Free Reformed Church of Calgary discussion
John Calvin’s Institutes (ICR)
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Book 2, Chapter 8, Section 35 to Book 2, Chapter 9, Section 5
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52. & 53. Calvin acknowledges that sometimes Scripture only mentions the second table of the law. The reason for this is because the first table is difficult to assess outwardly because it is primarily kept in the heart. On the other hand, obedience to the second table can be outwardly seen through works of love. However, the first table of the law takes priority. When we love our neighbors, it is evidence that we love God. This is why the apostle teaches, “The whole law is comprehended in one word, ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’” [Galatians 5:14] (p. 417).
54. There is no need to teach men how to love themselves. We are already inclined to excessive self-love. “Hence it is very clear that we keep the commandments not by loving ourselves but by loving God and neighbor; that he lives the best and holiest life who lives and strives for himself as little as he can, and that no one lives in a worse or more evil manner than he who lives and strives for himself alone, and thinks about and seeks only his own advantage” (p. 417). We are reminded that “love does not seek its own” [1 Cor. 13:5] and that “the Lord has not established a rule regarding love of ourselves” but “we must be ready to benefit our neighbor with no less eagerness, ardor, and care than ourselves” (p. 418).
55. We should love everyone, but our love should be of a greater degree to our close kindred. “Now, since Christ has shown in the parable of the Samaritan that the term ‘neighbor’ includes even the most remote person [Luke 10:36], we are not expected to limit the precept of love to those in close relationships. [But] I do not deny that the more closely a man is linked to us, the more intimate obligation we have to assist him” (p. 418). How is it possible to love everyone (even our enemies)? It is only possible when we look to God for help. “If we rightly direct our love, we must first turn our eyes not to man, the sight of whom would more often engender hate than love, but to God, who bids us extend to all men the love we bear to him, that this may be an unchanging principle: whatever the character of the man, we must yet love him because we love God” (p.419).
56. & 57. Calvin disputes the Roman Catholic teaching that some commands are universally binding (precepts) while others are optional (counsels). For example, Roman Catholic Church suggests that poverty, celibacy, and loving our enemies are voluntary counsels. Calvin points out the absurdity of it all. “Either let them blot out these things from the law or recognize that the Lord was Lawgiver, and let them not falsely represent him as a mere giver of counsel” (p 419). Calvin provides numerous Scriptural proofs, specifically focusing on the commandment to love our enemy, to show that “the obligatory character of these utterances reveals them clearly to be not exhortations but imperatives” (p. 420; cf. Matt. 5:44-47; Luke 6:27-28; Rom. 13:9; Prov. 25:21; Ex. 23:4-5; etc.).
58. & 59. Calvin also rejects the Roman Catholic distinction between venial and mortal sins. The Roman Catholic Church defines a venial sin as a “desire without deliberate assent, which does not long remain in the heart” (p. 421). But, Calvin points out that Rome uses the category of venial sins as an excuse for harboring secret sins which violate the first table of the law (against God) or the last commandment (against our neighbors). We are no position to judge which parts of the law are more or less important. In weighing sins “let us not bring forward false balances to weigh what we please and as we please, according to our own opinion, saying, ‘This is heavy’; ‘This is light’” (p. 422). Rather, “Paul calls death ‘the wages of sin’ [Romans 6:23]” proving that all sins are damnable. In this sense, all sins are mortal. It is dangerous to minimize parts of the law and its penalties.
9. CHRIST, ALTHOUGH HE WAS KNOWN TO THE JEWS UNDER THE LAW, WAS AT LENGTH CLEARLY REVEALED ONLY IN THE GOSPEL
1. There is essentially one covenant for all believers. Old Testament believers knew Christ through promises, shadows, and types. In this sense, “Moses bore witness to him” [John 5:46] and “Abraham is said to have seen Christ’s day and to have rejoiced” [John 8:56] (pp. 423-424). New Testament believers know Christ as he has been revealed to us visibly. Christ is the substance of the previous promises, shadows, and types. “Those mysteries which they [in the Old Testament] but glimpsed in shadowed outline are manifest to us” (p. 424). “For when he appeared in this, his image, he, as it were, made himself visible; whereas his appearance had before been indistinct and shadowed” (p. 424).
2. When speaking about the gospel, it can be understood broadly as all the promises of God in the Old Testament. More narrowly, the “gospel” refers to “the proclamation of the grace manifested in Christ” (p. 425). The two are interrelated in that “the truth of [God’s] promises would be realized in the person of the Son” and that “all the promises of God find their yea and amen in Christ” [2 Cor. 1:20] (p. 425).
3. We must maintain the important tension between the “already” and the “not yet.” Calvin cautions against an over-realized eschatology. In other words, while it is true that “Christ left unfinished nothing of the sum total of our salvation” (it has already been completed), yet “it is wrong to assume from this that we already possess the benefits imparted by him” fully (because they are not yet until the consummation).
There are some things which have already been given. “In believing Christ we at once pass from death into life” (p. 426). Still, “we must remember that saying of John’s: although we know that ‘we are the children of God, it does not yet appear …until we shall become like him, when we shall see him as he is’ [1 John 3:2]” (p. 426). “Although, therefore, Christ offers us in the gospel a present fullness of spiritual benefits, the enjoyment thereof ever lies hidden under the guardianship of hope, until, having put off corruptible flesh, we be transfigured in the glory of him who goes before us” (p. 426).
We reach closer to the eternal promises than the Old Testament saints, but we should not confuse our present condition as having everything in full. There is “a difference in the nature or quality of the promises: the gospel points out with the finger what the law foreshadowed under types” (p. 426). Still, for the present time, we “walk by faith, not by sight” (2 Cor. 5:5-7; cf. Heb. 11:1).
4. The Lutheran distinction between law and gospel, though having a certain degree of validity, is also exaggerated. For Luther, the “law” exclusively refers to God’s demands. It is true that the “law” is “the rule of righteous living by which God requires of us what is his own, giving us no hope of life unless we completely obey him, and adding on the other hand a curse if we deviate even in the slightest degree” (p. 426).
Still, the gospel is not opposed to the law. They do not represent different ways of salvation. For Calvin, the “law” refers to the whole of Old Testament religion, including its promises. “The gospel did not so supplant the entire law as to bring forward a different way of salvation. Rather, it confirmed and satisfied whatever the law had promised, and gave substance to the shadows… Where the whole law is concerned, the gospel differs from it only in clarity of manifestation” (p. 427).
5. Calvin clarifies John the Baptist’s position. “John stood between the law and the gospel, holding an intermediate office related to both” (p. 427). Although he proclaimed the sum of the gospel when he called Christ the Lamb of God, yet he was never able to witness Christ’s death and resurrection glory. “In this sense Christ calls [John the Baptist] ‘a burning and shining lamp’ [John 5:35], because full daylight had not yet come. Yet this does not prevent him from being numbered among the preachers of the gospel, for he actually used the same baptism as was afterward entrusted to the apostles [John 1:33]. But what John began the apostles carried forward to fulfillment, with greater freedom, only after Christ was received into heaven” (p. 428).
With this, we conclude our focused study of the Ten Commandments. Next time, we will continue our study, looking at the relationship between the Old and New Testaments by comparing their similarities and differences.
8. EXPLANATION OF THE MORAL LAW (THE TEN COMMANDMENTS)
Sections 35 to 38 exposit the fifth commandment:
Sections 39 to 40 exposit the sixth commandment:
Sections 41 to 44 exposit the seventh commandment:
Sections 45 to 46 exposit the eighth commandment:
Sections 47 to 48 exposit the ninth commandment:
Sections 49 to 50 exposit the tenth commandment: