Sovereign Grace: The Place and Significance of Christian Freedom in John Calvin's Political Thought

Front Cover
Oxford University Press, Jun 17, 1999 - Religion - 224 pages
The Reformation thinker John Calvin had significant and unusual things to say about life in public encounter, things which both anticipate modern thinking and, says William Stevenson, can serve as important antidotes to some of modern thinking's broader pretensions. This study attempts to give a coherent picture of Calvin's political theory by following the stream that flows from his fascinating short essay, "On Christian Freedom," one chapter in the magisterial Institutes of the Christian Religion. Stevenson argues that a full examination of this essay yields not only a more thorough explication--and historical placement--of Calvin's political ideas proper but also a more complete and coherent picture of their theological underpinnings.
 

Contents

Why Calvin? Why Now?
3
The Irreducible yet Partial Individual
11
Corporate Action but under Judgment
59
Cultural Dissociation and the Tutelage of History
105
Freedom as a Woven Cord Sheathed in Sovereign Grace
149
Notes
153
Bibliography
183
Index
197
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