
Contents
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Finding John Calvin Finding John Calvin
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Reformer in Community Reformer in Community
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Recasting Calvin after 2009 Recasting Calvin after 2009
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Engaging Calvin and Calvinism Engaging Calvin and Calvinism
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Suggested Reading Suggested Reading
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Works Cited Works Cited
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1 Introduction
Get accessBruce Gordon is the Titus Street Professor of Ecclesiastical History at Yale Divinity School. He is the author of Calvin (Yale University Press, 2009) and John Calvin’s Institutes of the Christian Religion (Princeton University Press, 2016).
Carl R. Trueman is Professor of Biblical and Religious Studies at Grove City College. He has written extensively on the history of Reformed theology and more recently on the rise of modern identity politics. In 2017–18 he was the William E. Simon Visiting Fellow in Religion and Public Life at Princeton University.
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Published:14 July 2021
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Abstract
A handbook to Calvin and Calvinism must address the complexities of assessing the influence of one sixteenth-century figure on a religious tradition still very much alive from Brazil to China. Calvinism is a slippery term that suggests that an extremely diverse and often contradictory tradition can be traced to one man. In many respects this is unsustainable, yet patterns emerge. Arguably, the term ‘Reformed’ is more appropriate to reflect the protean character of a branch of Christianity that emerged out of Switzerland during the Reformation to become a global faith. The contributions to this volume bring fresh perspectives to Calvin’s thought and influence and explore the broad spectrum in which they have been manifested over four hundred years in doctrine, institutions, literature, art, politics, and popular culture. Just like its eponymous founder, Calvinism has continually reinvented itself, acquiring new forms and adapting to changing circumstances and cultures.
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