John Calvin's Institutes in a Year

Calvin's Institutes: April 17


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Faith is not destroyed by fear—it is purified by it. In today’s reading from Institutes of the Christian Religion, Book 3, Chapter 2, Sections 22–27, John Calvin confronts a dangerous misunderstanding: that true assurance means the absence of trembling. Instead, he argues that a right kind of fear actually strengthens faith. By reflecting on God’s judgment, believers are not driven to despair but trained in humility, learning to distrust themselves while clinging more firmly to Christ. Calvin sharply rejects any attempt to mix faith with doubt, insisting that Christ is not distant but united to us—His righteousness covering our sin, His life replacing our death. He then draws a crucial distinction between servile fear and filial fear: the wicked fear punishment, but the believer fears offending a loving Father. This fear does not torment—it steadies. It does not weaken assurance—it deepens it. And in that tension, where self-distrust meets confidence in God, faith becomes both sober and unshakable.

Readings:

John Calvin — Institutes of the Christian Religion, Book 3, Chapter 2, Sections 22–27

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John Calvin's Institutes in a YearBy Christopher Michael Patton