Reformed Dogmatika

The Calvin Collection

John Calvin in his study, a hand-colored engraving

Reformed Dogmatika · Primary Sources

The Calvin Collection

Calvin’s own words, the city he reformed, and a reader’s path through both.

“Nearly all the wisdom we possess, that is to say, true and sound wisdom, consists of two parts: the knowledge of God and of ourselves.”

John CalvinInstitutes of the Christian Religion 1.1.1 (Battles)

John Calvin gave the Reformed church its clearest theological voice. He’s also known by a caricature: the grim tyrant of Geneva, the cold logician of predestination. The real Calvin is warmer and more pastoral than the legend allows. This collection gathers everything Reformed Dogmatika hosts on him in one place, from his devotional classics to the confessions he helped write.

Calvin’s aim was never fame. He wrote so that ordinary believers might know God, and know themselves before him. Jesus put it plainly: “And this is eternal life, that they know you the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom you have sent” (John 17:3). Read Calvin for that, and he won’t disappoint you.


Start Here

Not sure where to begin? Follow the path.

  1. 1

    New to the man? Start with the Reader’s Guide. It clears away the myths and maps his life, his books, and where to begin reading.

  2. 2

    Want Calvin in his own voice? Open the Golden Booklet or the Little Book on Prayer. Both are short, warm, and unmistakably him.

  3. 3

    Ready for Geneva? Sit in on the Consistory’s actual case files, then read the confessions Calvin helped shape.


The Reader’s Guide

The best single door into everything else here.

Portrait of John Calvin
Reader’s Guide
John Calvin: A Reformed Reader’s Guide
Our full guide to Calvin: the caricature answered, the life traced, and a curated reading order from the Institutes down to the letters. Start here and the rest of the collection falls into place.
Read the Guide →

Calvin in His Own Words

The pastor is easiest to meet in his shorter works. Each is a complete, readable edition hosted here.

“We are God’s: let us therefore live for him and die for him.”

John CalvinInstitutes of the Christian Religion 3.7.1 (Battles)

Geneva and the Reformed Confession

Calvin’s Geneva was a working church, not a theory. These sources show it up close, with the confessions that carried its theology across Europe.


Calvin’s Theology at a Glance

Where the doctrines of grace come from, and what they actually say.

Reference
The Five Points of Calvinism
The doctrines of grace, often summarized as the five points, grew out of the tradition Calvin shaped. Our guide explains each one with Scripture and the Reformed confessions.
Open the Guide →

Start anywhere. It all leads back to the same place: the knowledge of God, and of ourselves before him.

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