Tuesday, April 19, 2016

John Calvin on a False View of Scripture


"Those who, rejecting Scripture, imagine that they have some peculiar way of penetrating to God, are to be deemed not so much under the influence of error as madness.  For certain giddy men have lately appeared, who, while they make a great display of the superiority of the Spirit, reject all reading of the Scriptures themselves, and deride the simplicity of those who only delight in what they call the dead and deadly letter.  But I wish they would tell me what spirit it is whose inspiration raises them to such a sublime height that they dare despise the doctrine of Scripture as mean and childish.  If they answer that it is the Spirit of Christ, their confidence is exceedingly ridiculous; since they will, I presume, admit that the apostles and other believers in the primitive church were not illuminated by any other Spirit.  None of these thereby learned to despise the word of God, but everyone was imbued with greater reverence for it, as their writings most clearly testify.  And, indeed, it had been so foretold by the mouth of Isaiah.  For when he says, 'My Spirit that is upon thee, and my words which I have put in thy mouth, shall not depart out of thy mouth, nor out of the mouth of thy seed, nor out of the mouth of thy seed's seed, saith the Lord, from henceforth and for ever,' he does not tie down the ancient church to external doctrine, as he were a mere teacher elements; he rather shows that, under the reign of Christ, the true and full felicity of the new church will consist in their being ruled not less by the word than by the Spirit of God.  Hence we infer that these miscreants are guilty of fearful sacrilege in tearing asunder what the prophet joins in indissoluble union.  Add to this, that Paul, though carried up even to the third heaven, ceased not to profit by the doctrine of the Law and the Prophets, while, in like manner, he exhorts Timothy, a teacher of singular excellence, to give attention to reading (1 Tim 4:13).  And the eulogium which he pronounces on Scripture well deserves to be remembered, i.e., that 'it is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, and for instruction in righteousness, that the man of God may be perfect' (2 Tim 3:16).  What an infatuation of the devil therefore, to fancy that Scripture, which conducts the sons of God to the final goal, is of transient and temporary use?  Again, I should like those people to tell me whether they have imbibed any other spirit than that which Christ promises to his disciples.  Though their madness is extreme, it will scarcely carry them the length of making this their boast.  But what kind of Spirit did our Savior promise to send?  One who should not speak of himself (John 16:13), but suggest and instill the truths which he himself had delivered through the word.  Hence the office of the Spirit promised to us, is not to form new and unheard-of revelations, or to win a new form of doctrine, by which we may be led away from the received doctrine of the gospel, but to seal on our minds the very doctrine which the gospel recommends" (Institutes of the Christian Religion, John Calvin).

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