prophet, King, and Priest.
16. How Christ performed the Office of Redeemer in procuring our
salvation. The Death, Resurrection, and Ascension of Christ.
17. Christ rightly and properly said to have merited Grace and Salvation
for us.
BOOK THIRD
THE MODE OF OBTAINING THE GRACE OF CHRIST.
THE BENEFITS IT CONFERS, AND THE EFFECTS RESULTING FROM
IT.
Twenty-Five Chapters
1. The Benefits of Christ made available to us by the Secret Operation of
the Spirit.
2. Of Faith. The Definition of it. Its peculiar properties.
3. Regeneration by Faith. Of Repentance.
4. Penitence, as explained in the sophistical jargon of the Schoolmen,
widely different from the purity required by the Gospel. Of Confession and
Satisfactions.
5. Of the modes of Supplementing Satisfactions-viz. Indulgences and
Purgatory.
6. The Life of a Christian Man. Scriptural Arguments exhorting to
it.
7. A Summary of the Christian Life. Of Self-Denial.
8. Of Bearing the Cross-one branch of Self-Denial.
9. Of Meditating on the Future Life.
10. How to use the Present Life, and the comforts of it.
11. Of Justification by Faith. Both the name and the reality
defined.
12. Necessity of contemplating the Judgment-seat of God, in order to be
seriously convinced of the Doctrine of Gratuitous Justification.
13. Two things to be observed in Gratuitous Justification.
14. The beginning of Justification. In what sense progressive.
15. The boasted merit of Works subversive both of the Glory of God, in
bestowing Righteousness, and of the certainty of Salvation.
16. Refutation of the Calumnies by which it is attempted to throw odium on
this doctrine.
17. The Promises of the Law and the Gospel reconciled.
18. The Righteousness of Works improperly inferred from Rewards.
19. Of Christian Liberty.
20. Of Prayer-a perpetual exercise of Faith. The daily benefits derived
from it.
21. Of the Eternal Election, by which God has predestinated some to
Salvation and others to Destruction.
22. This Doctrine confirmed by Proofs from Scripture.
23. Refutation of the Calumnies by which this Doctrine is always unjustly
assailed.
24. Election confirmed by the Calling of God. The Reprobate bring upon
themselves the righteous destruction to which they are doomed.
25. Of the Last Resurrection.
BOOK FOURTH
OF THE EXTERNAL MEANS OR HELPS BY WHICH GOD ALLURES US
INTO
FELLOWSHIP WITH CHRIST, AND KEEPS US IN IT.
Twenty Chapters
1. Of the True Church. Duty of cultivating Unity with her, as the mother
of all the godly.
2. Comparison between the False Church and the True.
3. Of the Teachers and Ministers of the Church. Their Election and
Office.
4. Of the State of the Primitive Church, and the Mode of Government in use
before the Papacy.
5. The Ancient Form of Government utterly corrupted by the tyranny of the
Papacy.
6. Of the Primacy of the Romish See.
7. Of the Beginning and Rise of the Romish Papacy, till it attained a
height by which the Liberty of the Church was destroyed, and all true Rule
overthrown.
8. Of the Power of the Church in Articles of Faith. The unbridled license
of the Papal Church in destroying Purity of Doctrine.
9. Of Councils and their Authority.
10. Of the Power of making Laws. The cruelty of the Pope and his
adherents, in this respect, in tyrannically oppressing and destroying
Souls.
11. Of the Jurisdiction of the Church and the Abuses of it, as exemplified
in the Papacy.
12. Of the Discipline of the Church, and its principal use in Censures and
Excommunication.
13. Of Vows. The miserable entanglements caused by Vowing
rashly.
14. Of the Sacraments.
15. Of Baptism.
16. Paedobaptism. Its accordance with the Institution of Christ, and the
nature of the sign.
17. Of the Lord’s Supper, and the benefits conferred by
it.
18. Of the Popish Mass. How it not only profanes, but annihilates the
Lord’s Supper.
19. Of the Five Sacraments, falsely so called. Their spuriousness proved,
and their true character explained.
20. Of Civil Government.
INSTITUTES
OFTHE
CHRISTIAN RELIGION
BOOK FIRST. OF THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD THE
CREATOR
ARGUMENT.
The First Book treats of the knowledge of God the Creator. But as it is in
the creation of man that the divine perfections are best displayed, so man also
is made the subject of discourse. Thus the whole book divides itself into two
principal heads-the former relating to the knowledge of God, and the latter to
the knowledge of man. In the first chapter, these are considered jointly; and in
each of the following chapters, separately: occasionally, however, intermingled
with other matters which refer to one or other of the heads; e.g., the
discussions concerning Scripture and images, falling under the former head, and
the other three concerning the creation of the world, the holy angels and
devils, falling under the latter. The last point discussed-viz. the method of
the divine government, relates to both.
