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John Calvin, A
brief biography
Born July 10, 1509 in Noyon, France, Jean Calvin
was raised in a staunch Roman Catholic family. The local bishop employed
Calvin's father as an administrator in the town's cathedral. The father,
in turn, wanted John to become a priest. Because of close ties with the
bishop and his noble family, John's playmates and classmates in Noyon
(and later in Paris) were aristocratic and culturally influential in his
early life.
At the age of 14 Calvin went to Paris to study
at the College de Marche in preparation for university study. His
studies consisted of seven subjects: grammar, rhetoric, logic,
arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, and music. Toward the end of 1523
Calvin transferred to the more famous College Montaigu. While in Paris
he changed his name to its Latin form, Ioannis Calvinus, which in French
became Jean Calvin. During this time, Calvin's education was paid for in
part by income from a couple of small parishes. So although the new
theological teachings of individuals like Luther and Jacques Lefevre
d'Etaples were spreading throughout Paris, Calvin was closely tied to
the Roman Church. However, by 1527 Calvin had developed friendships with
individuals who were reform-minded. These contacts set the stage for
Calvin's eventual switch to the Reformed faith. Also, at this time
Calvin's father advised him to study law rather than theology.
By 1528 Calvin moved to Orleans to study civil
law. The following years found Calvin studying in various places and
under various scholars, as he received a humanist education. By 1532
Calvin finished his law studies and also published his first book, a
commentary on De Clementia by the Roman philosopher, Seneca. The
following year Calvin fled Paris because of contacts with individuals
who through lectures and writings opposed the Roman Catholic Church. It
is thought that in 1533 Calvin experienced the sudden and unexpected
conversion that he writes about in his foreword to his commentary on the
Psalms.
For the next three years, Calvin lived in
various places outside of France under various names. He studied on his
own, preached, and began work on his first edition of the Institutes—an
instant best seller. By 1536 Calvin had disengaged himself from the
Roman Catholic Church and made plans to permanently leave France and go
to Strasbourg. However, war had broken out between Francis I and Charles
V, so Calvin decided to make a one-night detour to Geneva.
But Calvin's fame in Geneva preceded him. Farel,
a local reformer, invited him to stay in Geneva and threatened him with
God's anger if he did not. Thus began a long, difficult, yet ultimately
fruitful relationship with that city. He began as a lecturer and
preacher, but by 1538 was asked to leave because of theological
conflicts. He went to Strasbourg until 1541. His stay there as a pastor
to French refugees was so peaceful and happy that when in 1541 the
Council of Geneva requested that he return to Geneva, he was emotionally
torn. He wanted to stay in Strasbourg but felt a responsibility to
return to Geneva. He did so and remained in Geneva until his death May
27, 1564. Those years were filled with lecturing, preaching, and the
writing of commentaries, treatises, and various editions of the
Institutes of the Christian Religion.
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