Rev. S.T. Butler Sr.-Pastor
on March 2, 2014, 9:51 pm
Starting a new study...
Calvin's Commentaries on the Catholic Epistles
Creator(s): Calvin, John (1509-1564)
Rights: Public Domain
LC Call no: BS491
LC Subjects: The Bible
Works about the Bible
COMMENTARIES ON THE CATHOLIC EPISTLES
BY JOHN CALVIN
TRANSLATED AND EDITED BY THE REV. JOHN OWEN,
VICAR OF THRUSSINGTON,
AND RURAL DEAN, LEICESTERSHIRE
CHRISTIAN CLASSICS ETHEREAL LIBRARY
GRAND RAPIDS, MI
[1]http://www.ccel.org
TRANSLATOR'S PREFACE
THE Dedication to King Edward the Sixth is remarkably interesting, as it refers to the character of Popery at that day, and to its manoeuvres with regard to a General Council. The language is strong, and perhaps rougher than what would be at present used, but still true according to all we gather from history as to the state of things in those days. The main principles of Popery are still the same, and similar are its proceedings, though they may be more disguised, and its spirit is equally intolerant and persecuting. Like Mahomedanism, it is exclusive, and ever injurious to the harmony and peace of society.
The order in which the Epistles are arranged is not the same as in our version. There has not been a uniformity in this respect among the ancients. The reason for the arrangement here adopted was probably this, that the First Epistle of Peter, and the First of John, had, from the beginning, been universally acknowledged as genuine, while the Epistle of James, the Second of Peter, and that of Jude, had not from the first been universally received as canonical, though they were eventually so received. The Second and the Third Epistle of John were evidently not deemed by Calvin as "catholic;" and for this reason, as it seems, he omitted them.
The word "Catholic," or General, as applied to the Epistles here explained, has been differently understood. Some have thought that they have been thus called, because they contain catholic truths; but other Epistles might, for this reason, be also called catholic. Others have supposed that catholic is synonymous with canonical; but in this case also there is no more reason for applying the word to these Epistles
than to any other Epistles. But the more probable opinion is, that they were called Catholic, or General, because they were not written to any particular Church, but to Jewish or to Gentile Christians generally. Moreover, the term was not given them at first, but in subsequent ages.
The most probable dates of the five Epistles here explained are the
following: --
BOOK-------------------------------------DATE
The Epistle of James,-------------------A.D. 61
The First Epistle of Peter,-------------A.D. 65
The Second Epistle of Peter,------------A.D. 65
The Epistle of Jude,--------------------A.D. 66
The First, Epistle of John,-------------A.D. 68
This is the order according to the dates most approved by the learned. There is, for the most part, a unanimity as to the dates of the three first Epistles; but with regard to the Epistle of Jude, and the First Epistle of John, there is not the same agreement. There are many who fix later dates: to Jude, 90, and to John, 91 or 92. But this is a matter of no great consequence.
"Here is the patience of the Saints: those here are they that keep the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus." Rev. 14:12 (Geneva 1560)
churchofthefirstcentury.org260
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