Calvin, John: Early Life
Early Life
Calvin early prepared for an ecclesiastical career; from 1523 to 1528 he studied in Paris. His opinions gradually turned to disagreement with the Roman position, and a demonstrated ability at disputation led him in 1528, at his father's instance, to study law at Orléans and Bourges. After his father's death in 1531 he returned to Paris, where he pursued his own predilection, the study of the classics and Hebrew. He came under the humanist influence and became interested in the growing rebellion against conservative theology. He experienced c.1533 what he later described as a “sudden conversion,” and he turned all his attention to the cause of the Reformation.
Sections in this article:
- Introduction
- Importance of Calvinism
- Involvement in Controversies
- Work in Geneva
- Institutes of the Christian Religion
- Early Life
- Bibliography
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