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Calvin and the Resignification of the World

Calvin and the Resignification of the World

Calvin and the Resignification of the World

Creation, Incarnation, and the Problem of Political Theology in the 1559 ‘Institutes'
Michelle Chaplin Sanchez, Harvard Divinity School, Massachusetts
March 2019
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9781108473040
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    Calvin's 1559 Institutes is one of the most important works of theology that emerged at a pivotal time in Europe's history. As a movement, Calvinism has often been linked to the emerging features of modernity, especially to capitalism, rationalism, disenchantment, and the formation of the modern sovereign state. In this book, Michelle Sanchez argues that a closer reading of the 1559 Institutes recalls some of the tensions that marked Calvinism's emergence among refugees, and ultimately opens new ways to understand the more complex ethical and political legacy of Calvinism. In conversation with theorists of practice and signification, she advocates for reading the Institutes as a pedagogical text that places the reader in the world as the domain in which to actively pursue the 'knowledge of God and ourselves' through participatory uses of divine revelation. Through this lens, she reconceives Calvin's understanding of sovereignty and how it works in relation to the embodied reader. Sanchez also critically examines Calvin's teaching on providence and the incarnation in conversation with theorists of political theology and modernity who emphasize the importance of those very doctrines.

    • Proposes a new reading of how Calvin's Institutes treats the material body as a locus of teaching
    • Investigates the pedagogical dimensions of Calvin's 1559 Institutio Christianae Religionis
    • Examines Calvin's thinking about political sovereignty

    Reviews & endorsements

    'This brilliant book defies facile summary.' Mark S. LeTourneau, Anglican and Episcopal History

    '… Sanchez homes in on Calvin's doctrines of providence and incarnation, offering a fresh reading of the Genevan Reformer's magnum opus as a pedagogical work that affirms embodiment and orients believers to engage the concrete worldly problems of society and politics.' J. Scott Jackson, International Journal of Systematic Theology

    'Calvin scholars and readers interested in how Reformation sources might interact with contemporary political theology will find Sanchez' book to be important and vital reading.' Aaron Klink, Religious Studies Review

    See more reviews

    Product details

    March 2019
    Adobe eBook Reader
    9781108571012
    0 pages
    This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.

    Table of Contents

    • Part I. Itinerant Pedagogy:
    • 1. Writing reform: the genre of the 1559 Institutio Christianae Religionis
    • Part II. Providence:
    • 2. The practice of writing providence
    • 3. Providence and world affirmation
    • 4. Providence and governmentality
    • Part III. Incarnation:
    • 5. Calvin's 'secularization' of Augustinian signification
    • 6. Faith resignifying understanding: atonement and election
    • 7. Calvin against political theology.
      Author
    • Michelle Chaplin Sanchez , Harvard Divinity School, Massachusetts

      Michelle Chaplin Sanchez is Associate Professor of Theology at Harvard Divinity School, where she teaches courses on the Protestant Reformations, intersections between Protestant theology and modern philosophy, theories of sovereignty and modernity, and other themes in Christian theology including providence and the existence of God. She has won several teaching awards, and has also published scholarly articles in the Journal of the American Academy of Religion, Scottish Journal of Theology, and Political Theology.