With regard to the former head-viz. the knowledge of God, it is shown, in
the first place, what the kind of knowledge is which God requires, Chap. 2. And,
in the second place (Chap. 3-9), where this knowledge must be sought, namely,
not in man; because, although naturally implanted in the human mind, it is
stifled, partly by ignorance, partly by evil intent, Chap. 3 and 4; not in the
frame of the world: because, although it shines most clearly there, we are so
stupid that these manifestations, however perspicuous, pass away without any
beneficial result, Chap. 5; but in Scripture (Chap. 6), which is treated of,
Chap. 7-9. In the third place, it is shown what the character of God is, Chap.
10. In the fourth place, how impious it is to give a visible form to God (here
images, the worship of them, and its origin, are considered), Chap. 11. In the
fifth place, it is shown that God is to be solely and wholly worshipped, Chap.
12. Lastly, Chap. 13 treats of the unity of the divine essence, and the
distinction of three persons.
With regard to the latter head-viz. the knowledge of man, first, Chap. 14
treats of the creation of the world, and of good and bad angels (these all
having reference to man). And then Chap. 15, taking up the subject of man
himself, examines his nature and his powers.
The better to illustrate the nature both of God and man, the three
remaining Chapters-viz. 16-18, proceed to treat of the general government of the
world, and particularly of human actions, in opposition to fortune and fate,
explaining both the doctrine and its use. In conclusion, it is shown, that
though God employs the instrumentality of the wicked, he is pure from sin and
from taint of every kind.
INSTITUTES
OF
THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION
_________
CHAPTER
1.
THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD AND OF OURSELVES MUTUALLY CONNECTED.
-NATURE OF THE CONNECTION.
Sections.
1. The sum of true wisdom-viz. the knowledge of God and of ourselves.
Effects of the latter.
2. Effects of the knowledge of God, in humbling our pride, unveiling our
hypocrisy, demonstrating the absolute perfections of God, and our own utter
helplessness.
3. Effects of the knowledge of God illustrated by the examples, 1. of holy
patriarchs; 2. of holy angels; 3. of the sun and moon.
1. OUR wisdom, in so far as it ought to be deemed true and solid Wisdom,
consists almost entirely of two parts: the knowledge of God and of ourselves.
But as these are connected together by many ties, it is not easy to determine
which of the two precedes and gives birth to the other. For, in the first place,
no man can survey himself without forthwith turning his thoughts towards the God
in whom he lives and moves; because it is perfectly obvious, that the endowments
which we possess cannot possibly be from ourselves; nay, that our very being is
nothing else than subsistence in God alone. In the second place, those blessings
which unceasingly distil to us from heaven, are like streams conducting us to
the fountain. Here, again, the infinitude of good which resides in God becomes
more apparent from our poverty. In particular, the miserable ruin into which the
revolt of the first man has plunged us, compels us to turn our eyes upwards; not
only that while hungry and famishing we may thence ask what we want, but being
aroused by fear may learn humility. For as there exists in man something like a
world of misery, and ever since we were stript of the divine attire our naked
shame discloses an immense series of disgraceful properties every man, being
stung by the consciousness of his own unhappiness, in this way necessarily
obtains at least some knowledge of God. Thus, our feeling of ignorance, vanity,
want, weakness, in short, depravity and corruption, reminds us (see Calvin on
John 4:10), that in the Lord, and none but He, dwell the true light of wisdom,
solid virtue, exuberant goodness. We are accordingly urged by our own evil
things to consider the good things of God; and, indeed, we cannot aspire to Him
in earnest until we have begun to be displeased with ourselves. For what man is
not disposed to rest in himself? Who, in fact, does not thus rest, so long as he
is unknown to himself; that is, so long as he is contented with his own
endowments, and unconscious or unmindful of his misery? Every person, therefore,
on coming to the knowledge of himself, is not only urged to seek God, but is
also led as by the hand to find him.
