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Jean Calvin (1509-1564):
A Quincentenary Exhibition

Anonymous. Portrait of Jean Calvin.
Pen and ink calligraphy,
with watercolor and gilt border on vellum.
[Switzerland?], 1698.
Click image for enlargement.
The sixteenth-century theologian and reformer Jean
Calvin exerted immense influence on the character
and practice of Western Christianity. Born in Noyon,
a small town in the Picardy region of France, Calvin
was educated at the Collège de Montaigu in Paris and
completed his law studies at Orléans in the early
1530s. His Institutio Religionis Christianae (“The
Institutes of the Christian Religion”), the first
published systematic statement of Reformed theology,
appeared in 1536 and was followed by four revised
and expanded editions issued during his lifetime.
Settling in Geneva, Calvin promoted the Reformation
both locally, through ecclesiastical discipline and
the introduction of vernacular catechisms and
liturgy, and internationally by means of his
numerous publications. The influence of Calvinism
was particularly strong in Switzerland, France, the
Netherlands, and among the Puritans in England,
Scotland, and colonial North America.
Central to Calvin’s reforms was the primacy of
scripture in faith and practice, the doctrine of
God’s sovereignty and benevolence in Christ, and the
necessity of discipline within the Church. His
theological knowledge, exegetical skills, and clear
and precise writing style contributed to his success
promoting the transformation of the Church and to
his status, along with Luther, as the most
significant author of the Protestant Reformation. He
produced a large and important body of writing
including the Institutio Religionis Christianae;
translations of the Old and the New Testaments;
commentaries, sermons, and lectures on the Bible;
polemical works; and an immense body of
correspondence. This exhibition commemorating the
quincentenary of Calvin’s birth provides a brief
introduction to the man and his work through his
translation of the Bible and commentaries on the Old
and New Testaments, English editions of the
Institutio Religionis Christianae, and images of the
author.
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