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Book Review - Calvin
- 10/06/09
- 7
It is here at last. For years now I have been waiting for a great biography of Calvin—the kind of biography which I would recommend without hesitation for those who would want to learn about the life of the great Reformer. In a year that has seen the arrival of at least half a dozen biographies of Calvin, this one, I believe, stands as the best. Written by Bruce Gordon, professor of Reformation History at Yale University, it is titled simply and properly, Calvin.
Biographies of figures as controversial as John Calvin tend to be written by unabashed fans or ardent enemies. There is a lot of biography that reads like hagiography and a lot that reads like pure slander. This was the case with Calvin himself and his earliest biographers—either they were his closest confidants, singing his highest praises or they were men who feared and despised him, fabricating outrageous charges against him (such as Jerome Bolsec who, ten years after Calvin’s death, wrote an account of the Reformer’s life in which he accused him of sodomy and suggested that he had died from crab lice). Even today, many of the biographies seem to focus undue attention on Calvin’s great accomplishments without wrestling with his notable faults and foibles. This new biography is an exception as Gordon writes from a position of notable objectivity. He seems a little bit detached from his subject, almost as if he has had to become a somewhat-grudging admirer of Calvin through immersing himself in the man’s life. Throughout the book he is willing to credit Calvin for what he did so well but he is also willing to call a spade a spade, whether that means pointing out pride or temper or youthful arrogance.
The greatest strength of Calvin may be the author’s deep knowledge of the time in which his subject lived. He sets Calvin firmly in his political, religious and cultural context, expending great effort in showing how Calvin was, in so many ways, a product of his time. This allows Gordon, a student of the Reformation even more than he is a Calvin scholar, to draw the reader into the time and the life of his subject in a way that none of the other biographies have been able to do. He also draws widely from Calvin’s writing, introducing lesser-known works and drawing often on his voluminous correspondence. In this way it is a more well-rounded account of Calvin than others and one that is also deeper.
I tend to measure successful biographies in one of two ways: either they teach me a lot about the subject and the context of his life or they make me feel as if I’ve met the subject himself (with the very occasional sublime biography doing both). Gordon’s Calvin falls firmly in the former camp. I did not feel like I knew Calvin himself at the end of this book, but I certainly did understand the man better, especially as I came to understand the religious and political climate he was born into and the even more complex climate he helped create.
In my opinion, this is the best biography of John Calvin to date. If you haven’t ever read a life of Calvin, this will be the place to start. And even if you’ve read each of the other biographies available, I am convinced that by reading this one you will gain a richer understanding of the man and the complex times in which he lived. I highly recommend it.

I am a follower of Jesus Christ, a husband to Aileen and a father to three young children. I worship and serve as a pastor at
Releasing on April 1, The Next
Comments (7)
Tim, I’m curious. What biographies did make you feel you’d met the subject, and which biographies fall into that sublime camp? Thanks for the tip - I appreciate biographies with excellent context.
This one is one my Christmas wish list . I have read much about Calvin’s life but have hoped for a single volume that deals fairly with the man. One thing that is important in any biography is how they deal with the man , the sinner who is saved by grace. Often we have a tendency to almost “deify” certain men but when I read how they struggled with sin in their lives but trusted in the completed work of Christ for salvation , it gives me hope. I’m a unashamed Calvinist and this should be a great read about one of the most misunderstood men in all Church history.
What biographies did make you feel you’d met the subject, and which biographies fall into that sublime camp?
I’m sure there are others, but off-hand I’d point to Jonathan Edwards by George Marsden and John Adams by David McCullough. George Whitefield by Arnold Dallimore may fit as well.
I don’t read many biographies. I’ve just finished reading “John Calvin: A Heart for Devotion, Doctrine & Doxology” which I enjoyed a great deal. It had enough small glimpses into Calvin’s life and times that my interest has been elevated.I’m purchasing this book based upon your recommendation.Thanks.
And (as I have also noted elsewhere!) if you wonder where such a rich study comes from, have a look at Gordon’s earlier work, The Swiss Reformation (Manchester University Press, 2002) — 416 thickly researched but readable (!) pages … what to read when you’re finished reading Calvin but still want more.
I’d second Tim’s recommendation. Not that I’m a Calvin scholar or anything, but I read about 6 biographies of him over the summer and this one was head and shoulders ahead of the rest (which is not to say all the others are bad!)
Perhaps the thing I appreciated most about this book was the way it set Calvin in the 16th century. We view him in hindsight as incredibly influential, but in his time he was often not listened to (on occasions, probably quite rightly). Rather, he was one among many influential Reformation voices, many of which we forget to our own hurt. Gordon does a fantastic job of setting Calvin among other reformation figures like Bullinger, Bucer, Vermingli, Farel, Viret, Melanchton and the Gneseo-Lutherans.
Good comment.
I finished reading the book yesterday and posted the following comment for ministerial colleagues.
This is the volume to save up for and buy. Magnificent. It is a new biography. Very sympathetic to Calvin but not hagiography! Several features I liked: I felt I got to know Calvin and found I liked him! Gordon is particularly good at placing Calvin in his historical context and in the process I got to learn a lot more about Bucer, Bullinger, Melanchthon, Farel, Viret, etc, the reformation in France and so on. Your appreciation of the man’s greatness as well as his vulnerability and difficulties, under God, can only be enhanced by reading Gordon. THANK GOD FOR JOHN CALVIN. A particularly valuable feature of the volume is the very extensive bibliography with short notes - I have highlighted about 6 future purchases and in fact the next volume comes from the bibliography.
Cheers