For those who don’t read the journal Political Theology, the first half of the latest issue is devoted to our birthday boy, John Calvin. Consider it a perfect compliment to my previous, popular post on must-have Calvin memorabilia.
Political Theology, Vol 10, No 3 (2009)
John Calvin and Political Theology
‘Editorial: Remembering Geneva’s Calvin’
—Marilynne Robinson
‘John Calvin and the Jews: A Problem in Political Theology’
—David C. Steinmetz
ABSTRACT: Although John Calvin rejected the angry invective of Martin Luther against the Jews, he nevertheless agreed with him that Christian biblical interpretation was a more reliable guide to the mind of the patriarchs in Genesis than the exegesis of Rabbinic Judaism. The Hebrew Bible was therefore properly understood as Christian Scripture and had always been addressed to the Church as well as to ancient Israe
‘Calvin and Natural Rights’
—David Little
ABSTRACT: This article applauds the recent rise of scholarly attention to studying the relation of religion to natural rights in general and Calvinism in particular. Against the strong belief in some quarters that appeals to nature, including the idea of rights, do not play a significant role in Calvin’s thought, the article concurs with recent (and some not so recent) work to the contrary, arguing that such appeals do occupy an important, if ambiguous, place for Calvin. However, the article resists explaining the variations in his thought as the result of changing interpretations over time. Rather, it is contended that these matters were a source of tension throughout Calvin’s career. He struggled not so much with the question of the natural knowledge of rights, but of the ability to choose to act on that knowledge. In conclusion, the article hints that Calvin’s ambivalence on this issue sowed the seeds for significant divergence among his descendants.
‘Calvin’s Legacy for Public Theology’
— Richard J. Mouw
ABSTRACT: Many thinkers, of whom Jean-Jacques Rousseau is a prominent example, have expressed ambivalence regarding John Calvin’s contribution to our understanding of a healthy civic order: while Calvin’s political genius is undeniable, he and his followers are also known for intolerant attitudes and practices. Thus the image of “two Calvins” by a recent biographer of the Reformer. In this essay I lay out some relevant tensions in Calvin’s political thought, while also identifying underlying themes that were later developed by his followers. Special attention is given to the ways in which the “neo-Calvinist” movement, initiated in the nineteenth century by Abraham Kuyper, both corrected and expanded upon Calvin’s theology of public life. It is noted that while Kuyper’s thought also influenced the Afrikaners’ apartheid ideology, Reformed opponents of apartheid also appealed to elements in Kuyper’s theology of public life. Although the results have been mixed, Kuyper and others did demonstrate the ways in which some basic elements of Calvin’s thought can be used to address issues that are being given sustained attention today in broad ranging explorations of what makes for a flourishing civil society characterized by a variety of “mediating structures.
‘What Reformed Theology in a Calvinist Key Brings to Conversations about Justice’
— Douglas F. Ottati
ABSTRACT: This essay distinguishes John Calvin’s participatory stance toward civil government and society from Peter Rideman’s Anabaptist view. It outlines three theological frames that Reformed theology in a Calvinist key brings to conversations about justice. And, in distinction from some other trajectories in Reformed theological ethics, for example, Karl Barth, Miroslav Volff, it tries to retrieve a Calvinist emphasis on natural equity and human moral sensibility with the help of philosophers such as John Rawls and Michael Walzer.


