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A reformer tried to build religious community by preaching the word of God and subjecting the town and territory to the pastoral oversight of evangelical clergy. To preach and reorganize, the reformer needed a bible that recounted events and narratives written down for an explicit purpose: the regeneration of individual and society. The reformer was sensitive to threats to the bible’s purpose. Any time textual fact and regenerative purpose seemed to drift apart, its purpose could seem to be compromised. Fact and purpose could drift apart in two ways. Historicizing the text, taking the book as the artifact of a distinctive, remote culture or as ancient fiction, could seem to nullify the text’s power as divine speech in the present. Equally problematic was the suggestion that spiritual readings of the text were divorced from historical facts. These two challenges to the bible, one historicizing and another spiritualizing, first appeared as an intellectual dilemma in the Reformation. This chapter illustrates that first appearance by examining two controversies in the life of the Reformation’s most celebrated literalist, John Calvin. The first example is Calvin’s conflict with his friend Sebastian Castellio. The second is Calvin’s conflict with the so-called “libertines.”
Few figures from the Reformation era have remained as divisive as John Calvin. Whether because of Calvin’s doctrine of predestination or his involvement in the execution of Michael Servetus in Geneva in 1553, his contemporary detractors found ample reason for dissension. Regarding the former, five-odd centuries have done little to ameliorate (and perhaps much to exacerbate) the prima facie severity of Calvin’s specific brand of predestination, which maintains that God foreordained multitudes to eternal damnation before the creation of the world. Anyone who has been tasked with explaining the reformer’s thoughts on this matter to undergraduates in a Christianity 101 course (or to an innocent bystander at the local watering hole) is keenly aware of its almost universal unattractiveness. This sentiment holds a fortiori for the execution of Servetus. Two key sixteenth-century figures, Jérôme-Hermès Bolsec and Sebastian Castellio, honed in on these two issues in a barrage of anti-Calvinist writings. In doing so, they painted the first broad strokes of what would prove to be an enduring image of Calvin as a dour and intransigent figure. Moreover, they forced Calvin and Geneva into a series of defensive responses that were formative in the process of confessionalization beginning in the 1550s, a crucial period for religious identity formation especially among Swiss Protestant churches.