2. On the other hand, it is evident that man never attains to a true
self-knowledge until he have previously contemplated the face of God, and come
down after such contemplation to look into himself. For (such is our innate
pride) we always seem to ourselves just, and upright, and wise, and holy, until
we are convinced, by clear evidence, of our injustice, vileness, folly, and
impurity. Convinced, however, we are not, if we look to ourselves only, and not
to the Lord also -He being the only standard by the application of
which this conviction can be produced. For, since we are all naturally prone to
hypocrisy, any empty semblance of righteousness is quite enough to satisfy us
instead of righteousness itself. And since nothing appears within us or around
us that is not tainted with very great impurity, so long as we keep our mind
within the confines of human pollution, anything which is in some small degree
less defiled delights us as if it were most pure just as an eye, to which
nothing but black had been previously presented, deems an object of a whitish,
or even of a brownish hue, to be perfectly white. Nay, the bodily sense may
furnish a still stronger illustration of the extent to which we are deluded in
estimating the powers of the mind. If, at mid-day, we either look down to the
ground, or on the surrounding objects which lie open to our view, we think
ourselves endued with a very strong and piercing eyesight; but when we look up
to the sun, and gaze at it unveiled, the sight which did excellently well for
the earth is instantly so dazzled and confounded by the refulgence, as to oblige
us to confess that our acuteness in discerning terrestrial objects is mere
dimness when applied to the sun. Thus too, it happens in estimating our
spiritual qualities. So long as we do not look beyond the earth, we are quite
pleased with our own righteousness, wisdom, and virtue; we address ourselves in
the most flattering terms, and seem only less than demigods. But should we once
begin to raise our thoughts to God, and reflect what kind of Being he is, and
how absolute the perfection of that righteousness, and wisdom, and virtue, to
which, as a standard, we are bound to be conformed, what formerly delighted us
by its false show of righteousness will become polluted with the greatest
iniquity; what strangely imposed upon us under the name of wisdom will disgust
by its extreme folly; and what presented the appearance of virtuous energy will
be condemned as the most miserable impotence. So far are those qualities in us,
which seem most perfect, from corresponding to the divine purity.
3. Hence that dread and amazement with which as Scripture uniformly
relates, holy men were struck and overwhelmed whenever they beheld the presence
of God. When we see those who previously stood firm and secure so quaking with
terror, that the fear of death takes hold of them, nay, they are, in a manner,
swallowed up and annihilated, the inference to be drawn is that men are never
duly touched and impressed with a conviction of their insignificance, until they
have contrasted themselves with the majesty of God. Frequent examples of this
consternation occur both in the Book of Judges and the Prophetical
Writings;
5[3] so much so, that it
was a common expression among the people of God, “We shall die, for we
have seen the Lord.” Hence the Book of Job, also, in humbling men under a
conviction of their folly, feebleness, and pollution, always derives its chief
argument from descriptions of the Divine wisdom, virtue, and purity. Nor without
cause: for we see Abraham the readier to acknowledge himself but dust and ashes
the nearer he approaches to behold the glory of the Lord, and Elijah unable to
wait with unveiled face for His approach; so dreadful is the sight. And what can
man do, man who is but rottenness and a worm, when even the Cherubim themselves
must veil their faces in very terror? To this, undoubtedly, the Prophet Isaiah
refers, when he says (Isaiah 24:23), “The moon shall be confounded, and
the sun ashamed, when the Lord of Hosts shall reign;”
i.e., when he
shall exhibit his refulgence, and give a nearer view of it, the brightest
objects will, in comparison, be covered with darkness.
But though the knowledge of God and the knowledge of ourselves are bound
together by a mutual tie, due arrangement requires that we treat of the former
in the first place, and then descend to the latter.
CHAPTER
2.
WHAT IT IS TO KNOW GOD,-TENDENCY OF THIS
KNOWLEDGE.
Sections.
1. The knowledge of God the Creator defined. The substance of this
knowledge, and the use to be made of it.
2. Further illustration of the use, together with a necessary reproof of
vain curiosity, and refutation of the Epicureans. The character of God as it
appears to the pious mind, contrasted with the absurd views of the Epicureans.
Religion defined.
