Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Part I Calvin’s Life and Context
- Part II Calvin’s Work
- 3 Calvin’s writings
- 4 Calvin as a biblical interpreter
- 5 Calvin’s theology
- 6 Calvin’s ethics
- 7 Calvin’s preaching
- 8 Calvin on piety
- 9 Calvin and social-ethical issues
- 10 Calvin and political issues
- 11 Calvin’s controversies
- Part III After Calvin
- Part IV Calvin Today
- Select bibliography
- Index
7 - Calvin’s preaching
from Part II - Calvin’s Work
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2006
- Frontmatter
- Part I Calvin’s Life and Context
- Part II Calvin’s Work
- 3 Calvin’s writings
- 4 Calvin as a biblical interpreter
- 5 Calvin’s theology
- 6 Calvin’s ethics
- 7 Calvin’s preaching
- 8 Calvin on piety
- 9 Calvin and social-ethical issues
- 10 Calvin and political issues
- 11 Calvin’s controversies
- Part III After Calvin
- Part IV Calvin Today
- Select bibliography
- Index
Summary
Observe here that the minister of the word is said in some way to save those whom he leads to the obedience of faith . . . [P]reaching is an instrument for effecting the salvation of the faithful, and though it can do nothing without the Spirit of God, yet through his inward operation it produces the most powerful effects.
Calvin, Commentary on Romans 11.14It is not surprising that a theologian who argued consistently that preaching was the ordinary means appointed by God for the salvation of the elect understood the delivery of sermons as among his most important duties. During his ministry in Geneva (1536-38, 1541-64), John Calvin preached well over two thousand sermons. From 1549, his most characteristic pattern of preaching was twice on Sunday and every weekday of every other week. His sermons typically lasted for more than an hour, and they were delivered without a manuscript or notes. Toward the end of his life, when poor health prevented his free movement, he even asked to be carried to church in a chair so that he could fulfill his responsibilities in the pulpit. The sheer volume of his preaching endeavors demonstrates their importance to him. Needless to say, it would be impossible within the scope of this essay to summarize the rich content of his many extant sermons. In order to gain a better understanding of Calvin the preacher, however, we first need to examine his theology of preaching, for only when we ascertain the significance of the act of preaching within the economy of faith as Calvin himself understood it will we grasp his own urgent sense of commitment to the preaching task.
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- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to John Calvin , pp. 106 - 124Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2004
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