The Recorded Atrocities of John Calvin

Truster

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Did Satan do this work?


The Geneva Bible is one of the most historically significant translations of the Bible into English, preceding the King James translation by 51 years.[1] It was the primary Bible of 16th century Protestantism and was the Bible used by William Shakespeare[citation needed], Oliver Cromwell, John Knox, John Donne, and John Bunyan, author of Pilgrim's Progress (1678).[2] It was one of the Bibles taken to America on the Mayflower (Pilgrim Hall Museum and Dr. Jiang have collected several bibles of Mayflower passengers). The Geneva Bible was used by many English Dissenters, and it was still respected by Oliver Cromwell's soldiers at the time of the English Civil War, in the booklet "Cromwell's Soldiers' Pocket Bible". WiKi.
 

Grosnick Marowbe

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Fault finding is stupid, if you knew what was going on in that era. King Henry divided the English churches, who were out clubbing everyone, the Roman Church were burning people at the stake, and Protestants did much the same.

Spare your dumb moral superiority complex, and trying to single out Calvin.

You're just predestined not to believe is all :chuckle:

And, of course you're wrong. Don't feel bad though. There are
plenty of people in your boat as well.
 

Crucible

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And, of course you're wrong. Don't feel bad though. There are
plenty of people in your boat as well.

I am perfectly right if you dare to actually look at the history. All you anti-Reformed folk are the same, resorting to anything you can to try and demonize Calvinism. Almost like an obsession- almost like you are.. p r e d e s t i n e d

It offends you because, like Scripture, it is a sword. All the biblical authors were Reformed, hombre :thumb:
 

Crucible

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Many years ago I was into Calvinism. Needless to say, I saw the error to my ways.


Reprobate- An undisciplined person; a sinner who is not of the elect and is predestined to damnation.



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Robert Pate

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Did Satan do this work?


The Geneva Bible is one of the most historically significant translations of the Bible into English, preceding the King James translation by 51 years.[1] It was the primary Bible of 16th century Protestantism and was the Bible used by William Shakespeare[citation needed], Oliver Cromwell, John Knox, John Donne, and John Bunyan, author of Pilgrim's Progress (1678).[2] It was one of the Bibles taken to America on the Mayflower (Pilgrim Hall Museum and Dr. Jiang have collected several bibles of Mayflower passengers). The Geneva Bible was used by many English Dissenters, and it was still respected by Oliver Cromwell's soldiers at the time of the English Civil War, in the booklet "Cromwell's Soldiers' Pocket Bible". WiKi.

So what!

John Calvin is still a demon.
 

patrick jane

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I am perfectly right if you dare to actually look at the history. All you anti-Reformed folk are the same, resorting to anything you can to try and demonize Calvinism. Almost like an obsession- almost like you are.. p r e d e s t i n e d

It offends you because, like Scripture, it is a sword. All the biblical authors were Reformed, hombre :thumb:

Moses was reformed ?
 

Crucible

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So you think that God is responsible for the works of the devil?

Isaiah 45:7
I form the light, and create darkness: I make peace, and create evil: I the LORD do all these things

It's not like the Bible doesn't come right out and tell you BRO
 

Robert Pate

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Isaiah 45:7
I form the light, and create darkness: I make peace, and create evil: I the LORD do all these things

It's not like the Bible doesn't come right out and tell you BRO

"I create evil" refers to physical evil or calamity rather than moral evil.

God is in no way pictured in scripture as the author of sin.

God allows sin, but does not create sin.

I am not your "bro".
 

Totton Linnet

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they did those things [and Calvin was the political leader] in the 16th century

They are Lazaruz's death bands

The church had been reformed, raised from the dead...but the medieval death bands were still about the church.

Many on you good American folks bleeve in the death penalty, an argument I would not enter into.

But I do wonder about the ghoulish crowds who gather to shout abuse outside the place of execution..."you're gunna fry...."

People can be so unlovely even in the most civilised places.
 

musterion

Well-known member
Wait a minute.

11. A girl was caught skating, a widow threw herself on the grave of her husband, a burgher offered his neighbor a pinch of snuff during divine service: they were summoned before the Consistory, exhorted and ordered to do penance.

As Calvin is (falsely) revered as the ultimate Protestant, what would his people's enforced penance be predicated on, Scripturally speaking? What would it have consisted of? And what would be the purpose?

Calvin's Geneva sounds like the cults of Catholicism like we have today: disagreeing with Rome enough to split off but pretty much unchanged in practice.
 

Robert Pate

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Wait a minute.



As Calvin is (falsely) revered as the ultimate Protestant, what would his people's enforced penance be predicated on, Scripturally speaking? What would it have consisted of? And what would be the purpose?