1. BY the knowledge of God, I understand that by which we not only conceive
that there is some God, but also apprehend what it is for our interest, and
conducive to his glory, what, in short, it is befitting to know concerning
him. For, properly speaking, we cannot say that God is known where
there is no religion or piety. I am not now referring to that species of
knowledge by which men, in themselves lost and under curse, apprehend God as a
Redeemer in Christ the Mediator. I speak only of that simple and primitive
knowledge, to which the mere course of nature would have conducted us, had Adam
stood upright. For although no man will now, in the present ruin of the human
race, perceive God to be either a father, or the author of salvation, or
propitious in any respect, until Christ interpose to make our peace; still it is
one thing to perceive that God our Maker supports us by his power, rules us by
his providence, fosters us by his goodness, and visits us with all kinds of
blessings, and another thing to embrace the grace of reconciliation offered to
us in Christ. Since, then, the Lord first appears, as well in the creation of
the world as in the general doctrine of Scripture, simply as a Creator, and
afterwards as a Redeemer in Christ,-a twofold knowledge of him hence arises: of
these the former is now to be considered, the latter will afterwards follow in
its order. But although our mind cannot conceive of God, without
rendering some worship to him, it will not, however, be sufficient simply to
hold that he is the only being whom all ought to worship and adore, unless we
are also persuaded that he is the fountain of all goodness, and that we must
seek everything in him, and in none but him. My meaning is: we must be persuaded
not only that as he once formed the world, so he sustains it by his boundless
power, governs it by his wisdom, preserves it by his goodness, in particular,
rules the human race with justice and Judgment, bears with them in mercy,
shields them by his protection; but also that not a particle of light, or
wisdom, or justice, or power, or rectitude, or genuine truth, will anywhere be
found, which does not flow from him, and of which he is not the cause; in this
way we must learn to expect and ask all things from him, and thankfully ascribe
to him whatever we receive. For this sense of the divine perfections is the
proper master to teach us piety, out of which religion springs. By piety I mean
that union of reverence and love to God which the knowledge of his benefits
inspires. For, until men feel that they owe everything to God, that they are
cherished by his paternal care, and that he is the author of all their
blessings, so that nought is to be looked for away from him, they will never
submit to him in voluntary obedience; nay, unless they place their entire
happiness in him, they will never yield up their whole selves to him in truth
and sincerity.
2. Those, therefore, who, in considering this question, propose to inquire
what the essence of God is, only delude us with frigid speculations,-it being
much more our interest to know what kind of being God is, and what things are
agreeable to his nature. For, of what use is it to join Epicures in
acknowledging some God who has cast off the care of the world, and only delights
himself in ease? What avails it, in short, to know a God with whom we have
nothing to do? The effect of our knowledge rather ought to be, first, to
teach us reverence and fear; and, secondly, to induce us, under its
guidance and teaching, to ask every good thing from him, and, when it is
received, ascribe it to him. For how can the idea of God enter your mind without
instantly giving rise to the thought, that since you are his workmanship, you
are bound, by the very law of creation, to submit to his authority?-that your
life is due to him?-that whatever you do ought to have reference to him? If so,
it undoubtedly follows that your life is sadly corrupted, if it is not framed in
obedience to him, since his will ought to be the law of our lives. On the other
hand, your idea of his nature is not clear unless you acknowledge him to be the
origin and fountain of all goodness. Hence would arise both confidence in him,
and a desire of cleaving to him, did not the depravity of the human mind lead it
away from the proper course of investigation.
For, first of all, the pious mind does not devise for itself any kind of
God, but looks alone to the one true God; nor does it feign for him any
character it pleases, but is contented to have him in the character in which he
manifests himself always guarding, with the utmost diligences against
transgressing his will, and wandering, with daring presumptions from the right
path. He by whom God is thus known perceiving how he governs all things,
confides in him as his guardian and protector, and casts himself entirely upon
his faithfulness,-perceiving him to be the source of every blessing, if he is in
any strait or feels any want, he instantly recurs to his protection and trusts
to his aid,-persuaded that he is good and merciful, he reclines upon him with
sure confidence, and doubts not that, in the divine clemency, a remedy will be
provided for his every time of need,-acknowledging him as his Father and his
Lords he considers himself bound to have respect to his authority in all things,
to reverence his majesty aim at the advancement of his glory, and obey his
commands,-regarding him as a just judge, armed with severity to punish crimes,
he keeps the Judgment-seat always in his view. Standing in awe of it, he curbs
himself, and fears to provoke his anger. Nevertheless, he is not so terrified by
an apprehension of Judgment as to wish he could withdraw himself, even if the
means of escape lay before him; nay, he embraces him not less as the avenger of
wickedness than as the rewarder of the righteous; because he perceives that it
equally appertains to his glory to store up punishment for the one, and eternal
life for the other. Besides, it is not the mere fear of punishment that
restrains him from sin. Loving and revering God as his father, honouring and
obeying him as his master, although there were no hell, he would revolt at the
very idea of offending him.
Such is pure and genuine religion, namely, confidence in God coupled with
serious fear-fear, which both includes in it willing reverence, and brings along
with it such legitimate worship as is prescribed by the law. And it ought to be
more carefully considered that all men promiscuously do homage to God, but very
few truly reverence him. On all hands there is abundance of ostentatious
ceremonies, but sincerity of heart is rare.
CHAPTER
3.
THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD NATURALLY IMPLANTED IN THE HUMAN
MIND.
Sections.
1. The knowledge of God being manifested to all makes the reprobate
without excuse. Universal belief and acknowledgement of the existence of
God.
