Jean Calvin, aiming to provide a coherent …

Years: 1541 - 1541

Jean Calvin, aiming to provide a coherent theology and disciplined organization for his Francophone followers, explains his complex doctrines in a simple style in The Institutes of the Christian Religion.

This groundbreaking tract conquers for the French language the ability to discuss religious subjects that have previously been reserved for Latin.

Calvin's seminal work, which will alter the course of Western history as much as any other book, is still read by theological students today.

Friends of Calvin gain control of the Geneva city council in 1541, and Calvin, now thirty-two and recently married, reluctantly accepts their invitation to return from three years of pleasant exile in Strasbourg as pastor of that city’s French congregation.

In Calvin’s Ordinances of 1541, he gives a new organization to the Protestant church consisting of pastors, doctors, elders, and deacons.

His reforms meet stiff resistance, however, among some Genevans who regard Calvin's morality as absurdly severe, with its banning of plays and its attempt to introduce religious pamphlets and psalm singing into Geneva's taverns.

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