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8 - Calvin as commentator on the Acts of the Apostles

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 November 2009

Wilhelmus H. Th. Moehn
Affiliation:
Pastor in the Netherlands
Lydia Verburg-Balke
Affiliation:
Pastor in the Netherlands
Donald K. McKim
Affiliation:
Memphis Theological Seminary
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Summary

“Was Calvin in seiner Auslegung dem Exegete zu bieten hat, ist noch lange nicht verarbeitet und harrt noch einer Fruchtbarmachung für unsere Zeit.”

THE CONTEXT OF THE COMMENTARY

John Calvin worked on Acts both as a commentator as well as a preacher. There is no evidence that Calvin ever lectured on Acts or used this book in the so-called congrégations on Friday mornings. Instead, he preached in the Genevan congregation on Acts during the same period that he was writing his commentary. In the scope of his entire exegetical work, this close coincidence between his sermons and his commentary on the same part of Scripture is unique. From Sunday August 25, 1549 until March 1554 Calvin preached in the morning and occasionally in the afternoon on Acts. On November 10, 1550 – when he had been preaching on Acts for more than a year – he wrote to Farel:

Why do you remind me of Acts and Genesis, embryos hardly yet conceived in the womb? I am ashamed to confess how slowly I am getting on with Acts. I have only done a third of it, and what I have written is so long that I foresee it will be a big volume. I have had to give up Genesis for the time being.

From ex tertia parte, we may conclude that he had more or less explained the first nine chapters. On November 9, 1550, he delivered the thirty-sixth sermon, on Acts 7:37–38.

Type
Chapter
Information
Calvin and the Bible , pp. 199 - 223
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2006

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