2. Objection-that religion and the belief of a Deity are the inventions of
crafty politicians. Refutation of the objection. This universal belief confirmed
by the examples of wicked men and Atheists.
3. Confirmed also by the vain endeavours of the wicked to banish all fear
of God from their minds. Conclusion, that the knowledge of God is naturally
implanted in the human mind.
1. THAT there exists in the human minds and indeed by natural instinct,
some sense of Deity, we hold to be beyond dispute, since God himself, to prevent
any man from pretending ignorance, has endued all men with some idea of his
Godhead, the memory of which he constantly renews and occasionally enlarges,
that all to a man being aware that there is a God, and that he is their Maker,
may be condemned by their own conscience when they neither worship him nor
consecrate their lives to his service. Certainly, if there is any quarter where
it may be supposed that God is unknown, the most likely for such an instance to
exist is among the dullest tribes farthest removed from civilisation. But, as a
heathen tells us,
5[4]
there is no nation so barbarous, no race so brutish, as not to be imbued with
the conviction that there is a God. Even those who, in other respects, seem to
differ least from the lower animals, constantly retain some sense of religion;
so thoroughly has this common conviction possessed the mind, so firmly is it
stamped on the breasts of all men. Since, then, there never has been, from the
very first, any quarter of the globe, any city, any household even, without
religion, this amounts to a tacit confession, that a sense of Deity is inscribed
on every heart. Nay, even idolatry is ample evidence of this fact. For we know
how reluctant man is to lower himself, in order to set other creatures above
him. Therefore, when he chooses to worship wood and stone rather than be thought
to have no God, it is evident how very strong this impression of a Deity must
be; since it is more difficult to obliterate it from the mind of man, than to
break down the feelings of his nature,-these certainly being broken down, when,
in opposition to his natural haughtiness, he spontaneously humbles himself
before the meanest object as an act of reverence to God.
2. It is most absurd, therefore, to maintain, as some do, that religion was
devised by the cunning and craft of a few individuals, as a means of keeping the
body of the people in due subjection, while there was nothing which those very
individuals, while teaching others to worship God, less believed than the
existence of a God. I readily acknowledge, that designing men have introduced a
vast number of fictions into religion, with the view of inspiring the populace
with reverence or striking them with terror, and thereby rendering them more
obsequious; but they never could have succeeded in this, had the minds of men
not been previously imbued with that uniform belief in God, from which, as from
its seed, the religious propensity springs. And it is altogether incredible that
those who, in the matter of religion, cunningly imposed on their ruder
neighbours, were altogether devoid of a knowledge of God. For though in old
times there were some, and in the present day not a few are found who deny the
being of a God, yet, whether they will or not, they occasionally feel the truth
which they are desirous not to know. We do not read of any man who broke out
into more unbridled and audacious contempt of the Deity than C.
Caligula,
5[6] and yet none showed
greater dread when any indication of divine wrath was manifested. Thus, however
unwilling, he shook with terror before the God whom he professedly studied to
condemn. You may every day see the same thing happening to his modern imitators.
The most audacious despiser of God is most easily disturbed, trembling at the
sound of a falling leaf. How so, unless in vindication of the divine majesty,
which smites their consciences the more strongly the more they endeavour to flee
from it. They all, indeed, look out for hiding-places where they may conceal
themselves from the presence of the Lord, and again efface it from their mind;
but after all their efforts they remain caught within the net. Though the
conviction may occasionally seem to vanish for a moment, it immediately returns,
and rushes in with new impetuosity, so that any interval of relief from the
gnawing of conscience is not unlike the slumber of the intoxicated or the
insane, who have no quiet rest in sleep, but are continually haunted with dire
horrific dreams. Even the wicked themselves, therefore, are an example of the
fact that some idea of God always exists in every human mind.
3. All men of sound Judgment will therefore hold, that a sense of Deity is
indelibly engraven on the human heart. And that this belief is naturally
engendered in all, and thoroughly fixed as it were in our very bones, is
strikingly attested by the contumacy of the wicked, who, though they struggle
furiously, are unable to extricate themselves from the fear of God. Though
Diagoras,
5[7] and others of like
stamps make themselves merry with whatever has been believed in all ages
concerning religion, and Dionysus scoffs at the Judgment of heaven, it is but a
Sardonian grin; for the worm of conscience, keener than burning steel, is
gnawing them within. I do not say with Cicero, that errors wear out by age, and
that religion increases and grows better day by day. For the world (as will be
shortly seen) labours as much as it can to shake off all knowledge of God, and
corrupts his worship in innumerable ways. I only say, that, when the stupid
hardness of heart, which the wick