Calvin's Geneva sounds like the cults of Catholicism like we have today: disagreeing with Rome enough to split off but pretty much unchanged in practice.

He never did really renounce Catholicism.

When he left the Catholic church he brought it along with him.

He took his Catholic beliefs along with his false doctrine and combined them and became a Son of hell.
 

Ask Mr. Religion

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PERSECUTIONS AT CALVIN'S GENEVA

Another example of the type of scholarship you practice, Robert. You wrongly title the thread to attract eyeballs: "The Recorded Atrocities of John Calvin" and then proceed to detail poor investigation into what the Geneva city council was doing. Time and again you demonstrate you are just not qualified to sit at the table where serious theological discourse takes place.

Any notion that Geneva was operating under Calvin as a theocrat is discredited with Farel and Calvin being forced to leave (in a big hurry) in 1538. Calvin's complaint that people named their dogs after him ought to dispel some of the usual aggressive claims that Calvin ruled Geneva.

The plain fact that Calvin did not achieve citizenship until 1559 is significant and overlooked by those hoping to discredit Calvin since they have failed to discredit the theology of the Reformer.

Calvin’s Geneva is best understood by actually doing some real homework rather than just copying and pasting from the usual anti-Calvinistic sites (or wing-nut KJBOnlyists like Jack Moorman).

Monter:
Calvin's Geneva

R. Willis:
Servetus And Calvin: A Study Of An Important Epoch In The Early History Of The Reformation

P. E. Hughes:
Calvin and the Consolidation of the Reformation in Geneva (1994).

Scott Manestch:
Calvin's Company of Pastors: Pastoral Care and the Emerging Reformed Church, 1536-1609

Afterwards go read someone who actually knows something about Calvin's life such as:

T. H. L. Parker:
John Calvin--A Biography

Richard Muller:
The Unaccommodated Calvin: Studies in the Foundation of a Theological Tradition

For that matter, why focus upon Calvin, when all of the leading magisterial reformers defended putting heretics, including Anabaptists, to death. Indeed, Zwingli, Luther, Melanchthon, and Bullinger and other leading reformers were just as vocal in their defense of such policies. Do you know anything about the history of the time in question? Geneva, like Zurich, was a little different because these were cantons, city-states. Cities in the Empire functioned a little differently. Further, after 1655 Reformed cities were under a special pressure because they weren’t included formally in the Peace of Augsburg and thus were technically illegal. They were already suspected of being soft of heresy (e.g., Anabaptists flocked to Zurich early) and the Reformed reacted in some cases, e.g., Heidelberg in 1572, by trying to demonstrate that they weren’t soft on heresy.

As someone who has actually studied Reformation history, my job isn’t to defend or prosecute Calvin. Rather it is to tell the truth about the past as best I can. Sure, sixteenth-century Geneva was just that-sixteenth century! Relative to modern pluralism it was a miserable place. Relative to other places in sixteenth-century Europe, it was regarded as a hospital. The diaconal ministry of Geneva was famous across Europe/British Isles. Women fled to Geneva for safety. Pilgrims came to Geneva to escape persecution in France, Italy, and the British Isles among other places. The modern, hospitable Geneva that we know via the Red Cross, et al began, in that sense, in the sixteenth century.

Was discipline harsh? Yes! It was the sixteenth century. People weren’t allowed to say and do whatever they wanted in pre-modern Europe. It just wasn’t allowed, anywhere.

Calvin was influential but he was also a pilgrim who was expelled by the Geneva city council and then recalled, a man who didn’t want to be there and who was hated by a substantial portion of the community, despite the claims of the uninformed that he ruled Geneva. The civil punishments handed by the Genevan council out were just that. The city council did not work for Calvin. He worked for them, but those facts don’t fit the popular anti-Calvinist narrative.

Robert, if you are too lazy to dig deeper find an online version of Schaff's History of Christianity. When it was published, scholarly fact-checking was not as rigorous as it is today, but even Schaff, no friend of Calvin, could not muster up the nonsense being posted by you and others herein.

So either all the recognized authors of historical accounts are all conspiring to maintain a huge cover-up about Calvin, since none of them affirm the nonsense in this thread, or, just perhaps, you simply do not know what you are talking about. :AMR:

These threads should come as no surprise to the discerning, for they show just how desperate the anti-Calvinist must be:
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AMR
 

Lon

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Many years ago I was into Calvinism. Needless to say, I saw the error to my ways.
:think: I don't really think you were :nono:

You may have had some odd introductions, but you didn't go far, nor understand a lot. Your blank quote of Calvin's testimony is evidence of that as well. How much could you understand Calvinism if you don't even know Calvin? :idunno:
 
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